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KFI 640 New Studios

Nobody was saying that. Audacity had several problem stations and the switched one of them.
You might be forgiven for not remembering (you read and comment on thousands of posts every month), but I do remember. Start here for a refresher: https://www.radiodiscussions.com/threads/kroq-billing.742221/page-4#post-6439193

Also here: https://www.radiodiscussions.com/threads/audacy.742775/#post-6441278

And by the way, it's Audacy - Audacity is freeware audio editor.
 
You might be forgiven for not remembering (you read and comment on thousands of posts every month), but I do remember. Start here for a refresher: https://www.radiodiscussions.com/threads/kroq-billing.742221/page-4#post-6439193
Those were comments about KROQ and its ongoing issues. They still do, but Amp was doing low billings and getting low ratings. Double whammy.
I was involved in radio in programming and management in LA since 1992 and did extensive consulting in the 70's as well. I'm very familiar with the stations.
And by the way, it's Audacy - Audacity is freeware audio editor.
Spell checker gone wild. That, as illustrated here, has to be the most stupid radio group name I've ever heard. For an audio service, to use a name with abnormal spelling is just a bad idea.

The only worse spell-check correction I know was Microsoft Word in the 90's when it would take group operator "Beasley" and change it to "Beastly".
 
Those were comments about KROQ and its ongoing issues. They still do, but Amp was doing low billings and getting low ratings. Double whammy.
Nevertheless, posters were in essence saying that the chance of Audacy blowing up ANY station to simulcast KNX was slim to zero. You're a smart man David, and I respect you. I would respect you more if, when you misspeak, you were as quick to correct yourself as you are to correcting others.
 
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Good talk on this station. I like Conway's show. He usually keeps politics out of it. Although,he obviously leans to the right.
 
There definitely has been a lot of talk on air about the new KFI studios, but from what I heard, it seems to be a temporary move and then next year they are moving to a new building. At least that’s the impression I got from listening to the various hosts this week talk about the move. Didn’t make a lot of sense to me, but I do agree that the sound is better coming from the new studios (and also might explain why they were working to improve the transmitter earlier this year).
 
There definitely has been a lot of talk on air about the new KFI studios, but from what I heard, it seems to be a temporary move and then next year they are moving to a new building. At least that’s the impression I got from listening to the various hosts this week talk about the move. Didn’t make a lot of sense to me, but I do agree that the sound is better coming from the new studios (and also might explain why they were working to improve the transmitter earlier this year).
I didn’t know about the new building, but consolidating use of space now makes some sense—-the big move will be easier, and it may be possible to sub-lease empty space in the meantime.
 
And by the way, it's Audacy - Audacity is freeware audio editor.
Spell checker gone wild. That, as illustrated here, has to be the most stupid radio group name I've ever heard. For an audio service, to use a name with abnormal spelling is just a bad idea.
I'll share a humorous anecdote here which illustrates David's point. On some of the former Entercom stations, the legal ID includes a reference to "audacy.com" (not uncommon for radio group owners these days).

A friend, not in radio but who knows that I am, e-mailed me shortly after the name change and asked why she kept getting a travel agency website when she typed that in. Turns out she was accessing "odyssey.com" which at the time belonged to a now-defunct company that brokered cruise line packages.

Leave it to David Field to forget entirely that radio is not a visual medium and choose a name for his radio company that sounds like a common word to the radio listeners and have no clue about the "clever" spelling ...
 
Leave it to David Field to forget entirely that radio is not a visual medium and choose a name for his radio company that sounds like a common word to the radio listeners and have no clue about the "clever" spelling ...
It's "cute" in theory, horrible in practice. Lest everyone forgets, young David no longer sees his company as a radio company - he fancies it a "multi-platform audio company" - or something like that.
 
It's "cute" in theory, horrible in practice. Lest everyone forgets, young David no longer sees his company as a radio company - he fancies it a "multi-platform audio company" - or something like that.
Oh yes, I forgot his reasoning. But he still forgot that people can't see a clever spelling when they only hear the name, so he's still an idiot for doing that.
 
Here in Atlanta when Radio.com changed to Audacy I remember some on air talent having to SPELL the company name. That is no way to do business.
 
Audacy is a really bad name/brand for reasons previously discussed. iHeart is better because it is more straight forward but is also terrible. It looks stupid and already seems dated.

Clear Channel moved to an "i" name probably to attract some coolness factor from the Apple brands, but they made the change right as Apple started moving away from that branding scheme. Sure there is still iPhone and iPad, but the products introduced since then have ditched that brand.... Apple Watch, HomePod, AirPods, etc. In some cases they have converted an existing "i" product to a new brand like iTunes > Apple Music.
 
The KFI hosts are notorious for including the listener in on what goes on at iHeart Los Angeles. For example internal memos are shared on air. If they have a beef with some new employee policy, that is shared in detail. The Employee Of The Month is introduced and celebrated on air. The hosts share personal problems and details about their lives. The KFI hosts have been there a very long time ( Handel, Gary and Shannon, John and Ken, and Tim Conway Jr.). When you've had a relationship with your audience for 20 plus years, it's hard not to have the level of comfort and sharing of their lives that they do. The listeners love that, as a lot of them have been their listeners just as long and consider those hosts as family members and longtime friends.

I know a lot of KFI fans like myself feel that KFI is hands down the best News and Talk station in the country. I don't think any other station in the US has anywhere near the kind of relationship that KFI has with their listeners. When I listen to the radio at least 80 percent is listening to KFI. Once you're hooked, everyone else is just mediocre and a waste listening to them.
It makes the talent more relatable to the audience. I dare say that it is a big part of KFI's success. If you can share some of yourself, good or bad, the audience respects that. Where I work, most of our talent occasionally share stories about themselves, and things going on around here, be it personal or off air. Sometimes, if a show is on a roll, it's just as entertaining off air, as the show on air is.
 
It makes the talent more relatable to the audience. I dare say that it is a big part of KFI's success. If you can share some of yourself, good or bad, the audience respects that. Where I work, most of our talent occasionally share stories about themselves, and things going on around here, be it personal or off air. Sometimes, if a show is on a roll, it's just as entertaining off air, as the show on air is.
In my experience, it works in spoken-word formats, where the audience is there for the talent, rather than music. It used to work (to a lesser degree) in Top 40 and MOR, at stations with major personalities (Robert W. Morgan could do an hour on a burned-out light in the men’s room), but that was a long time ago.
 
Leave it to David Field to forget entirely that radio is not a visual medium and choose a name for his radio company that sounds like a common word to the radio listeners and have no clue about the "clever" spelling ...
He is an aud one, when it comes to names. The previous company name was either a device used in large homes to communicate with a central point, or an invasive medical procedure done with blue gloves. Even more audacious is the amount of money probably paid for some company to come up with the non word Audacy. Bet he could have bought a bunch of Lyriq's for his top producers with that dough. DOH!
 
If you ask anyone not familiar with the radio business to spell out the name of a media company called Audacy, it's always O-D-Y-S-S-E-Y, that's if they can even spell that right! Yes, that's a problem if someone is searching for you on the internet, for example.
 
If you ask anyone not familiar with the radio business to spell out the name of a media company called Audacy, it's always O-D-Y-S-S-E-Y, that's if they can even spell that right! Yes, that's a problem if someone is searching for you on the internet, for example.
What is really odd is if they thought so highly of the name change, why haven't they changed the highly visible sign on their Dallas, Texas office building even a full year after the change?
 
(Robert W. Morgan could do an hour on a burned-out light in the men’s room), but that was a long time ago.
He could also do an off-air hour berating the engineers, office staff and anyone else who wandered by.

I have dealt with several #1 morning guys in LA who were also un-fun to manage. It must be the effects of the air pollution in the Southland. I'll have to ask Tina Delgado...
 
If you ask anyone not familiar with the radio business to spell out the name of a media company called Audacy, it's always O-D-Y-S-S-E-Y, that's if they can even spell that right! Yes, that's a problem if someone is searching for you on the internet, for example.
I have seen social media comments spelling it like Oddity or Oddicy. Having been through the two dozen versions of "K-Love" in the diary days in LA, I really worry about any name that is not phonetic.
 
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