S
stevensonair
Guest
Perhaps some of us would rather hear a conversation about whatever the views were, rather than a shouting match.
Perhaps some of us would rather hear a conversation about whatever the views were, rather than a shouting match.
I've noticed--more so on the TV side but to an extent on the radio side as well--that many hosts tend to adjust their agenda over time to fit the expectations of their audiences. Bill O'Reilly & Chris Matthews were always opinionated, but seemed to give both sides a more fair shake in the early days of their respective programs. But as Fox began to veer more sharply to the right, O'Reilly's program drifted more to the right; and as MSNBC veered sharply to the left, Matthews' program drifted more to the left. Greta Van Sustren does a very conservative political program now for Fox, though her CNN program (& even her Fox program at first) was almost entirely a court show that rarely touched on politics. (It's also interesting to note that she & her husband were big supporters of John Kerry & Hillary Clinton's presidential campaigns.)Air America had a political agenda ... Dave Ramsay has a personal agenda ... Rush morphed from being a brilliant satirist into a mouthpiece for the Republican party. I realize that everyone has an agenda of some sort but some hosts manage to check it at the door.
Ed Schultz comes off as a reasonable liberal on his radio show
I think what's wrong with much of today's talk radio is that it has an agenda (other than simply to entertain.)
When I started K***, I retained (name brand consultant) as a consultant - mabye one of the biggest mistakes I have ever made in radio, and I will tell you I have made some REALLY big ones. I had the concept of doing a station that was not hard-aligned left or right, with some "lifestyle" shows as well - ergo, Lou Dobbs, Joy Browne and Clarke Howard. Instead of telling me it would not work, (name brand consultant) helped me put together exactly the station I envisioned. (He is personally left-leaning ...)
We failed completely. I had Lou Dobbs do a marvelous TV commercial for me and we played it to death for two months on all five of the Comcast news channels. Result of the consultant fees, all that work, all that money, and all that promotion: a product that advertisers were uninterested in and a 0.0 share in Arbitron. Hard lessons learned.
My unfocused programming on K*** roughly reflects trying to do a playlist that is too large on a music station.
I'll add Doug Stephan to the mix. His show is one of the best on radio, IMO.
I should have qualified that statement by saying he "comes off as a somewhat more reasonable liberal on his radio show...." And I thought I had said that. Maybe someday I'll learn to give it one more proofread before hitting Reply.Not sure if serious.grey_dan said:Ed Schultz comes off as a reasonable liberal on his radio show
Nobody here wants to hear your real world experience. They'd rather stick to their pipe dreams of running Rush Limbaugh off the air so they won't have to hear opinions they disagree with anymore.
Originally Posted by ABQRADIO
When I started K***, I retained (name brand consultant) as a consultant
Nobody here wants to hear your real world experience.
Maybe we would like to hear his real world experience. Maybe not.
Maybe we would like to hear your real life opinions. Maybe not.
Would we all be better served if people who post could post what we think,
people who post could engage in civilized, back-and-forth discussion on the merits of what they think,
and as painful as it is, we would left some people post themselves into a corner, and hope they can recognize what they have done, without us having to say to them: Your point of view doesn't deserve to be heard, please keep it quiet.
As I read in another forum this week: (a whole thread on the topic by the way) My mistakes are my best teacher.
Your sarcasm detector is malfunctioning.