• Get involved.
    We want your input!
    Apply for Membership and join the conversations about everything related to broadcasting.

    After we receive your registration, a moderator will review it. After your registration is approved, you will be permitted to post.
    If you use a disposable or false email address, your registration will be rejected.

    After your membership is approved, please take a minute to tell us a little bit about yourself.
    https://www.radiodiscussions.com/forums/introduce-yourself.1088/

    Thanks in advance and have fun!
    RadioDiscussions Administrators

Denver KHOW mornings

On Tom Martino's October 30 podcast, the producer who also works on Ross Kaminsky's show said KHOW will have fill in morning hosts until January 1.
To be honest, KHOW seems to be an afterthought for iHeart. For example, unlike the other two iHeart talk stations, it doesn't have an FM translator, though it is on KRFX-HD2.
 
Apparently the reason for this is that KHOW's morning man Michael Brown ("Brownie" from the Bush administration) is moving to KOA:


So KHOW has a hole in mornings, but wants to keep it local. At least for now.

This seems to be a trend at iHeart talkers. Something similar happened at KFBK in Sacramento a month or so ago. They're replacing the hard news in mornings with more of a talk-based show. Talk is cheaper, requiring less staffing, and usually improves TSL.

iHeart has 3 news/talk AMs in Denver. The third one KDFD airs all the syndicated shows.
 
Apparently the reason for this is that KHOW's morning man Michael Brown ("Brownie" from the Bush administration) is moving to KOA:

That's exactly the reason for it. KOA moved Ross Kaminsky to replace most of "Colorado's Morning News", which will survive only 5-6 am. Kaminsky will do news-oriented talk from 6-9 am, leaving 9 am-12 noon to be filled. That slot is where Brown is going. Kaminsky's program often had interviews with newsmakers, so that kind of talk will be pulled forward in the morning.
So KHOW has a hole in mornings, but wants to keep it local. At least for now.
KHOW has also been something of a farm club for KOA. Kaminsky was doing morning drive there before being moved to KOA. The same thing is now happening with Brown.

This seems to be a trend at iHeart talkers. Something similar happened at KFBK in Sacramento a month or so ago. They're replacing the hard news in mornings with more of a talk-based show. Talk is cheaper, requiring less staffing, and usually improves TSL.
Pat Woodard was smart to retire when he did. Marty Lenz didn't have that option and was laid off.

iHeart has 3 news/talk AMs in Denver. The third one KDFD airs all the syndicated shows.
The only local content on KDFD is traffic reports. KDFD is explicitly an extreme-right talk station, featuring the usual crowd.
 
Apparently the reason for this is that KHOW's morning man Michael Brown ("Brownie" from the Bush administration) is moving to KOA:


So KHOW has a hole in mornings, but wants to keep it local. At least for now.

This seems to be a trend at iHeart talkers. Something similar happened at KFBK in Sacramento a month or so ago. They're replacing the hard news in mornings with more of a talk-based show. Talk is cheaper, requiring less staffing, and usually improves TSL.

iHeart has 3 news/talk AMs in Denver. The third one KDFD airs all the syndicated shows.
I've never listened to All -News (KNX in my area) for more than 30 minutes. After that it's repetition of the same stories, with a different feature. I agree TSL is a big problem with doing all news, whether the morning or all day.
 
I've never listened to All -News (KNX in my area) for more than 30 minutes. After that it's repetition of the same stories, with a different feature. I agree TSL is a big problem with doing all news, whether the morning or all day.

This is why the public radio format works so well for TSL. The clock is longer, so if you're listening to Morning Edition, you won't hear a story repeated for 2 hours. They're able to cover more topics that way, and do it in depth. However, it requires more people and is more expensive.
 


Back
Top Bottom