They're gonna jam this ESPN branding down our throat now. Pastor is merely following his marching orders from corporate, as he's their 4' tall marionette.
They're giving TV people radio shows, and it's God awful brutal. Mike Tirico's Show is like listening to paint dry. Michelle Tafoya (when she sits in) has no respect for the radio profession. It's as if they think they're a good listen because they're on ESPN TV.
I feel bad for the remaining local on-air employees other than Silvy and Waddle - who will no doubt become ESPN1000's premier show. Deservedly so, they've done a very solid job since taking over for Salis-bloom.
We're gonna be force fed Doug Gottleib and Brian FRIGGIN Kenny. Oh joy.
ESPN1000 is quickly becoming nothing more than an ESPN franchise - they'll be lucky to have much beyond Waddle and Silvy at this time next year.
Pastor is basically putting Jurko, Harry and Carm up on a rickety chair with a noose around their necks - and then jumping up and down on the floor. This 'radio executive' could give a rat's ass about ESPN1000's existing listeners. He's cutting expenses, and trying to retain ratings - which won't happen. Then when things fail, it won't be his fault - but he'll have the solution - trim back to one local show and more profit. Then when the ratings continue to sink, he'll point the finger at corporate and tell them they're nationally syndicated shows (other than Mike and Mike) aren't cutting it. Jim Pastor is a Teflon suit wearing executive, who will quickly find out what the Peter Principle is all about.
This from Los Angeles:
Link:
http://www.insidesocal.com/tomhoffarth/ ... radio.htmlPart of the meetings in Bristol, Conn., this week attended by KSPN-AM (710) new VP and general manager Chris Berry and program director Larry Gifford involved adjustments to the national ESPN Radio programming, which the local stuff is built around.
They've decided that in a two-part move, ESPN Radio will change this way in the near future to add a new show, boost the hours of a couple others and switch someone else to East Coast drive ...
OK, enough of a tease. As of Feb. 2, it'll be (with West Coast times, of course):
3 to 7 a.m.: Mike & Mike in the Morning
7 to 10 a.m.: The Herd with Colin Cowherd
10 a.m. to noon: Tirico & Van Pelt
Noon to 1 p.m.: Scott Van Pelt Show
1 to 4 p.m.: The Doug Gottlieb Show -- new to the lineup.
4 to 5 p.m.: Football Tonight
5 to 7 p.m.: The Brian Kenny Show
7 to 10 p.m.: ESPN live news and info block
10 p.m. to 2 a.m.: AllNight with Jason Smith
2 to 3 a.m.: SportsCenter
Starting March 16, Cowherd adds an hour on the backend (running 7 to 11 a.m.), while the Van Pelt solo stint (thankfully) ends, keeping the Tirico and Van Pelt combo from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. -- which Van Pelt seems to host solo too often enough.
So what does it mean for the local programming on KSPN?
Most likely, our sources tell us that with Gottlieb, a So Cal native moving from nights to days, he'll be on the air in L.A. in that 1-to-4 slot and shift the Steve Mason and John Ireland show back to its original 4 to 7 p.m. time, covering up the national show from Kenney, the ESPN "SportsCenter" anchor. Brian Long will also stay in the loop, probably during that 7 to 10 p.m. "news and info block" with Dave Denholm and do their show from the new ESPN Zone in L.A. Live across from Staples Center to add the live vibe.
Other factors that could alter this scenario:
==The Lakers start partnering with KSPN this fall with their games ... does Mychael Thompson, who will stay on a radio analyst, find a role in a sport-talk show at the station? Can you envision a situation where he does the Lakers games for one station but keeps his sports-talk co-host role at KLAC-AM (570), which is in his current contract and pays him more than if he just did the games?
==With all the dough that ESPN is spending on new studios for the local radio station (on-air talent as well as sales staff, etc.), can they afford to be so network-heavy on programming? It would make more sense that they do this to accomodate more local programming.
==Gifford gave Gottleib a tryout at the station as a consideration as a local host once Dave Dameshek was blown out. Does Jim Pastor, the overseeing boss at KSPN (as well as the ESPN Radio owned-and-operated affiliates in Chicago and Dallas) really like Gotteib enough to OK him going to the L.A. audience?