I am, to say the least, stunned by David's response. It seems a bit subjective to me and not objective, in that Mike's quote of KGO being #3 25-54 didn't quite sit well with David.
As one who listens to KGO a lot, as well as other talk radio stations, (as well as one involved for the last few years in the genre,) some questions and observations:
First, who thinks that talk radio in the 25-54 demo is growing, anyway? Especially at the rate it did, say, 10-15 years ago when there was a "newness" to the Limbaugh, Hannity, Liddy, Savage, Art Bell "legacy" of hard-hitting right wing radio. My feeling is that there is a decided "flatness," if not decline to the "national talkers" over the last two or three years, if not erosion that is getting faster quarter-to-quarter. The content is not sharp, is very repetitious and, now, apologetic in tone with excuses for the right side in response to the left, liberal side. I'm hearing more right-wing "whining" now than ever.
As for "liberal talk," Air America then and now in its latest reincarnation has proven to be far less than stellar in the performance arena.
With the glut of talk radio on so many frequencies ... all readily heard on more than location on most "local" radio dials today, sometimes within 20-30 miles ... how long is this "trend" going to continue. I find audiences feeling that national talk is stagnating.
I don't see Limbaugh, Hannity, Levin, Savage, Ingraham, Schlesinger, Noorey, Elder, O'Reilly, Colmes, Larson, Bohannon, King, Humphries, Edell, Reynolds, Browne or the second and third tier personalities growing audience ... but merely shifting from show-to-show.
Back to KGO. First, the station, unlike its sister station, KSFO, is live, local and diverse. Yes, KGO has its conservative/moderate bent with the legendary Ronn Owens, who owns the talk market in the Bay Area, no matter the demo ... and I know strongly in the 25-54 year old demo ... not much higher than 30-35 on average, but certainly lower than the older 50 demo.
Then there's attorney Len Tillum, fun for awhile, but not in a great place for his "I am a lawya" talk. He is best on the weekends. 45 minutes is an injustice to him ... and the audience is decidedly older.
Dr. Dean Edell. Now you're hitting the 50+ demo. To old for the station, but a legendary voice in the Bay Area. I don't find him appealing, but it's the "legacy" factor. I do think Mr. Swanson could re-tool the noon to two segment.
No one can replace the late Pete Wilson. Pete was no Ronn Owens, but did well in the 35+ demo and probably better on the 45+ demo. His replacement, Gil Gross, is a decent effort by KGO to represent hip, cool and yet, still refined and defined talk for the 35+ audience ... right in the lower middle of the 25-54 year sweet spot. Not a bad move. Entertaining and informative.
The 4 to 7 p.m. news block is bland on KGO. Talk is king on Newstalk/810 and in my opinion, the demo strength is lost as the audience age goes up with this block. But, the best traffic coverage in the area and that booming signal, makes news an important priority for all prime demos, in my opinion. Maybe just not as long in the TSL figures as it could be ... except in the 50+ demo. The afternoon news isn't hip. It's flows like a glacier, in my opinion. It's there to fill in the spots between weather and traffic. I am one who still tolerates Lloyd Lindsey Young's weather casts, remembering him from his New York days on WWOR before moving west.
Gene Burns is a Libertarian. Nothing wrong with that. In fact, I think Gene Burns is the best talk show host on KGO. Perfect for nights and probably a 45+ audience ... but active and interesting to listen to most all the time. But who's listening to radio at night in talk radio at those "prime time" hours?
Bernie Ward. Noted "lion of the left." Liberal who does quite well and I bet does quite well with the "surviving" 30+ audience that recycles from Burns to Bernie ... but the demo goes up from there...way up.
Ray Talifiero. Hard to be objective here for me. I can't stand the show, or the man's ultra-left stance, presentation or take on events. His audience tips the scales, I'd imagine, to 65+ or, at least, most anyone over 50 at best all-night.
The KGO morning news - again, "must hear radio" in the morning, though Ed Baxter has probably outlived his many year stay by now. But the cast moves, is frequently humorous and the traffic and weather can't be beat. Again, demos from 25 up, if not a majority in the 35 plus category ... the low mid side of the 25-54 demo.
John Rothman should be on full time ... but where? I'd opt for 4-7. I think he'd be great there ... but he probably would skew older because of his all-night weekend audience. But then again, maybe not. I think he'd do well with a 30+ demo on KGO.
The imaging of the station with promos is first rate. I just can't spend $80 for a CD of the many promos run, but they're great. Production, too. But the imaging of Lonnie Perkins is first class and first rate. Strong, articulate and passionate.
Jingles are horrible. Especially the solo acapellas. Logo wise, they're ok ... but the sound is grating sameness. Too much brass, not enough vocal mix and, well, not very "hip." (But they try to be.)
I think KGO is stuck in the middle ... the low middle sweet spot of the 25-54s, but as is the case with long-time talk stations (especially number one KGO after 29 years of being number one all the time,) it would not be hard to see the audience getting older and older each month.
Wonder what KGO would do on FM... I bet it could fly and with decent demos...because KGO is the voice of San Francisco. But it's audience is getting older where it is. And that signal ... you can't beat it. Leave KGO where it is. It still has a future ... but it looks like it will be an older future year by year from now on.