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KMOX Reporter Brian Kelly Departs

Kelly, who rejoined the station in 2009 after originally working there from 1997 to 2002, was a news reporter and weekend edition of Total Information AM

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Cuts from Audacy continue as KMOX Brian Kelly has departed.

Kelly, who rejoined the station in 2009 after originally working there from 1997 to 2002, was a news reporter and weekend edition of Total Information AM.

A report from KSDK-TV claims four employees were released in the Audacy cuts in St. Louis, including Kelly.

He previously was a traffic reporter, weekend news and sports reporter in Kansas City before working for KMOX.

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7 Comments

7 Comments

  1. Ann Mowery

    September 10, 2022 at 7:25 am

    How could you let Bryan Kelly go? What a talented man. Looked forward to total information on Saturday. Always listened. His music and interesting topics were top notch. I won’t be listening. Another person I miss is Ryan Wrecker. Overnights are not the same.
    I’ll be finding another station.

  2. Ann Mowery

    September 10, 2022 at 7:25 am

    How could you let Bryan Kelly go? What a talented man. Looked forward to total information on Saturday. Always listened. His music and interesting topics were top notch. I won’t be listening. Another person I miss is Ryan Wrecker. Overnights are not the same.
    I’ll be finding another station.

  3. Pat Siewing

    September 12, 2022 at 9:09 pm

    I also miss Brian Kelly. He was very professional and I ALWAYS enjoyed listening to him on Saturday and Sunday mornings. He was an excellent reporter and did a wonderful job interviewing his guests. Why on earth would you let an excellent, professional and interesting man go???? I am very, very disappointed. Also disappointed in some of your other changes. I have listened to KMOX radio for many, many years, but I may be looking for a different radio station. 😞😬

  4. Carolyn

    September 17, 2022 at 7:45 am

    I miss Brian Kelly on Total Information Am on the weekend. I won’t be listening to KMOX on the weekend anymore.

  5. Carolyn

    September 17, 2022 at 7:45 am

    I miss Brian Kelly on Total Information Am on the weekend. I won’t be listening to KMOX on the weekend anymore.

  6. Eric Mosely

    September 17, 2022 at 10:12 am

    I am extremely disappointed that you let Brian Kelly go. His Saturday and Sunday programs were unequalled elsewhere. Brian showed his interviewing skills by asking important questions that other reporters skipped. His music selections always either jogged my memory and/or made my day. By letting Brian Kelly go, KMOX proved it no longer has a finger on the pulse of St Louis.

  7. Eric Mosely

    September 17, 2022 at 10:12 am

    I am extremely disappointed that you let Brian Kelly go. His Saturday and Sunday programs were unequalled elsewhere. Brian showed his interviewing skills by asking important questions that other reporters skipped. His music selections always either jogged my memory and/or made my day. By letting Brian Kelly go, KMOX proved it no longer has a finger on the pulse of St Louis.

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News Audio

Bob Pittman: iHeartMedia Won’t Be Shutting Down Broadcast Stations

“90% of Americans listen to iHeart broadcast radio stations every month. To put that in context, the biggest TV network reaches less than 40% of Americans and the big streaming music services reach less than 30%.”

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Very few large broadcasting corporations adopted digital platforms as quickly as iHeartMedia did. iHeartRadio is one of the most popular platforms for streaming content from a variety off stations. Bob Pittman says that does not mean the company does not see plenty of value in traditional broadcast radio.

Lydia Moynihan of The New York Post spoke with the iHeartMedia CEO Friday morning. She asked Pittman if he could foresee a day when the company would be done with terrestrial radio and focus solely on digital products.

“To the contrary – the strength and foundation of our company is our broadcast radio stations,” Pittman responded. “90% of Americans listen to iHeart broadcast radio stations every month. To put that in context, the biggest TV network reaches less than 40% of Americans and the big streaming music services reach less than 30%.”

He added that any success that the company has seen with podcasting or streaming is clearly linked to the success of the its radio stations. He said that is true for its live events too.

“We use that massive and unique reach of our broadcast radio to build complementary products like the iHeartRadio digital service and our major events like the iHeartRadio Music Festival, the iHeartRadio Music Awards and the iHeartRadio Jingle Ball Tour, and it’s why we’re the #1 podcast publisher by a lot.  It all starts with using the trusted voices on our broadcast radio stations and creating demand – and with our unparalleled reach we have quite an advantage over the other audio players, regardless of their cash war chests.”

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News Audio

Buffalo, Chicago, Milwaukee Top Markets for AM Radio

“The study shows thirteen markets that have at least 40% of listeners using AM radio. Ten of them are in the Midwest.”

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Nielsen has looked at information from the 2022 fall book to determine where AM radio is the most popular. The company released a list Thursday of 141 markets where at least 20% of radio listeners tune to AM radio in a given month. Cities in the Great Lakes region are all at the top of the list.

In Buffalo, 56% of radio listeners use the AM band in a month. The market’s most-listened to stations are both AM stations owned by Audacy – news/talk WBEN and sports talker WGR. Neither has an FM simulcast.

There is a tie for second place. 48% of listeners in Chicago utilize AM. Popular news stations WGN and WLS are both only available on AM as is the market’s heritage sports talk brand, 670 The Score. Milwaukee is the other market with 48% of listeners using AM radio.

AM radio remains very popular in the Midwest. The study shows thirteen markets that have at least 40% of listeners using AM radio. Ten of them are in the Midwest.

Last month, Nielsen used numbers from the 2022 Fall book to show that across the country, more than 82 million people rely on AM radio during a month. That is a third of all terrestrial radio listeners.

A hearing on Sen. Ed Markey’s AM For Every Vehicle Act is scheduled for Wednesday on Capitol Hill.

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News Audio

Fox News Radio Reportedly Facing Cutbacks

“Freelance shifts still exist on the network and current freelancers have been offered other opportunities over the weekend. Staff employees were not impacted.”

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According to All Access, Fox News Radio is tightening the belt a bit. Job cuts and staff reassignments are on the way.

Most of the effected positions are filled by freelancers. Reporters and fill-in hosts could be effected.

“Fox News Audio has reduced the number of freelance shifts and adjusted its workflow on weekends,” a source told Perry Michael Simon. “Freelance shifts still exist on the network and current freelancers have been offered other opportunities over the weekend. Staff employees were not impacted.”

One full-time staffer has confirmed that he is out. News anchor Kerin McCue had been with Fox News Radio since 2012. He told All Access that he will exit some time this month. The report does not say if that is the result of these cutbacks or McCue’s own decision.

The network does have a lower-cost plan for the weekend. Some repurposed content from SiriusXM’s Fox News Headlines 24/7 will fill newscast slots.

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