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CBS News Radio Closed

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I'm surprised anyone still watches TWC.

There are websites (including NOAA) and apps for that now.
I mean... I was gifted a C Crane Pocket radio for Christmas this year and actually use the NOAA weather radio feature at times.

I'm definitely an outlier there, big time, though! I bet I'm one of like 8 20-somethings that know weather radio even exists😂.
 
Yup, I am, too. I'm in my mid-20s. CBS TOH updates are my primary (and often only) news consumption. It's been that way since middle school. If there's something on one of the newscasts that I find interesting, I'll dig deeper online.

I find it too easy to get sucked into the internet news vortex so I actively avoid most news content online. I don't have any news apps, nor do I regularly visit any news websites.

Life is better without being connected to negative news 24/7/365. Far better.

I'll miss CBS Radio News a lot.
 
I'm definitely an outlier there, big time, though! I bet I'm one of like 8 20-somethings that know weather radio even exists😂.
I'm an outlier too! However, my formative years happened at a time when radio still had some relevance (late 90s and early 2000s), so I'm probably less than an outlier than you (in general, many people under 30 barely know what radio is, because they grew up online during a time where the only things they know are Google, Facebook and Twitter, among other (anti)social media (traps)platforms).

That said, I do pay more attention to the news than you (probably more than I should LOL), but I do generally like to just listen to the CBS TOH news reports while driving, because it's simpler, and they usually give a decent overview of the day's happenings (it was better when they had a full 5-6 minutes 7 days a week).

c
 
There is public perception. When I hear hear FOX news on a music station, I can't help but think "conservative". I like streaming small market music radio stations particularly full service, and I honestly can't think of one that uses FOX (I'm sure there are), but it's usually ABC or CBS.
WSAT outside Charlotte is a community station with a lot of local advertisers. I haven't listened since it switched from 60s and 70s to 70s and 80s, but it has had Fox News Radio for several years. I never perceived a conservative bias.
 
I never listened past the "This is ABC News" optional cutaway at 3:30. So I'll take your word for it.
I remember Stardust (ABC standards) affiliates could do one of three versions. I never heard an affiliate play music during the first two minutes or so, so I think the newscast was just part of the feed. But there was one station that would drop the newscast after the first opportunity, run commercials, and go back to music. Another affiliate would stay with the newscast until it went back to music. And then there were cases where the entire first six minutes of the hour was a newscast followed by commercials. One affiliate did this with another network's newscast.
 
Despite its money problems, Salem still owns two distinct networks, one for religion stations, one for conservative talk.
I think I'm remembering correctly that the standards station in Charlotte used Salem, and then switched to Town Hall. I may have heard on this site that Town Hall was Salem. At least one of the other stations under the same owner as the standards station were Christian talk, and the standards station went back to simulcasting that station or those stations.
 
I like that third one. The first one is what used to be on two stations I listen to. One gave up top of the hour news, and wasn't even airing it live, but would finish the song first.

One-third of that was TMI, in my opinion, and off-topic.
 
WSAT outside Charlotte is a community station with a lot of local advertisers. I haven't listened since it switched from 60s and 70s to 70s and 80s, but it has had Fox News Radio for several years. I never perceived a conservative bias.
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 know it’s not that easy but it’s a shame they couldn’t keep the TOH newscasts anchored by existing CBS News broadcast and streaming channel news staff. Similar to how a local news station provides weather updates for a local radio station.
 
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.
The bias can be there but difficult to see. Let's pretend the top 10 news stories in the current hour are: A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J. CBS's newscast airs A, B, C, D, E, F, maybe G if enough seconds remain in the cast.

Fox looks at the same stories and airs A, C, E, F, H, J. If you listen to a Fox newscast, you'd never know B, D, G or I had happened. Why? Because those latter stories don't fit the narrative Fox wants to sell you. Bias by omission.

NPR does what CBS does, only they give more seconds to each of the biggest or newest news stories. So in their case it might be A, B, C, D, and if time permits E. Not enough time in the current hour to squeeze in the other stories. But E, F, G, etc. might have gotten the full treatment in earlier newscasts, and in any event all of those stories were (or will be) covered on Morning Edition and/or All Things Considered and/or Here and Now.
 
I think NPR understands that. There is an NPR station in Buffalo, WNED, that is in the commercial band and has decided to go commercial. They went to NPR and asked if they could run NPR programs on their commercial station. NPR told them no.

So the same company will be running both non-commercial and commercial stations on different frequencies.

Will they be able to comingle the funds to prop up whichever one is less successful?
 
I know it’s not that easy but it’s a shame they couldn’t keep the TOH newscasts anchored by existing CBS News broadcast and streaming channel news staff. Similar to how a local news station provides weather updates for a local radio station.
Primarily television talent sound terrible on the radio. They don't know how to write for it, and they aren't selected for TV roles based on their vocal talent.
 
Bari Weiss is my age? Thought she was in her 30s with how she's ruined CBS.
 
No, she just doesn't know how to act her age. Nor do I believe she has the maturity to run the place.
She hasn't led a large organization before. I think that's why Cibrowski is still there, to keep things running, because he has had that kind of experience.
 
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