Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:amfmxm said:GRC, your question is rooted in the premise that liberal/progressive talk radio doesn't work. Please explain KPOJ's success first (and WXXM/Madison) then revisit the question.
What was bouncing around my brain did not come out quite the way it should have on the screen. It is not MY premise that liberal/progressive talk radio doesn't work. (I was wondering out loud if it could.) My premise was that the conventional wisdom of most of the messages posted in R-I hold that liberal talk will not and can not work. The question I was asking: Are so many of the people in radio buying this concept that there are no players with the smarts and the willingness to make it work.
Thank you for the tip on some stations that are making it work. And thanks to the people who posted that they are currently doing civilized talk radio in their markets. That doesn't make the headlines in the industry columns and blogs.
That still leaves the question: If a licensee wants to give it a try, how do they recognize the "brains" that can actually make it work. Not the on air host necessarily. The responsible management person who can write the recipe for talent, promotion, and actual positioning of the "tone". My observation about Air America is that they tried to hit the ground with full-strength, fully-extreme message. Is it essential to begin with a more bland, more centrist position and then know when to get more "hard core" as time moves on.
You comments about small market merchants not wanting to offed the other side struck me as an example of the need to fully understand the effects of introducing new material to the Talk Radio scene that must be tailored to the market.
Recognizing the "brains" to make lib-talk work kind of goes back to my Clear Channel/WCAO example (I'm betting $100 that none of the Mays boys have ever voluntarily listened to a Black Gospel song). But maybe KPOJ is an even better example.
Realize that Lowry Mays & Tom Hicks--the two Texans who turned CC into the 1250-station monster--were two of George W. Bush's biggest supporters/contributors/fund-raisers in both his Texas gubernatorial campaign and his presidential campaigns. There is NO sympathy for liberal thought in CC--never has been, never will be. Yet they own most of the truly successful progressive talkers in the U.S. (KPOJ/Portland, WXXM/Madison, KTLK/LA, KKGN/San Francisco).
The first question is "Why?" And the answer, of course, is that there is money to be made.
The second question is "How?" And the answer is... they hired people who understand how radio works.
Program something that people in the market want to hear. Put it on a station they can hear. Promote it. And sell the "ears"--the audience generated by the programming/station/promotion--to advertisers who want to reach those people.
In truth, I think it really does help if the management & sales folks "believe in" (or at least, like) what they're selling--just like it helps if the salespeople for a Country station actually like Country--but it's not absolutely necessary. They just have to be smart enough to know that it doesn't matter what THEY like... it's what the LISTENER likes.
Regarding Air America...
I don't think their mistake was that they began with an extreme message. The lib-talk listener certainly wasn't offended. I do think that the "founding fathers" made enormous financial & operational errors. Their plan was grandiose when it obviously called for a more cautious approach--they went through money at a mad clip. Their top executives were mostly from other fields ("Hey, radio can't be THAT difficult!")... and no one had much of a grasp on radio station perspectives or, for that matter, network ad sales. Perhaps most critically, they did not anticipate just how much hostility they would encounter from Big Business advertisers--the folks who "underwrite" network radio. In other words, they really didn't do their homework. A little basic research would have saved them a lot of heartache, and money.
Jones Radio (now Dial Global) had everything that Air America didn't (and, apparently, still doesn't). And at this point, they seem to be the most likely to continue progressive talk radio in the long haul.