Keith321 said:
Julius Leonard Marx said:
Keith: I am awed by your profound eloquence.
As I am by yours. A lot of words to say nothing....
We get it....you're a liberal...you like Kuby...big bad corperations are screwing everyone...corporate executives are pushing their own political ideology...it's all a big consiracy.....yada-yada-yada....
No, Keith, you don't get it. I'm not even sure you want to.
I listened to K+C only occasionally and I was not a fan of the show. I actually listened to Imus more regularly, although I didn't enjoy his show as much as I used to.
I thought Kuby was treated poorly and at the very least should have been allowed to stay the remaining month and finish the show with Sliwa.
Please review the questions I posted above:
"Why is it news/talk programming decisions are always in the direction of more neo-conservative, GOP party line political talk radio?"
"If it's only about money, why does this consistent programming move rightward keep resulting in declining revenues and Citadel's stock price going down?"
I'd be interested in your response.
I am not a liberal. I ask as a former stockholder in corporations owning radio stations (Disney and Clear Channel), who sold at a major loss. Citadel stockholders should be asking these questions, too. In the past year, Citadel stock has gone from 11 to two. Now they are unloading more stations. If you trust them so much, how much of your money have you invested in the company?
Once upon a time, William Randolph Hearst owned the largest media company in the US. The editorial pages of his newspapers and the columnists he hired were remarkably consistent in their opinions. Hearst claimed he had no agenda either.
The head of Citadel was involved in syndicating Imus at Infinity Radio.
The opinions expressed by Imus and his new boss are remarkably similar.
Conspiracy? Your words, not mine. Human nature to like a guy who agrees with you? Probably. Human nature to think what you like will make successful radio? Absolutely.
Beyond ideology, the leading talk station in the largest market has replaced a local talk show with a syndicated show. They have already done this in PM drive. The trend in this company is toward more syndicated, less local (in some markets, no local). C+K was a purely Noo Yawk kind of show; it is doubtful the show would have legs. Citadel wanted Imus for syndication. A local morning show for New York be damned. A local morning show in a bunch of other markets be damned, too. C+K are only the first morning hosts to be dumped for Imus, they are not the last.
Sorry if my posts are too long for a short attention span. If you want simple answers and sound-bites, I can see why you like right-wing talk radio.