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Is there any such thing as a local talk show anymore?

http://www.radioandrecords.com/Newsroom/2006_04_12/wlwsmike.asp

WLW, basically the last completely 24-hour live/local talk station in the "W"s announced that Mike McConnell's 9-noon ET talk show goes national this summer, distributed by Clear Channel, owner of WLW and parent of Premiere Radio which syndicates Glenn Beck in the same daypart (five or so top-50 market CC talkers including WLW crosstown sister 55KRC have dropped Beck recently in moves which could be described as a move to more local and political talk).

Mike, who has also served as permanent host of Premiere's syndicated "The Weekend" for two or three years since the host-a-week format was dropped, is no doubt a great talent, but seeing that he's already on a 50kW blowtorch with huge ratings and reaches three or four top-60 markets on a daily basis, plus the 16 people that listen to WLW on XM. It's not like the guy is on some half-baked station just waiting for his big break... he's spent 20 years being #1 on a heritage talker. Sure, it's not quite KGO, but it leads me to ask whether we can survive without every host with an ounce of talent getting a national mic.

While the talk format may be increasing, I think it's widely accepted that political talk, at least of a conservative stripe, is pretty well saturated in most cities. Why we don't see much new product for the progressive, lifestyle, and hot talk formats, yet a never-ending parade of new RWers keep floating by is beyond me. Is it so horrible to be a big fish in a medium-size pond? Succeeding on WLW is a big deal. Or would a host rather have a fifth-string national show on 500-watt AMs in 60 markets?
 
The time to have done that was five years ago. McConnell is more libertarian than most, but I'm not sure what clearances still could exist. Would WTVN, Columbus drop Beck for McConnell? WOWO in Ft. Wayne?<P ID="signature">______________
"Your right to know supersedes your right to exist"..Gary Burbank</P>
 
> The time to have done that was five years ago. McConnell is
> more libertarian than most, but I'm not sure what clearances
> still could exist. Would WTVN, Columbus drop Beck for
> McConnell? WOWO in Ft. Wayne?

I'd say there are already plenty of people in Columbus and Ft. Wayne listening to McConnell and other WLW fare. In 12+, The Big One comes close to CC sister WTPG, the liberal talker in central Ohio. Considering WLW is a two-hour drive away, that's not bad. In Ft. Wayne, WOWO pretty much has no competition and is always in the top one or two stations, with double digit shares in its target demos (and often in 12+ for that matter).

Perhaps Denny Schaeffer on perpetual loser WGST/Atlanta should be worried, though.
 
McConnell Ohio Expansion?

> Perhaps Denny Schaeffer on perpetual loser WGST/Atlanta
> should be worried, though.

As McConnell's weekday show will be syndicated by Clear Channel Programming, and apparently not by Clear Channel arm Premiere, I wonder if he's basically the fall back position for the company's own stations A) unhappy with Glenn Beck or B) unable to mount a decent local show in the pre-Rush slot?

Here, WHLO/640 Akron seems to be doing well with Beck, a cast-off from WTAM/1100 in Cleveland. His presence has even helped give the station some (minimal) numbers in the Cleveland market, where it doesn't have a perfect signal.

And WTAM itself is now live and local in the slot with former WSPD/Toledo host Bob Frantz. WKBN/570 Youngstown, the third Clear Channel option in the Northeast Ohio region, has local talker Dan Rivers (also WKBN's PD), who picked up the slot after the death of veteran local host Dan Ryan.

So...there wouldn't appear to be much room for McConnell to expand up here in what would be a natural spot for him. But I wonder how Beck's doing for WTVN/610 Columbus, and if they would follow WTAM's lead and dump him for McConnell...picking up some of those in-market listeners listening to WLW...

-OA<P ID="signature">______________
Ohio Media Watch - <a target="_blank" href=http://ohiomedia.blogspot.com>http://ohiomedia.blogspot.com</a></P>
 
Re: McConnell Ohio Expansion?

WTVN would be interesting to watch, it would make sense. I could see WXNT, Indianapolis following suit. Still, I think on one hand WLW's ratings could suffer because of the local angle dissapearing. McConnell had said over the years that he resisted national weekday syndication because on his local show he can talk about "the city idiots, the county idiots,the state idiots and the national idiots", which after 7/31 he will no longer be able to do. McConnell even recently mentioned Gary Burbank's foray into syndication when there was tons of Marge Schott material that wouldn't translate to a nationwide audience. <P ID="signature">______________
"Your right to know supersedes your right to exist"..Gary Burbank</P>
 
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