Another conservative talk show host? Good luck with that!
WILM's problem: Its signal is obviously best in the City of Wilmington, and - with a few exceptions - Wilmington does not provide a hotbed of support for conservative talkers.
Having said that, WILM would end up with a more consistent air-sound (conservative talk) EXCEPT for John Watson (although John swings right on law & order, and U.S. military interventions).
By the way, if CC tries to give Watson the boot, look for significant protests from Wilmington's African-American community! Not that the old civil rights leaders could FORCE CC to make an about-face, but Watson's following in the city was one of the few things CC still had going for it.
After all, he's been a fixture on WILM since the mid-1980's. That would produce a new dilemma for the new PD: He'd be under even more pressure to keep, or retain, Harmon Carey's Saturday morning show, which is abysmal.
The paradox now: Watson, occasional replacement host Ted Efaw, and morning news co-anchor Valorie Mack are all liberal or even progressive.
It'll be interesting to see what happens with WILM under this new PD.
By the way, CC management apparently reached out to other people before making this hire.
The continuing conundrum: Wilmington is not a market where advertisers seek to put their ads on controversial talk-shows. Yet a controversial host is what draws attention.
Wilmington is not a market where there's a waiting line for advertisers wanting talk-show hosts to do live "reads", and testimonials.
When it comes to A.M. radio in Wilmington, advertisers buy traffic, weather, stock reports, news, sports, state legislative reports, snow closings, etc. That introduces another difficulty for the new local host: For advertising avails, WILM might have to retain many of those "elements". But if WILM does so, the new talent will end up with a very truncated show.
(This happened some years ago when Carlotta Bradley defected from WILM to WDEL. At 'DEL, she ended up hosting a talk-show in P.M. drive. But she got very frustrated with all the interruptions, which to her -- killed the momentum for her show! Callers often wouldn't wait through the interminable breaks.)
Another point: With the flip-flopping of formats and networks between WILM & WDEL, a share of WILM's listeners migrated to WDEL. Younger listeners are on FM or new media. Even if they're conservative, it's doubtful they will discover the "new" WILM in the morning, absent the incredible advertising / marketing effort Clear Channel is loathe to do.