willdav713 said:Isn't morning shows the first to be axed before a station's format changes? Take San Antonio's KTFM 102.7 Drex was axed a couple of weeks before the flip to K-Rock. Drex did mornings.
willdav713 said:I don't think they would touch KGSR since it has been improving... but with KUTX becoming AAA, and KGSR still has AAA lean to it.
DominiqueRadio said:willdav713 said:Isn't morning shows the first to be axed before a station's format changes? Take San Antonio's KTFM 102.7 Drex was axed a couple of weeks before the flip to K-Rock. Drex did mornings.
If getting a job offer in market #3 for a boatload of money was ever considered being axed.... chop me up!!!
Seriously though, Drex was never fired. He had Chicago calling him, bought up his contract, and he was off. There was no way KTFM would have ever fired him.
Joey Dee was doing mornings at the time of the death of 102.7 KTFM, and he was let go at the same time as the rest of the staff.
flyingdj said:Will there be any repercussions from this? Dale thinks that the "new" FCC allows an inadvertent comment that comes from someone not employed by the station.
Kent said:There shouldn't be, but I'm not sure if there's been a court decision saying "yes" or "no" to it. The so-called "fleeting expletive" is technically legal, though the Bush FCC tried to crack down on it. There really are no such things as "forbidden words." The FCC has only forbidden contexts in its rules.
rbrucecarter5 said:I get so tired of the same worn out old list of about 24 words used to express strong disapproval. With over a million words currently in the English language, you would think people could communicate much more effectively without resorting to the same old list. Are they really so unintelligent?