BJ Shea Exits KZOK Mornings
In a late weekend shocker, BJ Shea has announced his exit from mornings at iHeartMedia Classic Rock 102.5 KZOK Seattle
radioinsight.com
radioinsight.com
To exit a station and announce it on a Sunday seems a little suspicious. Either he desired to exit on his own, or corporate forced him out for something egregious (I can't imagine BJ doing something completely off the rails to get fired so something major happened between he and management)
I’ve been a lifelong KZOK fan, but I don’t really find myself listening as much as I used to. BJ Shea absolutely gave me a reason to change my listening habits and come back for the first time in a while. I think iheart is dreaming if they think they can replace him with ease (I actually think they got extremely lucky when they got BJ in the first place). Obviously he’s a strong personality, but that’s part of what made him successful on KISW for so long.If they screwed with his contract, I hope he sues them into oblivion. iHeart are a cancerous company to work for. Wish they would kill that part of Telecom 96 and bring back more regional ownerships, but it might be too little too late for that.
But back to KZOK; it’s an absolutely soulless radio station in 2024. Almost completely voice tracked from other markets, bland imaging, relatively small playlist, etc. It’s almost bizarre, since 95.7 doesn’t seem to have these problems.
You’re absolutely right about the demographics, but from the standpoint of a listener in the market, it’s pretty evident that a lot more TLC goes into 95.7. Even if the playlist is similar in size, it’s hard to tell when it seems like they hit the same 20 songs over and over again. To make a long story short, I listened for the morning show and not the music (despite being a classic rock fan, there’s only so much Nirvana and Guns N Roses one can stand).They're very different radio stations. One is classic rock, the other is variety hits. They appeal to different demographics. Classic rock is more male, variety hits is slightly more female. They share some songs, but the presentation is different. Playlist size is about the same. iHeart classic rock stations tend to have strong morning shows, if you look around the company. So I would expect they'll replace him with someone similar.
You’re absolutely right about the demographics, but from the standpoint of a listener in the market, it’s pretty evident that a lot more TLC goes into 95.7.
Even if the playlist is similar in size, it’s hard to tell when it seems like they hit the same 20 songs over and over again.
The problem with heritage talent is it can sometimes attract only heritage audience. If the demos were going in the wrong direction, that would be a problem. Sometimes a host can age out of the demo. We don't know if that happened, or if the talent simply is going through his own change of life situation. That happened to Danny a couple of times.Snagging BJ Shea was almost the perfect move to replace the void left by Danny, since he’s been a Seattle institution among male listeners for so many years.
It’s too bad Chris can’t duplicate himself. He’s a great host and consistently does a fantastic job as the PM drive host on 95.7. But there’s only so much money that can be spent on talent. From my own perspective, the tracked hosts on KZOK have never done much for me (and it seems like I’m not the only one thinking it).Chris Sargent is PD for both stations. So he co-ordinates how they're run.
That may be how it seems, but it's not how it is. Both stations shift songs around every week, and the songs they play heavily also change. The number of spins their most played songs get each week is exactly the same. The main thing is that whenever someone tunes in, they hear a big hit. Nobody listens non-stop all day, and they don't program for that.
The problem with heritage talent is it can sometimes attract only heritage audience. If the demos were going in the wrong direction, that would be a problem. Sometimes a host can age out of the demo. We don't know if that happened, or if the talent simply is going through his own change of life situation. That happened to Danny a couple of times.
While I respect your opinion, I adamantly disagree that BJ aged out of the demo.
Perhaps the playlist itself on KZOK isn’t problematic, but many listeners would agree that it’s pretty predictable and repetitive.
I’m curious to see what happens when the dust settles on this one. Maybe at that point we’ll glean more about what motivates people to tune into 102.5. They’ve been blessed with great morning show talent for years. Take that away, and who knows what will happen. The main point I’m trying to make is that the incentive to actively choose KZOK has dwindled year after year. Let’s see what they do next right the ship.I didn't say he has, just that it can be a problem for people his age. He may also feel the same way you do about the music.
Some people want predictable and repetitive. That's what perpetuates monogamy. I'll point out that KZOK is a Top 5 station. They clearly appeal to a lot of people...just not you.
You bring up a good point here, because who knows what they will do next. Obviously there’s bound to be a flood of comments about long retired hosts on this thread, but I am genuinely curious about what their options might be.The question now is who do you get for mornings after nuking a morning show that was actually doing good and establishing itself, not to mention they just hired a new producer a few months ago. Do they go canned programming/syndicated and potentially lose market share or try to get a legacy talent on mornings. Bob Rivers is retired, Kent and Alan are retired, and let's not keep going back to Robin and Maynard, they're not coming back. They could try to bring back Chris and Dana, albeit I don't think Chris Collins was well welcomed in Seattle.
The question now is who do you get for mornings after nuking a morning show that was actually doing good and establishing itself,
...I hear Mitch Levy is available lolLately some iHeart classic rock stations have been hiring talent with sports background. They just did it in Boston a few months ago.
The co-host of the city's #1 morning show quit, and now hosts morning at iHeart's classic rocker WZLX. Ratings have gone up a full share since.
I did a quick search, and found a Reddit thread from St Louis about his exit from KSHE. Almost all of the comments were negative. It’s the internet (and you can usually take it with a grain of salt), but I’m not sure this is a slam dunk.One name that would be new to Seattle is Josh Innes. He recently left KSHE in St. Louis. He's worked for iHeart in Nashville where he hosted mornings at a classic rocker that was syndicated to WLLZ in Detroit. Before that he did sports talk in Houston and Philadelphia.