4
4UH8SIMBKAGN
Guest
Once again the Los Angeles Times upholds its tradition of slanting the news, partial truths and outright left wing lies. This is a total lying hit piece on California conservative talk radio. Interesting that this is published after a week that John & Ken have raked the L.A. Times over the coals for not covering their tax revolt that attracted 15,000 people on 3/7 in Fullerton.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-talkradio15-2009mar15,0,39114.story
I think Michael Finnegan forgot these facts, among others:
KFI REPLACED John Ziegler with Kennedy and Suits. No local talkshow time was lost.
KABC has expanded Doug McIntyre's show to 5 hours from 4.
KOGO has added local host Chip Franklin to mornings from WBAL in Baltimore in a shift that was all news but now is talk and news.
KSTE Sacramento had its best ratings book in history (Fall 2008) moving 4.3 to 5.5 to place second of all Sacramento stations beaten only by sister news/talk KFBK, the perennial leader in Sacramento. The two, alone, command an incredible and record 13.2 share of Sacramento radio. Salem talk KTKZ had it's best ratings book ever. Even KSFO from San Francisco in the Sacramento ratings doubled.
KFI climbed to a 4.3 share in the January PPM. It's highest in over a year and rates as the #3 station in Los Angeles. The article failed to included John & Ken's KFI cume from the San Bernardino-Riverside PPM, Ventura-Oxnard and San Diego ratings.
KOGO had higher ratings in the Fall 2008 book than it did in the previous Fall book. It's Winter 2009 P1 ratings are also higher than the Winter P1 2008 ratings report. It rates as the #2 station in San Diego.
KSFO's ratings were up 10% in January 2009 just 0.1 of a point less than it's highest rating in the last year.
The SCBA announced that automotive advertising in Los Angeles radio was down 2/3 in January 2009. Cutbacks in advertising and jobs, due to the economy, has hit radio, tv and yes, even newspapers. I guess we couldn't tell that by how thin the Sunday Los Angeles has become. They even have dropped the local news section, the California section. If you follow www.laobserved.com almost every single week there are job layoffs reported at the Los Angeles Times. Those circulation numbers at the Los Angeles Times have only been pointing one way, south. Now, I guess, they shouldn't do anything like file by bankruptcy? Oh, that's right, they already did.
I hope the rumor that Rupert Murdoch wants the Los Angeles Times is true. We'll finally get some "fair and balanced" truth in a Los Angeles newspaper. Wouldn't that be great, for once.
http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-talkradio15-2009mar15,0,39114.story
I think Michael Finnegan forgot these facts, among others:
KFI REPLACED John Ziegler with Kennedy and Suits. No local talkshow time was lost.
KABC has expanded Doug McIntyre's show to 5 hours from 4.
KOGO has added local host Chip Franklin to mornings from WBAL in Baltimore in a shift that was all news but now is talk and news.
KSTE Sacramento had its best ratings book in history (Fall 2008) moving 4.3 to 5.5 to place second of all Sacramento stations beaten only by sister news/talk KFBK, the perennial leader in Sacramento. The two, alone, command an incredible and record 13.2 share of Sacramento radio. Salem talk KTKZ had it's best ratings book ever. Even KSFO from San Francisco in the Sacramento ratings doubled.
KFI climbed to a 4.3 share in the January PPM. It's highest in over a year and rates as the #3 station in Los Angeles. The article failed to included John & Ken's KFI cume from the San Bernardino-Riverside PPM, Ventura-Oxnard and San Diego ratings.
KOGO had higher ratings in the Fall 2008 book than it did in the previous Fall book. It's Winter 2009 P1 ratings are also higher than the Winter P1 2008 ratings report. It rates as the #2 station in San Diego.
KSFO's ratings were up 10% in January 2009 just 0.1 of a point less than it's highest rating in the last year.
The SCBA announced that automotive advertising in Los Angeles radio was down 2/3 in January 2009. Cutbacks in advertising and jobs, due to the economy, has hit radio, tv and yes, even newspapers. I guess we couldn't tell that by how thin the Sunday Los Angeles has become. They even have dropped the local news section, the California section. If you follow www.laobserved.com almost every single week there are job layoffs reported at the Los Angeles Times. Those circulation numbers at the Los Angeles Times have only been pointing one way, south. Now, I guess, they shouldn't do anything like file by bankruptcy? Oh, that's right, they already did.
I hope the rumor that Rupert Murdoch wants the Los Angeles Times is true. We'll finally get some "fair and balanced" truth in a Los Angeles newspaper. Wouldn't that be great, for once.