Aw, shoot! I knew that!!KGO is owned by Cumulus.
I'm too tired today....
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Aw, shoot! I knew that!!KGO is owned by Cumulus.
Just found out that Cali doesn’t allow sports betting when I tried to place a bet from my hotel in SF. Ugh.No kidding!
Ah, OK.
BIN is on 910 (not sure what the call is), and their stupid interference makes KVIN 920 almost impossible to listen to in the morning and early afternoon (interestingly, reception improves at some point in the early evening before KVIN switches to night power).
Fair enough. I understand the need for cutting costs, I just wish it didn't have to be sports betting, of all things (and in a city that decisively voted against legalizing it, in fact). I just think it was poor taste on iHeartMedia's part.
At least it wasn't a religious station though. We already have more than enough of those!
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You can bet on horse races but no other sports. So why the long face?Just found out that Cali doesn’t allow sports betting when I tried to place a bet from my hotel in SF. Ugh.
I don't care what's on a radio station I don't listen to. And I'm really straining to come up with a format and a level of excellence that would make me listen to AM.Fair enough. I understand the need for cutting costs, I just wish it didn't have to be sports betting, of all things (and in a city that decisively voted against legalizing it, in fact). I just think it was poor taste on iHeartMedia's part.
At least it wasn't a religious station though. We already have more than enough of those!
You are not alone... about 90% of adult Americans agree.And I'm really straining to come up with a format and a level of excellence that would make me listen to AM.
I mean, there was a time when KCBS, if it wasn't simulcast on FM, would have made that list, but the quality of the product under Audacy is nothing like it was seven or eight years ago.You are not alone... about 90% of adult Americans agree.
It is nothing short of astonishing how Audacy is wrecking KCBS. Virtually all the legacy news anchors and street reporters have left, "retired" or been shown the door. The people who've filled their shoes have come from (a) former talk station KGO, (b) former AAA KFOG, (c) jazz station KCSM, (d) KGO-TV ("ABC7") news, (e) KPIX ("CBS5") news, and I'm sure I'm forgetting a few other "misfits". (Not claiming these individuals are misfits as people, just that they're not (IMO) well suited to anchoring at a legacy all-news station.)I mean, there was a time when KCBS, if it wasn't simulcast on FM, would have made that list, but the quality of the product under Audacy is nothing like it was seven or eight years ago.
It is nothing short of astonishing how Audacy is wrecking KCBS. Virtually all the legacy news anchors and street reporters have left, "retired" or been shown the door.
I know! I keep wondering when Audacy does something similar to what they did to KDWN and announce that they'll end broadcasting on 740 (no time soon, I hope).It is nothing short of astonishing how Audacy is wrecking KCBS.
I agree. I've been listening to KCBS fairly regularly since at least 2004 or so (back when they still called themselves "all news 74"), and I'm dismayed by how the quality of the format seems to have suffered since it was first a "Radio.com" and now an Audacy station.I mean, there was a time when KCBS, if it wasn't simulcast on FM, would have made that list, but the quality of the product under Audacy is nothing like it was seven or eight years ago.
I would say that much of this cheapening happened post-COVID, so it is likely a result of Audacy's severely reduced revenues, which seems to be pretty much irreversible
Look, it's not like we don't, for the most part, understand why this is happening. As David's pointed out a bunch of times, revenues are down somewhere in the neighborhood of 70% over the last two decades (on an inflation-adjusted basis). Expenses of course go up with inflation and supply-demand. People want their income to at least stay flat, if not increase, rather than erode with inflation. And anyone who is in their 60's or 70's -- and that includes myself -- feels the tug of time and has seen friends and family succumb to age and illness, especially after our war with COVID. Lots of casualties, lots of victims, more than a few we each knew or knew of. None of that should be a blinding revelation.It's not just Audacy's reduced revenue. Everyone has taken a hit, with revenues down and costs going up because of inflation. The question is: How to improve revenue without adding to the commercial load? Ideas?
But a business needs to invest in their future if they want there to be a future. Audacy has cheapened the product in many ways, and it's become quite noticeable with the all-news stations.
I recently found a recording of 6 hours of KCBS from June 2, 2000. This was the day Al Hart retired. Of course, he was very much the voice of the station and nearly impossible to replace. But other, less obvious things struck me as well:I mean, there was a time when KCBS, if it wasn't simulcast on FM, would have made that list, but the quality of the product under Audacy is nothing like it was seven or eight years ago.
The traffic reports are still decent, but they seem to be relying primarily on call-ins and Twitter (which, up until recently, wasn't terrible I suppose) whereas in the not to distant past, they'd get out their helicopter (and I think they also had a dedicated crew of people who would simply drive around and report on conditions on the ground directly) and report first hand info. I get that much of this was scaled back due to better technology, excessively high costs, etc., but it does seem to have compromised their quality a bit.
There's another factor: the demographics of the staff. There was a big surge in the early 1970s when the leading edge of the bay boom graduated from J-schools, speech programs, etc. (or in some cases, just going right from high school, but much less so on the news side). Broadcast stations still had requirements for news and public-affairs programming, and, in TV, there was a particularly notable increase in staffing. Graduates from the later part of the 1970s had a tougher time finding jobs, because all those new roles were already taken, and because the push to deregulate was just starting. So all those grads from, let's say, 1970-1976 are now past 65 and ready to retire. There are fewer "less old" (I hesitate to say "younger") people to take their places because, instead of a smooth progression of hiring over time, a whole bunch of people were hired all at once and now they're ready to retire all at once. This can be notable in TV - look at the turnover KTVU has had - but particularly stark in radio. Moreover, jobs in radio news shrank in the 1980s. It was evident to just about any young person looking to enter the field at the time that it would be tough. A few did it anyway, but I'd be willing to wager that far more just said, screw it, I'll do something else where I don't have to live on macaroni and cheese in a small market for years because my salary wouldn't cover basic living expenses. (Or words to that effect.) So the talent pool became shallower and shallower, and incumbents stayed put. Now that those incumbents have been retiring, there's not that much talent there to replace them. Radio stations failed to develop news talent and, at least for the few stations where that still matters, it's come back to bite them.Replacing veteran anchors and street reporters with newbies should be happening organically, slowly, as should retirements. At minimum, the vets need to be mentors to the newbies so the quality doesn't erode. But when it's happened so fast that it's painfully obvious to even casual listeners that the product's been cheapened, then management has failed.
So the talent pool became shallower and shallower, and incumbents stayed put.
As I have said on other threads it's sad that what was once one of the finest and balanced talk stations in the country has changed formats and is literally now in the ratings toilet (whether they need ratings or not).@TheBigA , @michael hagerty Got it, thanks!
BIN?
I still think it's a total waste of a good frequency. Even conservative talk would be better, except the market for that here is pretty much saturated already (and all the liberal talk seems to have moved to FM for some reason).
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As I have said on other threads it's sad that what was once one of the finest and balanced talk stations in the country has changed formats and is literally now in the ratings toilet (whether they need ratings or not).
There's more to it than that - and I'll admit that I didn't say everything I could have said in that first post. Even so, I have to think about what broadcasting (radio and TV) were like in the late 1960s - when, at least as a listener, there seemed to be multiple possibilities - and now, when it seems to be in decline.That's a key phrase: incumbents stayed put. You could say that about every aspect of radio. People got hired out of college, and stayed put. When that happens, how does a station develop new talent? There's no place to put them. Look at what happened at KFOG and KGO. How do you build a new generation of stars when the previous generation won't get out of the way? Then one day you bring in a new voice, and the audience still wants their old friends. They resent it when you cycle in someone new.
I believe the 740 transmitter site is either in a flood plain, or pretty close to one. That land is not likely to be developed any time soon. The AM also gives KCBS some South Bay coverage where the 106.9 coverage is spotty.I know! I keep wondering when Audacy does something similar to what they did to KDWN and announce that they'll end broadcasting on 740 (no time soon, I hope).