An article on cnyradio.com quoted Citadel management saying Alexis just wanted to step down as PD, but she is not leaving. Certainly not a decision you see every day -- makes you wonder why she'd want to give up the benefits of being PD. If the format flips, it's not as if she's going to be "immune" to the requisite house-cleaning just because she's not management anymore. But, for what it's worth, the article also linked to a job posting. If Citadel was looking to flip the format on 95X, you'd think they would mention that in the posting, rather than soliciting people with rock experience. (Unless it's a bogus posting to throw people off and the "real" ad is one of those "blind box" ads in the national trades.)
Next item: Dave Allen. He's been applying for other jobs elsewhere for years. If he finally landed one, good for him. You can't blame him for wanting out -- look at how Citadel has treated 105.9 like a red-headed stepchild for years. WLTI has the most pathetic radio station booth at the State Fair... a mostly-empty tent with a huge bottle of pennies. Not to knock the effort of helping sick kids, but the booth isn't a real "attention-getter." No big boombox with jocks broadcasting live all day like 93Q or 95X.
I've always thought WLTI could do a much better job, if only they hired one or two more jocks and made a strong, concerted effort to increase brand awareness. Even though an at-work station should be music-intensive, it shouldn't be 100% jockless after 10AM either. Yes, it's mostly background music, but listeners get sick of hearing "the voice guy" after every other song, repeating the same 12 or 15 liners all day long. And most importantly, there's only so many live remotes and other appearances you can make when your on-air staff consists of one person.
On the other side of the argument, jockless is better than being voicetracked by someone who already appears on 1 or 2 other stations. There's nothing cheesier than hearing the same person using 3 different names to appear on 3 different stations... as if listeners will never touch the dial and figure out the scam.