They may very well end up licensing the brand and content to whomever steps into the void, particularly for the Audacy newsers.Whatever company is in charge of the NBC Radio News IP (Comcast? NBCUniversal?) got out of radio years ago, yet licenses the sounder and name to iHeart so the name brand lives on. I don't see why Paramount-Skydance-Warner Brothers-Discovery-whatever can't do the same?
c
bayarearadio.org
I'm not saying that they shouldn't cover it, only that it should not be the lead when more substantive stories are out there.Keep in mind that what the president does is news, regardless of who he is. This particular president was a media star before he became a politician. So he knows how the media works, and knows how to control the conversation. He does that regularly with his social media posts, that are quotable and attributable, thus are news. In the 24 hour news cycle, those kinds of things move to the top of all newscasts because the president said it. An example of that might be his comment on the death of Robert Mueller.
Trump skillfully uses the fact that they all start slobbering like Pavlov-trained dogs whenever he posts something goofy on Truth Social.
It's why he does it frankly, and they never seem to figure that out.
Imagine yourself as an editor in a newsroom.I'm not saying that they shouldn't cover it, only that it should not be the lead when more substantive stories are out there.
Trump skillfully uses the fact that they all start slobbering like Pavlov-trained dogs whenever he posts something goofy on Truth Social.
It's why he does it frankly, and they never seem to figure that out.
Do you think your competitors are going to make the same decision? Unlikely. Then where does that put you? Not in a good place, probably.
I've had real-life obligations get in the way of replying, but you are spot on regarding demographics and listener habits.While this is a big story due to the longevity of the CBS radio network, how many people under 60-65 these days are actually "tuning in" at the top of the hour to hear network news on radio? Seems like most listeners won't even care if stations run a different network or none at all.
The 1967 sounder was replaced in 2001?!My late mom sometimes listened to NPR News on car rides. And after moving from the Midwest to California, around 1998 or '99 I discovered KCBS All-News and the tail end of that 1967 CBS sounder.
Someone else posted the 2012 CBS webpage with downloadable MP3 files of its radio jingles. It links to one version dated the 1980s-90s, and another from the early 2000s-2018, essentially confirming NetworkNewsMusic's timeframe of 1967-2001.The 1967 sounder was replaced in 2001?!
I could've sworn I'd heard it on KCBS as late as 2005 or so!
Nevertheless, the sounder they used from 2001-2018 is OK too, and still better than the newest (and as fate would have it, final) version.
My memory of KCBS before 2004 is hazy because I tended to mostly listen to music stations back then, although I do have a distinct memory of taping a portion of a traffic and weather segment (I can clearly remember the old traffic and weather sounders, which were used in some form until at least 2008) sometime in 1998 (the tape's long gone now, I'm sure, and I was terrible at documenting things then, so I can't prove it).
c
The few times I've sampled FNR, I didn't notice much of a bias either. I think the problem is more the toxicity of the Fox brand among liberal listeners; in other words, they will refuse to pay any mind to anything with the word Fox in its name, especially if it's news related.
I'm not saying that they shouldn't cover it, only that it should not be the lead when more substantive stories are out there.
Trump skillfully uses the fact that they all start slobbering like Pavlov-trained dogs whenever he posts something goofy on Truth Social.
It's why he does it frankly, and they never seem to figure that out.
Sadly, there is an audience out there who really believes that the mainstream media has not only been lying to them about what the President says but that has also been supportive of a federal bureaucracy that they believe is not serving the interest of the American electorate. Unfortunately, Fox, OAN, and others have been taking advantage of these beliefs (some of which have been held for a long time) for their own financial gain.
This is spot on, Mark. Very well stated. I think that by and large, CBS Radio does a very nice job figuring out what to use for their "lead" stories. They'll be missed for sure.Imagine yourself as an editor in a newsroom.
A story comes in, either on the wire or from one of your reporters, with something the president has said or done.
Assume you ignore it, or give it lesser prominence, because of the "here he goes again" factor.
Do you think your competitors are going to make the same decision? Unlikely. Then where does that put you? Not in a good place, probably.
Here's the thing: Trump's always got material. It may be crazy material, but it comes from one of the most powerful people in the world. And he's accessible. He complains about the media but he continues to engage with them. He takes out his frustrations through other means and through tools like Brendan Carr, and sometimes yells at individual reporters. But he makes news. It may not be good news, but news it is.
What Trump's opponents, especially progressives, haven't figured out: if you want better coverage, you had better engage with reporters and be consistent about it. Even if you don't always like what they do.
I'd concur. Their radio news is pretty good coverage and I don't see a whole lot of bias. Maybe slightly right at times. Yes, they occasionally use wording that might appeal to right wing folks more... but NPR news does that frequently with left leaning language and I'd say more often than I hear right wing buzz-words from Fox News Radio.The few times I've sampled FNR, I didn't notice much of a bias either. I think the problem is more the toxicity of the Fox brand among liberal listeners; in other words, they will refuse to pay any mind to anything with the word Fox in its name, especially if it's news related.
One exception I can think of is, perhaps, the storied 20th Century Fox movie studio, now owned by Disney, who notably removed "Fox" shortly after acquiring it).
c
I agree!It's a real shame that CBS is going away because they were clearly the best and (I'd say) most centrist of the radio news services.