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KTRH & Glenn Beck

KEYH was on Buffalo Speedway, just north of the SW Fwy outbound feeder in a building that's no longer there. It wasnext door that building with the golden dome.

You know if it weren't for this website, I would be able to forget some of the places I have worked.

In the summer of 76 I left KPRC radio to go to NBC in NY and work in that News and Information Service. A 24-7 all news radio network. It was a smooth running operation, and sounded great, but NBC didn't think it all the way through when they created it. It turned out that less than half the NBC radio affiliates wanted anything to do with it. So, NBC was forced to make it available to non-affiliates in the same markets as their affiliates. That meant NBC and NIS were in competition in many markets. Houston was one of those. KPRC radio didn't carry NIS, but KLYX FM did. Hooray for David Fowler and Hal Eisner.

As an editor and writer for NIS, I worked the phones for tape on breaking stories, and we had to deal with NIS affiliates only if there was one. So, if an interesting story broke in, Houston for example, I had to check the "Conflict" list to see who to call for help -- the NBC affiliate if it carried NIS, and if it didn't, the competing NIS affiliate.

Because of these and other problems, NBC never did figure out how to market the NIS, which meant it was doomed from the start. I got there in September of 76. The day after the 76 Presidential election in November the NBC suits came to the NIS newsroom and dropped the bomb on us. NIS would be cancelled in May of the following year. My wife and I had no wish to hang around NYC waiting to be unemployed, so I beat a hasty retreat back to Houston and quickly got a job at KTRH.

I worked there doing news and call-in shows till late 78, and finally quit because I got tired of working afternoons and nights. In late 78, David Fowler had left KLYX for KEYH, so I called him about a job and he hired me over the phone.

When I showed up at KEYH two weeks later, I learned that Fowler had quit and the station owner had no idea who I was. He brought me in anyway because they were so desperate for voices. KEYH was still speaking English then, all news all day, sunup to sundown. The owner was a Christian Scientist, and he wouldn't allow any stories about medicine, which meant no stories from the Medical Center. Really! We had some good people there. Steve Gilmartin did sports. The reporting staff included Pat Hernandez and Cindy Wright (now Cindy Gabriel). Pat and I are now back together again at KUHF.

Unfortunately, KEYH's daytime news programming Monday through Friday was making no money. NONE. They had a boiler room with about a dozen people calling local businesses selling public service type commercials for pennies. Stuff like "Billy Bob's Transmission Shop in Humble urges you to drive safely this weekend, and watch out for children."

But wait! On Saturdays and Sundays, they carried Spanish language programming that was making money hand over fist. It was paying all the station's bills, but just barely. Sometime in early 79, the owners snapped to how much more money they could make with Spanish programming 7 days a week instead of 2. The owner then gave the whole English speaking staff 30 days notice, and KEYH changed languages on April 1st of 1979.
 
FilioScotia said:
In the summer of 76 I left KPRC radio to go to NBC in NY and work in that News and Information Service. A 24-7 all news radio network. It was a smooth running operation, and sounded great

30+ years later, I still miss NIS. I was living in the DFW area at the time it was on, and there were actually two stations in the market that carried it (WRR 1310 and KRXV 1540, targeting Dallas and Fort Worth, respectively.) I listened to NIS quite a bit--it was great to be able to tune over for 20-30 minutes and get a news fix, then return to music elsewhere on the dial. And the mix of coverage was quite thorough as well. Wish we had something like that today.
 
Funny thing about the NIS. It went off the air in May 1977, but the format it used is still in use today on CNN.

I remember reading somewhere that the creators of CNN used the same hourly newswheel template the NIS used. The CNN newsroom was also organized very similar to NIS.

And some former NIS newswriters and editors went to work at CNN when it went on the air a few years after NIS died. They had valuable experience in working in that kind of repeating news format.

There was absolutely nothing wrong with the way NIS did the news 24-7. It would have succeeded if NBC had figured out how to market it.
 
FilioScotia said:
There was absolutely nothing wrong with the way NIS did the news 24-7. It would have succeeded if NBC had figured out how to market it.

It wasn't for lack of talented people, either. One of my favorites was Cameron Swayze (John Cameron Swayze, Jr.).
 
FilioScotia said:
KEYH was on Buffalo Speedway, just north of the SW Fwy outbound feeder in a building that's no longer there. It wasnext door that building with the golden dome.

You know if it weren't for this website, I would be able to forget some of the places I have worked.

Unfortunately, KEYH's daytime news programming Monday through Friday was making no money. NONE. They had a boiler room with about a dozen people calling local businesses selling public service type commercials for pennies. Stuff like "Billy Bob's Transmission Shop in Humble urges you to drive safely this weekend, and watch out for children."

But wait! On Saturdays and Sundays, they carried Spanish language programming that was making money hand over fist. It was paying all the station's bills, but just barely. Sometime in early 79, the owners snapped to how much more money they could make with Spanish programming 7 days a week instead of 2. The owner then gave the whole English speaking staff 30 days notice, and KEYH changed languages on April 1st of 1979.

Thanks for this post!! As I recall, the women manager said KEYH was changing changing formats to Spanish
programing because the ratings where much higher during the weekend when they were doing Spanish programing. At least one book in 1979 or so, KEYH was #6 or #7 in the 12+ ratings with their Spanish programing. But that was during a time when there only competition was Spanish language KLVL 1480.
 
Why does anyone care other that to bash Clear Channel? Have you ever listened to KTRH in the morning for over an hour? You get the same stories over and over and over. Beck will be a good fit, he's pretty entertaining. Better yet let's dig up Dewey Compton and Little Dew and the guy that use to read poetry on KTRH, let's get back to when the were a REAL radio NEWS station right? Pardon the sarcasm please.
gabigley1 said:
FilioScotia said:
I find it hard to fathom that KTRH is dropping two hours of local news to carry Glenn Beck. I don't think this decision is being made on a local level. After all, Houston is a major market and most major market have full time local news departments.

You must not be from around here. KTRH isn't dropping two hours of local news or local programming for Glenn Beck. The time slot in question here is 9am till 11am, and KTRH is only switching from whatever syndicated talker it now has in that slot to carry GBeck, also syndicated. KTRH's AM and PM news segments are not affected.

I hate to be the one to tell you this, but you're way off in assuming that most major market stations have full time local news departments. Not if Clear Channel has anything to say about it. Houston had news departments everywhere you looked until CC started buying up stations and closing news departments. Now, CC's KTRH staffers provide newscasts for the other CC stations.Non CC stations that still carry local newscasts are buying them from the Metro Networks, the newscast outsourcing firm.

From more than a dozen full time news departments 20 years ago, Houston is now down to just two. That's right -- there are now only two full time news operations in the Houston market. There's KTRH, but it's only a pale shadow of what it was 20 years ago. Most of its good personnel have moved on or been laid off.

And there's KUHF Houston Public Radio, which currently has a full time paid staff of seven reporters and newscasters, all former commercial reporters and anchors who have found new life and new careers in public radio. Most of them came to public radio from KTRH.Everybody at KUHF says public radio is a completely different world, and they wouldn't go back to commercial radio for all the tea in China.

Houston was -- at one time -- a big, energetic, lively, busy and competitive radio news market. You could find local news up and down the dial. And it was fun to work here. Those days are long gone. Thanks Clear Channel.

I got confused because it seem like the morning news block runs from 5:00AM to 11:00AM M-F. Click here:
http://www.ktrh.com/pages/schedule.html

You are right, I should have known better because CC has reduced their news dept for many year. Haven't lived on Houston for over twenty years. When was the last time KTRH has a fully staffed newsroom? Also,
was Joe Izbrand the last News Director they had? I know Joe from my childhood days growing up in San Antonio.

Now the big question, can Houston support a full time all local news station?? Dose anyone remember the old ALL NEWS KEYH radio from 1975 to 1979??
back in 1969.
 
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