"While we don’t have a News station in the Buffalo cluster, we do have the premiere Urban-formatted station (WBLK), and we had staff members on the scene shortly after."
I intermittently listened to both WBLK and WUFO after the Tops Market murders. As others have noted in a previous thread dedicated to radio's response to the abhorrent tragedy that took the lives of ten African American residents, I must have missed the local reports from "staff members on the scene." WBLK and WUFO were sweeping what sounded like voice-tracked music programming each of the numerous times I spot checked the stations after the shootings were reported on WBEN, WECK, The Buffalo News website, and local TV stations.
Of WBLK and WUFO? No long-form reporting. No local cut-ins.
Both WUFO and WBLK are heritage urban stations. WBLK bills itself as
"The People's Station." So it's bleakly ironic that WBEN, the right wing news-talk station which might as well bill itself as "The Suburban
White People's Station;" and WECK, the upper-demo-oldies station, far better served the interests of Buffalo's inner-city community than did the urban legacies, WUFO and WBLK.
So, Harvey "talked" about the shooting on the Monday immediately following the weekend. I spot-checked listened and heard only
one conversation before the show reverted to form. No fan of WBEN is this poster, but the fact is, the station, even with a depleted news staff, offered more coverage of the Buffalo shootings in newscasts and its local talk shows on the following Monday, and through the ensuing week.
As to WBUF, the original topic of this meandering thread: Keep bailing and make sure the bilge pumps don't fail.