Yes it does apply to Joe Izbrand. I did two terms at KTRH -- in the late 70s under News Director Ben Baldwin, and again in the late 80s and early 90s under Melanie Miller and Izbrand.
Baldwin was a nice guy and I liked him, but his only effort at "directing" the news was to hand out copies of morning newspaper stories with "Reaction?" penciled at the top. After being away from Houston for ten years, I came back to KTRH in 1988 and found that nothing had changed.
Neither Miller or Izbrand had any idea how to "direct" news without using the morning paper as their assignment editor. They would have been lost without it. Most of us out in the newsroom never complained because it's easy to get reaction to a story.
In defense of that approach, we had to work that way because in a heavy news wheel format like KTRH had back then, "Volume" is the number one requirement. Reporters had to produce at least two stories a day, and, get this: We had to produce three versions of each story for use that day, three more versions for the next morning, and three more versions for the weekend news blocks to use. Nine versions of the same story, before we could move on to our next story, so we just couldn't spend a lot of time on every story. We had to keep the news wheel turning.
It was a real sweatshop. Miller, Izbrand and GM Laura Morris were always cracking the whip, managing with intimidation and keeping us in fear of losing our jobs. I left KTRH forever in 1991, burned out and suffering clinical depression, so I don't know how their successors worked. However, if you listened to KTRH during the day, most of what you heard were reactions to stories in the newspaper.
Every one of those former KTRH people now at KROI News92 can verify what I've just written.