Holy cow.
Okay.
Let me
pull rank provide insight and guidance as a former programmer.
@Mark Roberts is absolutely correct about the priorities:
1) Figure out how to replace at least four minutes per hour (sometimes more) of content that was coming from CBS. Some of that could be added spot load.
2) Determine whether the top-of-the-hour remains nationally focused or whether they'll start leading with local stories at the top.
3) Adjust the news wheel accordingly.
Beyond that, you apply any change to a successful radio station with a medicine dropper. For those too young to remember---
So, if....and I mean
IF...
(screen goes all wavy, harp music plays):
1-There's too big an audience disconnect with KCBS having 100% less CBS.
2-Audacy wants to distance its brand from Bari Weiss' devaluation and destruction of CBS News' image and reputation.
The simplest thing is to change
only the call letters. And the logical time to do it is the same time CBS News goes away---otherwise, you're changing stuff twice.
A filing is made with the FCC to change 740 to KFRC, effective May 23.
Randy Thomas re-records the legal ID
exactly as it was before, except for the four letters before "AM":
"When you need to know. KFRC-AM. KFRC-FM and HD-1. San Francisco, Oakland, San Jose. An Audacy station."
The music beds remain the same.
The traffic folks say "Your next update is at (time) on the traffic leader, KFRC."
The anchor lockout to traffic and weather on the 8s is "...on All News 106-9 and AM 740, KFRC."
The lead in to the story promo montage leading into the newscast at :59 is "Coming up on KFRC:"
The reporters lock out with "In (city), (reporter), KFRC."
There may be a few other "KCBS"s sprinkled around the hour, but not many. Those become "KFRC"s.
And all of it is delivered like you've been doing it since Marconi figured out the wireless.
The sound remains constant and reassuring.
Because.....
The station is #2 with an 8.3 and you don't want to f**k it up.
And before anyone suggests that a (retired) pro is mocking the ideas of the people who haven't worked in radio---nope. You've just read what I'd write in an internal memo.
Welcome to the inside.