What I'm hearing here is that WBFO is outspending WBEN for news coverage.
Heck, WECK is outspending WBEN.
I don't hear WBEN "hashing local to death," rather it seems more to be a matter of them "playing the news hits" ... combined with a very thin news department. That said, WBFO provides a superior local news product, offering in-depth coverage on many key local issues, particularly education, the economy and government, combined with a daily line-up of outstanding programming from NPR, MPR, PRI and other sources. Brian Meyer was (is) a bona fide print and radio news professional, but his self-aggrandizing attitude during membership drives won't be missed. Word from more than a few staffers is that tact wasn't his strong suite. When it came to directing and motivating his staff, he's said to have publicly criticized staffers, ignoring or totally unaware of the axiom, "compliment in public, criticize in private." That aside, he leaves the station fairly well positioned, with room to improve. WBFO appears to have a secure understanding of where 'radio' is going and how it must adapt. Conversely, WBEN appears to be hinged to an age-old formula of conservative talk that fires up the base, yet appeals to an increasingly aging and thinning audience. Yes, WBEN posts admirable Persons 12+ ratings and is one of the top billing stations in the market, but this post is about providing a news product that serves listeners. WBFO does a far better job than WBEN. Congratulations to Debo and Rosenthal. Two Daves, taking on what once was Goliath.WBFO is investing in its local content and has high quality NPR programming. They have a good balance of solid local and NPR coverage. Rehashing local stuff to death isn't compelling Radio...
Nothing harsh about that statement. WBEN is toxic. They are a Far Right propaganda echo chamber. They ceased being a "News" station long long ago.
It will be fascinating to see and hear how WBEN evolves following Entercom's "purchase" of CBS radio.
It will be fascinating to see and hear how WBEN evolves following Entercom's "purchase" of CBS radio. WBEN and the Buffalo cluster were once pretty big fish in Entercom's portfolio. That was "BC," Before CBS. Now, markets like Buffalo and Rochester have a lower profile with regard to the revenue they throw off, compared to the major market stations now in the Entercom fold.
(Waiting for "A" to have the last word...)
Tom Ashbrook had a great show. It's unfortunate that he used poor judgement that caused his demise. His current replacements are solid, but he's a tough act to follow. NPR has a path forward.
Entercom knows that WBEN cannot evolve. The FM simulcast was a debacle. They didn't change the content or try to reboot. No fix is possible or worth the investment. They'll milk it while they can and it will follow KB 1520 into Oblivion...