M
MediaMogul
Guest
Having attended the OU-Kansas State game last night and hearing/feeling the blast for myself the first thing most people did was flipped through the stations on their walkmans... I asked people around me what station they were tuning to and amazingly the most common response was WKY.
KTOK had Jerry Bowman at the scene and he broke in with about a forty five second report over the phone. This was at the beginning of the fourth quarter. At the top of the 10:00 hour it was the top story on Fox News... KTOK then went into a "best of" program without any type of coverage....
I listened to the Sports Animal while waiting in traffic after the game... they briefly mentioned what exits were closed "because some dude blew himself up..." They could have cared less...
I would think given the current state of our nation and the history we have of terrorism here in Oklahoma, our media outlets would have given this story more than a brief mention, especially when it was the top story for at least one national newscast.
This was a time when someone really could have shined, given that a good chunk of the 84,000 people in one area were left wondering, "What in the hell is going on?" and the only medium they had to turn to was their radio. It makes me really want to become the PD of one of OKC's news/talk stations for the simple fact that when things like this happen, you could count on the fact that it would get more than a forty-five second report.
KTOK had Jerry Bowman at the scene and he broke in with about a forty five second report over the phone. This was at the beginning of the fourth quarter. At the top of the 10:00 hour it was the top story on Fox News... KTOK then went into a "best of" program without any type of coverage....
I listened to the Sports Animal while waiting in traffic after the game... they briefly mentioned what exits were closed "because some dude blew himself up..." They could have cared less...
I would think given the current state of our nation and the history we have of terrorism here in Oklahoma, our media outlets would have given this story more than a brief mention, especially when it was the top story for at least one national newscast.
This was a time when someone really could have shined, given that a good chunk of the 84,000 people in one area were left wondering, "What in the hell is going on?" and the only medium they had to turn to was their radio. It makes me really want to become the PD of one of OKC's news/talk stations for the simple fact that when things like this happen, you could count on the fact that it would get more than a forty-five second report.