Only listening for a half-hour or so, and already I can tell this Stigall is very, very good. Great voice, well-spoken, great timing/pacing, and good interaction with callers. So far I'm very impressed. He sounds young, but "good young"-- not immature whatsoever. Quite frankly the station hasn't sounded this good in morning drive since Tony Bruno was the local host 21 years ago. This sounds like a younger, hipper, faster-paced version of the old Paul W. Smith show on WWDB. I only tuned in around 6:30 (so I may have missed it)-- but I have yet to hear pacifying garbage like, "Which 'Rocky' movie was the best?" or, "Who makes the best cheesesteak?" Good mix of interviews and conversation.
As for the station re-branding, my feelings are more mixed. I like the station's reverting back to the "Talkradio 1210" moniker (for at least the third time that I can recall). Actually, "The New" is being used. Given the station's ratings slide, aging demos, and stale sound, I like the idea.
The 839-1210 call-in number that's been around since the '70s has been retired, sort of. Instead of local Philly, Suburban, and South Jersey numbers, a single new toll-free 855-839-1210 is being used. Seems kind of counterproductive to roll out a "national-sounding" toll-free number (replacing local 215, 610, and 856 ones) while trying to hammer home the new "local" direction of the station. And what's the point? No one pays for long distance anymore, right?
I'm not quite sure why the station is doing this rollout in two separate phases, separated by two weeks. Seems kind of confusing for the listeners. I'm sure there's a good reason.
And most bizarre-- for a station clearly trying to re-brand itself, I'm still hearing the same tired sounders and beds for the legal ID, news, and traffic. And it's the same awful station voice (used since 2008 World Series) on the liners. Seems like a simple no-brainer here-- who re-brands without making those very basic changes?
One more thing-- every hour I'm hearing of "more live and local talk." Correct me if I'm wrong, but won't 1210 now have significantly FEWER live hours (specifically a pre-recorded afternoon drive)?
The station criticisms are minor. The new morning show is stellar. A great hire. With regard to the morning show, they did good.
I'm afraid to ask-- is Stigall here, or broadcasting over a line from Kansas City?
Stigall, Dom, and Rush will provide a solid lead-in for the one-hour Smerconish show at 3.
As for the station re-branding, my feelings are more mixed. I like the station's reverting back to the "Talkradio 1210" moniker (for at least the third time that I can recall). Actually, "The New" is being used. Given the station's ratings slide, aging demos, and stale sound, I like the idea.
The 839-1210 call-in number that's been around since the '70s has been retired, sort of. Instead of local Philly, Suburban, and South Jersey numbers, a single new toll-free 855-839-1210 is being used. Seems kind of counterproductive to roll out a "national-sounding" toll-free number (replacing local 215, 610, and 856 ones) while trying to hammer home the new "local" direction of the station. And what's the point? No one pays for long distance anymore, right?
I'm not quite sure why the station is doing this rollout in two separate phases, separated by two weeks. Seems kind of confusing for the listeners. I'm sure there's a good reason.
And most bizarre-- for a station clearly trying to re-brand itself, I'm still hearing the same tired sounders and beds for the legal ID, news, and traffic. And it's the same awful station voice (used since 2008 World Series) on the liners. Seems like a simple no-brainer here-- who re-brands without making those very basic changes?
One more thing-- every hour I'm hearing of "more live and local talk." Correct me if I'm wrong, but won't 1210 now have significantly FEWER live hours (specifically a pre-recorded afternoon drive)?
The station criticisms are minor. The new morning show is stellar. A great hire. With regard to the morning show, they did good.
I'm afraid to ask-- is Stigall here, or broadcasting over a line from Kansas City?
Stigall, Dom, and Rush will provide a solid lead-in for the one-hour Smerconish show at 3.