• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Steve Gregory and more fired from KFI

Not surprised. There are news people at TTN. So they will supply news to the stations that use it.

And the award for the greatest margin by which the point can be missed goes to…

Look, BigA, not everyone can know every market (which is why I generally confine myself to California), but you clearly don’t grasp the impact of Robin Bertolucci and Steve Gregory.

We know what they’ll fill the hole with. You don’t seem to know the size of the hole.
 
Steve Gregory was KFI's best reporter, and the go to for the hosts to get the scoop and coverage of local crime and politics no one else had. His news specials were top notch and award winning. You have to be a regular listener to fully understand how HUGE this loss is. KFI's news coverage will never be the same.

How sad to see the gutting that is happening to the best news and talk radio station in the US. Why are they getting rid of the best and most talented???
 
This you?

Was there anything factually wrong with what I said? Once again, my name is not Bob Pittman. Try to understand.

He said he's cutting duplication. There are news people at TTN. They can cover local news for KFI.

I'm not saying Steve Gregory is unimportant to the station, just as I didn't say Robin Bertolucci was unimportant. They would have been cut years ago if they weren't important. This isn't about firing bad people or firing hard workers. It's about cutting costs. That's it.

You want people to attack Bob Pittman? There's a whole site dedicated to that.

Why are they getting rid of the best and most talented???

Because they're also the most expensive.
 
Just breaking; Gary & Shannon are talking about it on the air. Deep cuts to KFI’s news operations.
My sources tell me it's pretty much the entire news operation including the great Chris Little.

If it's all about the bottom-line and the "business", then why don't these bean-counters pick a business where the quality of the product doesn't matter. (not sure what that business might be, but it's not broadcasting)
 

Attachments

  • Untitled.mp4
    706.9 KB
Last edited:
If it's all about the bottom-line and the "business", then why don't these bean-counters pick a business where the quality of the product doesn't matter. (not sure what that business might be, but it's not broadcasting)

The problem isn't the bean counters. The problem is the audience for broadcast radio is dropping. It's been dropping for a while. It dropped while Steve Gregory was there. I'm not talking about share. I'm talking about the actual audience for broadcast radio. We know fewer people listen. So when fewer people listen, you need to scale down the budget to the size of the audience. That's what's happening here. It's not just KFI or iHeart. It happened at KLOS. It happened at KPCC. It happened at the LA Times. Fewer people use traditional media, so traditional media can no longer staff as though it's the 1980s. I have no reason to believe that the people who left are coming back.
 
Why would anyone WANT to come back?

Once again: They left while Steve and Robin were there. Having them on staff didn't stop the audience from leaving. You can't budget on people coming back. You budget based on actual listening numbers. That's how these decisions are being made.

How many people here listened to Steve's Sunday afternoon with college students? That's the question people should be asking.
 
The problem is the audience for broadcast radio is dropping. It's been dropping for a while.
Well, it's a self-fulfilling prophecy, isn't it?
  • Management cuts people to boost profits.
  • Quality suffers and listeners leave.
  • Less listeners justify more management cuts.
  • Quality decreases again and more listeners leave.
  • Upper management must deliver more profits to Wall Street, so more cuts are required.
  • Quality decreases and more listeners leave.
  • Rinse and repeat until all value is drained out.
Radio is still capable of delivering a quality product, attracting listeners, and making money. The problem is that outside investors can never be satisfied, no matter how much money is brought in.

And debt service due to overexpansion is a bitch, too.
 
How many people here listened to Steve's Sunday afternoon with college students? That's the question people should be asking.
The question should be - how can we sell this station or just flip the "off" switch and get into the widget business, since they clearly don't want to be broadcasters. Give someone who wants to be a broadcaster a shot.
 
Well, it's a self-fulfilling prophecy, isn't it?

All of that ignores that there was a massive technological change where people stopped buying radios are instead bought phones.

Once again: It's not the 1980s. There's no amount of staff you can hire that will cause people to throw away their phones and computers, and instead listen to broadcast radio. That train left a long time ago. The debt was caused 20 years ago. They never really dealt with it. They're dealing with it now.

The question should be - how can we sell this station or just flip the "off" switch and get into the widget business, since they clearly don't want to be broadcasters. Give someone who wants to be a broadcaster a shot.

Nobody is buying radio stations. Please wake up. How much do you get paid at that LPFM? Do you think Steve Gregory would be happy working for free? That's the problem. There are people now who are willing to work for free. People get their news from people who work for free. That's the real problem. The real broadcasters you talk about would have to work for free.
 
Well, it's a self-fulfilling prophecy, isn't it?
  • Management cuts people to boost profits.
  • Quality suffers and listeners leave.
  • Less listeners justify more management cuts.
  • Quality decreases again and more listeners leave.
  • Upper management must deliver more profits to Wall Street, so more cuts are required.
  • Quality decreases and more listeners leave.
  • Rinse and repeat until all value is drained out.
Radio is still capable of delivering a quality product, attracting listeners, and making money. The problem is that outside investors can never be satisfied, no matter how much money is brought in.

And debt service due to overexpansion is a bitch, too.
Nailed it on all counts.
 
Status
This thread has been closed due to inactivity. You can create a new thread to discuss this topic.


Back
Top Bottom