Wow from forgotten DJ in San Francisco to Legendary talk show host on 790 KABC.
Failed? Michael Jackson had more than a 30 year run in the most competitive market in the country. Few broadcasters can say as much.
The point was that the very 70's sound of Jackson's show failed when a different and newer style of presentation was offered.
Jackson did not ever do well outside LA; his show was an LA quirk just as Ronn Owens was in San Francisco.
That ain't failure. That's live and local.
With Owens, yes. He was never beaten by Rush. But in LA, Jackson was eventually crushed by him. It is, thus, neither about being live nor local but being more entertaining.
An awful lot of vitriol directed at a pretty good radio host. Jackson's show was syndicated and enjoyed a good measure of success for a long time. The landscape shifted on him when he was in the twilight of his career. That doesn't invalidate the success he had. The emergence of Rush's national program upended a lot of successful local shows. Even in Detroit, the legendary JP McCarthy gave up his long running 'Focus' program as a result of Limbaugh's program, that certainly doesn't mean that the many years of success that 'Focus' had don't mean anything and the same applies to Jackson.
https://www.c-span.org/video/?76056-1/michael-jackson-talk-radio-show
The best clip from KABC. Anybody have airchecks of Jackson on KYA and others.
Wow, she was SO cute! Amazing what the passage of twenty years can do to a person...
The point was that the very 70's sound of Jackson's show failed when a different and newer style of presentation was offered.
Jackson did not ever do well outside LA; his show was an LA quirk just as Ronn Owens was in San Francisco.
Ronn Owens was supposedly Michael Jackson replacement but was a failure in Los Angeles but a legend in San Francisco. But in San Francisco Ronn Owens got rolled over by KQED Forum and the NPR News/talk programming in the San Francisco area for the past decade. I understand in some parts of the country Rush Limbaugh killed off local hosts in your area.
Yes, you are correct. "Sighting" looked wrong and I didn't feel like looking it up. I'll try to be more careful in the future.I think you mean "sighting."
Failed? Michael Jackson had more than a 30 year run in the most competitive market in the country. Few broadcasters can say as much.
The point was that the very 70's sound of Jackson's show failed when a different and newer style of presentation was offered.
Jackson did not ever do well outside LA; his show was an LA quirk just as Ronn Owens was in San Francisco.
Anyone making disparaging remarks, such as the above "Jackson's show failed when...." obviously never has taken the care to understand qualitatively how good the show was, nor quantitatively how dominant it was in the local ratings for nearly three decades.
Several posters, including umfan, have already posted about why the post above is so wrong. Michael Jackson was a superb talkradio host, among the best ever to air on LARadio. He spent 30 years owning late morning in this town (mostly 9a to noon). His ratings did slip. as mentioned in this thread, when Rush came to town. Rush is a also a master broadcaster, but of a different variety. Rush is "look at me", whereas Michael Jackson was always about his guests, his audience, and educating the public with polite, informative discourse with verbal zingers that were brilliant, funny, and spontaneous. Everyone from all sitting Presidents of the United States during that era, to Peter Jennings, to Wolfgang Puck, to Richard SImmons, to journalists of virtually every major publication in this country (most notably the Los Angeles Times - Jack Nelson, DC Bureau Chief seemed to be on nearly daily), wanted to be on his program. His guest roster was so packed, that he often had 2 to 3 top tier guests on his program each hour. Anyone making disparaging remarks, such as the above "Jackson's show failed when...." obviously never has taken the care to understand qualitatively how good the show was, nor quantitatively how dominant it was in the local ratings for nearly three decades.