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KDKA’s Kevin Battle Making The Most of Chances in Return Home

Battle sat down with Barrett News Media to discuss his journey to become the co-host of the KDKA-AM Radio morning show with Larry Richert.

Ryan Hedrick

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Pittsburgh native Kevin Battle is as blue-collar as they come. As the co-host of the legendary KDKA-AM Radio morning show, Battle’s diversity, and willingness to try new things has served him well. In addition to radio, he has worked in sales, marketing, public relations, and customer service.

In between stints in Baltimore and New York City, Battle worked selling motorcycles while juggling a part-time position at the now-defunct all-news station WNEW FM in Washington D.C. It was there that he learned about a position at Fox News Radio that would eventually prepare him for the opportunity to return home to work at a station that he grew up idolizing.

Battle’s radio career began after he graduated from Clarion University of Pennsylvania. He was hired by Clear Channel Pittsburgh to work at its six-station cluster where he would spend the next eight years sharpening his skills in production, digital dissemination, and promotions.

In 2011, CBS Radio hired him to program and re-brand the station now known as 105.7 The Fan. He credits his time there for helping him realize the parallels that exist between sports and news talk. Recently, Battle sat down with Barrett News Media to discuss his journey to become the co-host of the KDKA-AM Radio morning show with Larry Richert and what he learned from his time in the Fox News Radio newsroom.

Ryan Hedrick: You were a sports programmer in Baltimore for several years. How and why did you make the transition to news/talk radio?

Kevin Battle: My contract was not renewed in Baltimore because things changed. So, after that, I found myself on the outside of radio looking in. I started selling motorcycles part-time and then I landed a part-time job at WNEW 99.1 FM in Washington D.C. After a year, somebody told me about a position in New York at Fox News Radio.

At the time I sent my resume up, they just happened to be putting together a SiriusXM broadcast called Fox News Headlines 24/7. They needed a lot of people and they needed them quickly. My lease was coming up on my apartment and I had two part-time jobs that didn’t mind if I was going to leave on such short notice.

RH: When you were programming the sports station in Baltimore what was your long-term goal?

KB: I had always been a news junkie. I was somebody who grew up in the news, my first job was with the Pittsburgh Press. I grew up in Pittsburgh, so sports are just drilled into your head. Before I started programming sports in Baltimore, I was out of radio again because of circumstances and the way they presented themselves.

In 2008, I was selling real estate when the economy collapsed. At the same time, Baltimore was re-branding its politically motivated FM station to sports talk. You can run a sports station just like a news station. That’s what I did. We focused on the hottest topics of the day and we spoke passionately about them. Our ratings jumped from 16th to 2nd.

RH: How did your experience at Fox News Radio set you up for the opportunity to co-host a morning show on KDKA in Pittsburgh?

KB: The people at Fox were phenomenal, I couldn’t have asked for a better group to work for. There is a lot made about the network’s politics, but I worked in the newsroom and in that environment they just wanted the facts and they wanted everything correct.

RH: What are the main differences between your job at Fox News Radio and your current position at KDKA-AM?

KB: I am the co-host of the KDKA morning show. I book guests and I help cultivate the topics that we will be discussing. KDKA is uber focused on Pittsburgh, it is Pittsburgh, and we try to represent Pittsburgh all day and every day.

When I was at Fox doing national radio, there was no local touch. You kind of gloss over the regions and you gloss over the big stories of the day. When you are on the network you lose touch with the listener. At KDKA, I have felt the energy from the local listener from day one.

RH: Take us inside the process that ultimately got you hired at KDKA-AM.

KB: It was interesting because I knew the programmer at the time who was Jim Graci. He called me and said “I didn’t know if you noticed, but we have a job opening at KDKA.” I went through the interview process but by no means was the phone call a guarantee that I was going to get the job, it was just an invitation to apply. I took a week off during Christmas break to meet Larry [Richert]. I met him 20 years ago, but he didn’t remember me. At that point, we had never worked together. Management wanted me to do a live on-air audition and I couldn’t do that because I was working for Fox at the time and there was an affiliate station in the same market. So, we went into a side studio and we did some breaks, and everything went smoothly. I was nervous as heck because it was KDKA, Larry is a legend, and I wanted to come home.

RH: Recently, Barrett Sports/News Media reported that KDKA PD Jim Graciis out of a job. What is your environment like working without a program director?

KB: What’s happening now is that P.J. Kumanchik who is the news director is a phenomenal guy, he is the heart and soul of KDKA. P.J. has been with the station for almost 30 years. He knows every piece of equipment, every button, every schedule, he knows everything that there is to know about KDKA. You have so many great professionals with so much experience, it’s like something is missing but nothing is being dropped.  

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Can News/Talk Radio Be the Opposite of the Thanksgiving Table?

I wonder if the delicate dance between honesty and not wanting to offend is the same at the “table” as it is on the radio airwaves. Regardless, the prospect of conversations in both places can be both refreshing and frightening.

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A photo of a family dinner

As we get overnight Truth Social rants from Donald Trump, Hunter Biden’s laptop trending, another presidential debate, and more calls for anyone but a Trump-Biden race, the whole ability to be politically independent seems to be increasingly difficult, whether it be on the radio or at the dinner table.

First, what does it actually mean to be independent? Everyone likes to say they’re independent, but before judging them on their merits, what are the defining criteria?

It’s not about objectivity vs. subjectivity. No one is truly objective, so let’s get past that middle school comparison. I view the concept of political independence as two things: Intellectual flexibility and partisan separation.

The first term involves the ability to react to new, different, and dynamic information and actually adjust a viewpoint. Ardent partisans call this flip-flopping. I call it a saving grace of the free mind (cue Matrix theme music). You should be able to evolve and shift a position based on learning. Most adults are not able or willing to do this (see my old column on silos).

Partisan separation is an offshoot of the willingness to be intellectually flexible. If you are 100 percent beholden to a party, you cannot be intellectually flexible. As a human and as a morning radio host, that’s an untenable place to occupy – IMHO, as the young’uns say.

When I review my portfolio of political views, thoughts, and feelings, I accept some that are considered conservative, and others that look progressive, while still possessing several moderate stances as well. The point is not to blindly follow a line; follow what your senses tell you, even if it’s not consistently one side or the other.

Think of it as split-ticket voting, but on issues and not candidates – and try doing it on an ongoing basis.

Critics on either side may say you flip flop or even some call you a coward. I am fine with that, and every day on the air, I am working on the courage to embrace all 360 degrees of my views without fear of the response. My agenda is not to have an agenda.

So, some two weeks after Thanksgiving, I am still processing the many hours of conversation at the “table”. I put that in quotations because we don’t actually have a sit-down meal. With 35 or so people, we set up the food buffet-style and let everyone have at it.

I wonder if the delicate dance between honesty and not wanting to offend is the same at the “table” as it is on the radio airwaves. Regardless, the prospect of conversations in both places can be both refreshing and frightening.

Personally, I like to go there right away and then assess whether it’s worth staying there. At my holiday meal, there were so many options for people to talk to – one could just float around the rooms — and the outs are easy. I could get more food, hit the bathroom, or the simple need to catch up with someone else. As the alcohol flowed, so did the more political conversations.

I know not to give my end-of-day thoughts with the close relatives; I keep that kind of candor to crazy cousins and their spouses.

My wife’s extended family is mostly New England Democrats with a smattering of shy-about-it Republicans. In the past, we’ve had drunken tears over political issues – including one fantastic meltdown over a relative’s vote for Trump — but it’s been mostly quiet for the last few years. Having said that it’s clear that a truly independent – or rather, open-minded – approach is precarious.

Here are some areas, questions, and stances where I’ve learned people get upset, and more disturbingly, judge you — whether it be on the radio or at the dinner “table”. These are all things we should be able to discuss without fear:

Can’t you truly want to expand the vote to the most people possible but also wonder about the merits of voter ID and absentee ballot security?

If you worry about the concept of late-term abortion, you are pro-life.

And If you question the border policy, you are anti-immigrant.

If you at least acknowledge the fact that the world actually seemed more peaceful three years ago, you might as well have a MAGA flag in your bedroom.

Question President Biden’s age? people think you’re going to vote for Donald Trump.

If you lament the death of Palestinian civilians, you are anti-Israel.

If you correct the misuse of the term genocide, it means you support genocide.

Think the government has the potential to be a force for good? You’re a spend-thirsty liberal.

If you want to save Social Security by raising the earnings cap, you’re a tax-thirsty liberal.

If you recognize white privilege and still want to work out how to make opportunity fair in this country, you’re anti-white.

Want to at least brainstorm on what reparations would look like? You are also anti-white.

If you are curious about whether there should be some sort of line at some point between boys and girls sports, you are anti-trans.

If you argue for true free speech, you get in trouble on both sides.

And if you think market-based solutions can work, you are an elitist.

I could go on and on, but you get the point. Exploring these issues should not mean an absolute commitment to a stance. These are evolving subjects, and there has to be an evolving discourse in order to even have a chance at intellectual flexibility.

Do I have an answer for how to do this? No. Am I still hesitant to approach some of these topics on the air? Yes. Will I continue to test things when it feels appropriate? Absolutely.

In radio, getting there remains a work in progress, but even though I want to work in the middle a lot, it does not mean that I want to be stuck there.

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Is Journalism Worth the Cost? Facebook and Google Are About to Find Out

Is there really value in Big Tech and social media, or are you, the user, being sold to advertisers and potentially next to news outlets?

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Can you put a price on journalism? A new Columbia University study says you can and U.S. publishers are owed nearly $14 Billion from Google and Meta. The number comes from both companies’ total advertising revenue.

Meta’s disbursement would be $1.9 Billion (6.6%). Google’s payout would be much higher at $10-$12 Billion (17.5%) because the study found a majority of Google users preferred the site with news. This information comes as several countries, like Australia and Canada, have passed legislation requiring payments to publishers. Other countries, including the United States, are looking to pass legislation requiring Big Tech companies to compensate outlets for carrying their news content.

According to Pew Research Center, 86% of Americans are “often getting news” on their smartphone, computer, or other digital devices. Of those surveyed, half get news from social media. However, revenue flow for many news outlets is thinner than the newsprint that arrives at your door. NewsRated reports profits for newspaper outlets in 2021 were $1.44 Billion, a 12.54% drop since 2017. Their main source of funding comes from online ads.

While the extra payday from Big Tech would benefit most if not all outlets, is it ethical to be paid by the platform that is distributing your product? Especially when they can and have censored news at their own discretion.

In August, Meta stopped sharing news content in Canada because of passed legislation requiring the social media company to pay news outlets for its journalism. In late November, Canada and Google agreed the technology company would pay $100 Million annually to news publishers in the country. Final rules for the Great White North’s legislation will be released on December 19.

In the U.S., take a look at what social media giants did to the New York Post after their initial article on Hunter Biden’s laptop. The outlet was barred from accessing their Twitter account unless the tweet was deleted. Twitter and Facebook both suppressed reposts of the story. Not only did this story turn out to be true, but it took legacy media outlets 769 days to verify its legitimacy. If conservative outlets weren’t banging the drum on this story, would it have been swept under the rug completely?


The other issue with Big Tech paying news outlets, can and would it selectively negotiate with outlets whose content aligns with the values of Big Tech? Keep in mind Google is already facing an antitrust lawsuit for allegedly maintaining a monopoly over the online search market. Could they unilaterally decide which media outlets they pay, which news content they carry, and would they allow news, like the antitrust lawsuit, to populate on their search engine?

If Big Tech controls what you see, does their bias now replace journalistic integrity? Furthermore, if the delivery of news content becomes subject to the law of supply and demand versus the true utility of news content, to inform the public, is the media’s intended function (being the 4th estate) now completely null and void?

One country might have some of the answers, Australia. Legislators Down Under pushed through legislation for Google and Meta to pay media outlets in 2021. By all accounts it’s labeled as a ‘success.’

More than 30 outlets signed deals with Google and Meta for compensation. One year after the legislation was enacted Australia’s The Guardian added 50 journalists. Non-Disclosure agreements (NDAs) however don’t let the public know how much outlets are being paid by Big Tech. Critics of the legislation believe these NDAs may leave smaller outlets unable to compete with mainstream media.

One important note, legislators are leaving X, formerly Twitter, out of the compensation discussion. They lost $75 Million in revenue after Elon Musk bought the platform. This begs the question, is there really value in Big Tech and social media, or are you, the user, being sold to advertisers and potentially next to news outlets?

Regardless, Musk’s purchase taught us a few things, all social media serves as a “de facto public town square.” With that analogy, Google is now your library. Research is no longer about what you look at, it’s who is telling you what to look at. All algorithms operate like this. Even if fray and fringe news outlets strike a deal with Big Tech they still could be selectively censored due to a designed lack of clicks. Legislation like this in U.S. is still awhile away at the Federal level.

Instead, States are trying to take matters into their own hands. In California, a Democratic State Assembly Member introduced a bill requiring tech companies to pay a 70% usage fee when advertising is sold next to news content. Can these payments uphold the integrity of journalism? Or does the price of journalism cost journalists their integrity?

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Jen Psaki Continues Tallying Ratings Wins for MSNBC

MSNBC rewarded that success by expanding her show to Mondays at 8 PM Eastern which precedes the channel’s popular Rachel Maddow Show.

Doug Pucci

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A photo of Jen Psaki
(Photo: MSNBC)

Jen Psaki, President Biden’s first White House press secretary, officially joined MSNBC’s roster of anchors and hosts back on March 19 with Inside with Jen Psaki.

The Sunday noon time show got off to a positive start when it debuted to 1.094 million viewers including 137,000 within the key 25-54 demographic. It fell just 12,000 shy of Fox News Channel’s Fox News Live in total viewers on that day (Mar. 19), but the MSNBC show led its timeslot over FNC and CNN in adults 25-54. It was at that time news of Donald Trump’s then-pending arraignment in New York City began to surface, resulting in a ratings uplift to the left-leaning outlet overall.

Inside with Jen Psaki instantly became MSNBC’s No. 1 show on Sundays, and has remained so, despite the waning of news of Trump’s legal woes. Since its Mar. 19 launch through Nov. 26, the program has averaged 823,000 viewers and 87,000 adults 25-54, according to Nielsen Media Research. For three out of the four Sundays within the month of August (Aug. 13 the exception), Jen Psaki outdrew its time slot competition FNC’s Fox News Live in total viewers.

MSNBC rewarded that success by expanding her show to Mondays at 8 PM Eastern which precedes the channel’s popular Rachel Maddow Show. For Psaki’s Monday premiere back on Sep. 25, former House Speaker Nancy Pelosi was a guest.

That edition posted 1.666 million viewers including 139,000 adults 25-54; compared to the Monday prior (Sep. 18), relatively even with usual time slot occupant All In with Chris Hayes among the key demo (133,000) but rose 342,000 in total viewers (All In now only airing on MSNBC Tuesdays thru Fridays). “Inside” Monday has since remained an improvement over All In, averaging 1.46 million viewers and 143,000 adults 25-54 through Nov. 20.

On the opposite end for MSNBC, it recently axed its Sunday evening program The Mehdi Hasan Show. It lasted just 21 months on linear TV; it originally began on NBCUniversal’s streaming platform Peacock in Oct. 2020. Its most recent result was for Nov. 26: a mere 440,000 viewers and 26,000 in 25-54 — a higher total audience than CNN (335,000) in the Sunday 8 p.m. slot but far behind in the important demo (CNN, 54,000 adults 25-54).

While Hasan had enjoyed above 600,000 total viewers in each of its August editions, it still drew much less than half of its direct competitor from FNC, Life, Liberty and Levin. Returning to the example of Nov. 26 at 8 PM, FNC experienced an even larger margin of victory over its cable news competitors with Levin delivering 1.371 million viewers including 114,000 in 25-54.

Cable news averages for November 13-19, 2023:

Total Day (Nov. 13-19 @ 6 a.m.-5:59 a.m.)

  • Fox News Channel: 1.229 million viewers; 149,000 adults 25-54
  • MSNBC: 0.833 million viewers; 85,000 adults 25-54
  • CNN: 0.456 million viewers; 87,000 adults 25-54
  • Newsmax: 0.145 million viewers; 11,000 adults 25-54
  • HLN: 0.135 million viewers; 38,000 adults 25-54
  • Fox Business Network: 0.115 million viewers; 12,000 adults 25-54
  • CNBC: 0.112 million viewers; 24,000 adults 25-54
  • NewsNation: 0.074 million viewers; 13,000 adults 25-54
  • The Weather Channel: 0.074 million viewers; 19,000 adults 25-54

Prime Time (Nov. 13-18 @ 8-11 p.m.; Nov. 19 @ 7-11 p.m.)

  • Fox News Channel: 1.831 million viewers; 213,000 adults 25-54
  • MSNBC: 1.241 million viewers; 115,000 adults 25-54
  • CNN: 0.509 million viewers; 110,000 adults 25-54
  • Newsmax: 0.201 million viewers; 16,000 adults 25-54
  • NewsNation: 0.108 million viewers; 21,000 adults 25-54

Top 10 most-watched cable news programs (and the top programs of other outlets with their respective associated ranks) in total viewers:

1. The Five (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 3.029 million viewers

2. The Five (FOXNC, Tue. 11/14/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.842 million viewers

3. The Five (FOXNC, Wed. 11/15/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.744 million viewers

4. The Five (FOXNC, Thu. 11/16/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.680 million viewers

5. Jesse Watters Primetime (FOXNC, Wed. 11/15/2023 8:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.643 million viewers

6. The Five (FOXNC, Fri. 11/17/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.616 million viewers

7. Jesse Watters Primetime (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 8:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.565 million viewers

8. Rachel Maddow Show (MSNBC, Mon. 11/13/2023 9:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.543 million viewers

9. Jesse Watters Primetime (FOXNC, Tue. 11/14/2023 8:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.533 million viewers

10. Hannity (FOXNC, Tue. 11/14/2023 9:00 PM, 60 min.) 2.328 million viewers

Top 10 cable news programs (and the top  programs of other outlets with their respective associated ranks) among adults 25-54:

1. The Five (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.322 million adults 25-54

2. Gutfeld! (FOXNC, Fri. 11/17/2023 10:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.315 million adults 25-54

3. Gutfeld! (FOXNC, Tue. 11/14/2023 10:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.298 million adults 25-54

4. Jesse Watters Primetime (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 8:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.297 million adults 25-54

5. Gutfeld! (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 10:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.292 million adults 25-54

6. The Five (FOXNC, Wed. 11/15/2023 5:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.281 million adults 25-54

7. The Ingraham Angle (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 7:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.280 million adults 25-54

8. Jesse Watters Primetime (FOXNC, Tue. 11/14/2023 8:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.277 million adults 25-54

9. Hannity (FOXNC, Tue. 11/14/2023 9:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.270 million adults 25-54

10. Hannity (FOXNC, Mon. 11/13/2023 9:00 PM, 60 min.) 0.263 million adults 25-54

Source: Live+Same Day data, Nielsen Media Research

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