A respected republican consultant offered some interesting analysis of the election results. His comments parallel Parks' observation. He said, "we (republicans) have lost the ability to understand the tone of the discussion. As a result, we're tone deaf to the needs of voters that should be welcome in our party. We need these voters." He went on to say (paraphrasing) that Republicans erred in attempting to take the Tea Party under the GOP wing, only to be bitten by it because the Tea Party and Republican Party should be considered two separate entities, which in the political sense, is a good thing.
If this analysis is applied to talk radio as well (in that there are distinctions to be made between appealing to Republicans, Libertarians and members of the Tea Party) does this then point to a fragmentation of conservative talk radio? This won't happen in a market like Buffalo where the three most powerful AM facilities are owned by the same company.
Also, there's been little mention made of 1520 WWKB. You'd think Buffalo's 50 thousand watt progressive talk station would get some ink here after the Democrats won, but KB wasn't even part of my radio scan which included WBEN, WGR, WBFO and CFRB to get the Canadian perspective on the US election. Did anybody spend any time listening to KB?
If this analysis is applied to talk radio as well (in that there are distinctions to be made between appealing to Republicans, Libertarians and members of the Tea Party) does this then point to a fragmentation of conservative talk radio? This won't happen in a market like Buffalo where the three most powerful AM facilities are owned by the same company.
Also, there's been little mention made of 1520 WWKB. You'd think Buffalo's 50 thousand watt progressive talk station would get some ink here after the Democrats won, but KB wasn't even part of my radio scan which included WBEN, WGR, WBFO and CFRB to get the Canadian perspective on the US election. Did anybody spend any time listening to KB?