indieradioguy said:
Talk radio without listener calls isn't "talk radio."
Horse hockey. Television has "talk shows" on every network, every morning and every night, and none of them take calls. Some might read an email or tweet from a viewer, but there is no interaction whatsoever.
Every major market needs to have a flagship "talk radio" station
If it's outdated, then how do you explain the fact that whenever a "talk radio" host appears on a local TV news show,
the anchor always - always - asks him or her what callers are saying about a local news story? We all saw that (again)
just last week with the NFL. Also, television "talk shows" interact with their audience, and there's no semblence of
audience interaction on 92.3 (what proof do you have those tweets and Facebook posts are from actual listeners and
not some producer or intern?), so it's not really a valid comparison. Consequently, a lot of us had have simply fled
to 91.5 and NPR, whose shows frequently take listener calls, including the puzzles on Weekend Edition. Can you
imagine NPR playing puzzles among themselves? Yet, Dumb & Dumber exclude listeners from playing "Fact or Fiction"
and nobody even notices anymore. I guess Bonneville thinks Aunt Edna is hep to entering stupid code words for a
chance to win a prize. (Today's code word is "Depends," with a capital D.) I wish I could one day understand the
rationale guiding Bonneville's business decisions.