I recorded Wednesday's news and talk block, finally giving up on the new recorder and going back to the tried and true Tascam. I listened to the now-truncated "Colorado's Morning News" from 5 to 6 am, followed by "Ross Kaminsky on the News" until 9 am.
The first of these four hours is pretty much the same as before: a couple of six-minute newscasts, two shorter newscasts, two business-news segments...for which Jeana Gondek was the solo anchor. There were also two two-minute sportscasts read by news anchor Chad Bower. Traffic reports were included as well, adjacent to the newscasts. In the first half-hour, Gondek also had an interview with ABC News correspondent Steven Portnoy about the congressional vote on the Jeffrey Epstein files. All pretty familiar and not much different from before.
The changes kick in at 6 am when Ross Kaminsky comes on board. There are four newscasts, roughly at quarter hours...though KOA is not particularly good at sticking to a clock. All the newscasts, read by Gondek, were usually three minutes in length, including brief sports items, all followed by traffic reports.
Other features...business news, dedicated sportscasts, news interviews...have all been replaced by segments where Kaminsky is the lead voice. Kaminsky still does interviews, but they're not conducted in a manner that a journalist would conduct them. To be fair, Kaminsky has said he is not a journalist and has said that he wouldn't attempt to influence the manner in which Gondek reports news. Still, hearing interviews conducted by a less-than-neutral interviewer makes it seem less like news and more like propaganda.
In other ways, the line between news and opinion are also blurred in the non-newscast segments of the 6-9 am block, especially when Gondek and Kaminsky are engaging in back-and-forth banter. I hasten to make clear that Gondek never expresses news-related opinions on the program.
There were three interviews in that morning's program. One, in the 8 am hour about potentially dangerous toys, was timely and fairly uncontroversial. It was the interview that represented the least amount of change from "Colorado's Morning News".
The first interview, in the 6 am hour, was with Chris Stirewalt, political analyst for NewsNation. Kaminsky started out by asking a question about recent polling regarding President Trump's performance. Kaminsky asked the question in a manner that suggested that some media were cheering for Trump to have poor polling numbers. Stirewalt was a good diplomat; he contradicted Kaminsky's premise by pointing out that, objectively, Trump isn't polling well and appears to have run out of the traditional "honeymoon" period for newly installed presidents.
It was actually a pretty decent interview, despite occasional interjections of opinion. One weird note is that both Stirewalt and Kaminsky said they don't like the term "affordability" but never explained their dislike of it.
The interview in the 7 am hour, though, was pure propaganda, and esoteric, too. It was with the president of the National Right to Work Committee (i.e., anti-union), Mark Mix. The interview was about a package of bills being developed by Sen. Bill Cassidy (R-Louisiana) that Kaminsky positioned as bills to "modernize and add a little more freedom to American labor laws". Among other things, the bills would require secret balloting for union representation elections and restrictions on picketing. This was a very friendly interview; Kaminsky didn't challenge Mix at all.
There was a weird element to this interview: Kaminsky attacked Sen. Josh Hawley (R-Missouri), who apparently opposes Cassidy's bills and has introduced bills of his own to strength unions' positions in representation elections through mandatory arbitration and other measures.
Unsurprisingly, one of his (Cassidy's) opponents is one of the worst Republicans by far in the U.S. Senate, a guy named Josh Hawley, who might as well be a Democrat on most issues.
Josh Hawley is a socially conservative Democrat.
OK, we get it. Kaminsky doesn't like Democrats and uses the word "Democrat" as a cudgel. But, as someone who's from Missouri originally and who still tries to keep up with goings-on in the state, I found those statements to be downright bizarre. I'm no fan of Josh Hawley, either, for other reasons, but this was just weird. He ought to look up "Harold Volkmer" sometime to see what a socially conservative Democrat from Missouri really was like. (Disclaimer: I was acquainted with Rep. Volkmer back when I was a reporter.)
I don't see this as something that attracts a morning drive-time audience.
Other segments were generally less political, though Kaminsky kept referring to the Epstein files while saying he didn't really want to get into many details about them. But he talked about them in several segments anyway.
While listening to the recording of the Wednesday program, I came to realize a common theme among KOA's programming. It's repellent. The talk show hosts sound terrible. Ross Kaminsky's voice is the least offensive but I can only take so much of it...and that has nothing to do with what I think of his political stands. I've mentioned the raspy, nasal quality of Michael Brown's voice in another thread. Mandy Connell has a voice that could strip paint from the nearest wall. The sports-talk programming sounds more normal but is of interest only to sports fans. The top-of-hour IDs are overproduced, as if to appeal to 16-year-old gamers. The blindster.com commercials (for window coverings) are numerous and repetitive. The Voltair encoding is cranked up high so that it sounds like a low bitrate stream. It almost sounds as if the station is trying to drive away listeners. No wonder its ratings performance is mediocre at best. I was criticized in another thread for saying that iHeart was incompetent in its management of KOA. Based on what I heard, I stick by that conclusion.
They could do so much better. They probably won't. It wouldn't surprise me if, in the next round of cuts, the news elements of the morning-drive programming were eliminated altogether and what KOA ends up with is another cookie-cutter talk show. They may lose an expense but they'll also lose listeners and revenue. Not a winning proposition, and another example of how radio needs to be re-imagined. iHeart isn't too big to fail, and its size may in fact lead it to fail.