The part of Ron Kuby’s article that stuck out in my mind was his comments about the demise of local talent by many corporate radio operations. I’ve always believed that a radio station, be it in Buffalo, Rochester, Syracuse should serve the local community.
Al from Buffalo mentioned Public Radio. I happened to like public radio and am an avid listener, but the station I listen to is in Boston. Now do I sound like a hypocrite for first praising local personalities, then listening to a station outside the market where I live? To some perhaps but let me explain.
To me a successful talk format should be a mix of informative communication, both on local and national subjects. WBUR in Boston has both. After Morning Edition ends at 9am the station gives their audience an international perspective by airing the BBC news for an hour. Then WBUR returns to their local talk programming throughout the day, which some local stations in Western NY also carry. On Point is one I can think of.
The only thing missing from my internet streaming is local news and I can catch in my car on my journey from work to home each day. Regarding local news, with the exception of Karen DeWitt’s insightful reports on state government, most of the local news I hear either is a rehash of yesterday’s news, some re-writes out of newspapers, wire service stories, or coverage of some local news conference held earlier in the day. I miss the investigative stuff we (or should I say they) used to do on public radio. Granted many public radio stations don't have the staff they once did and do the best they can with what personnel they have.
Now back to the subject of talk radio. As a listener I don’t want someone to tell me what to think, I want to be able to digest the information, or topic being discussed, and make up my own mind.