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Steve Sobol had written:
| | Funny that you mention KCBS. When I'm in an AM mood I listen to KNX 1070. I | generally have little use for talk radio (although John and Ken occasionally | have something entertaining to say over on KFI), and when I'm down in | Greater Los Angeles, all of the other stations' traffic only covers Los | Angeles County and Orange County. KNX's "extended" traffic coverage also | covers the Inland Empire (Riverside and San Bernardino counties), including | I-15 through southern San Bernardino County up into the Cajon Pass, the | route I take to get home. | | I think I'll give KCBS a try next time I'm down there. Will be interesting | to listen to the difference between the two stations. KCBS is somewhat different from KNX. KCBS is usually pretty rigid on its newswheel, much more so than KNX. In the morning, I do not need a clock. I can tell what time it is by listening to what KCBS is doing. On the other hand, KCBS seems to have a somewhat more evenly paced style (story lengths plus the pace of newsreading) than KNX. KCBS voices can be a little quirkier than KNX, i.e. there are some reporters and anchors on KCBS who, while quite professional, don't have a stereotypical news-announcer sound. I actually find that rather refreshing. Until about a year ago, KCBS could be somewhat laid-back. The lockout, for example, was famous for the very long pause between "KCBS" and "All-News 74". The lockout is now just "KCBS". The bumpers were changed, too (whereas KNX hardly has any at all other than the traffic sounder). I think both are high-quality operations - the differences are stylistic, but the reporting and presentation are quite professional in either case. -- Mark Roberts |"Nor was it the last empire to delude itself that the best troops, Oakland, Cal.| armed with the latest equipment and backed by the resources of NO HTML MAIL | the greatest state in the world, could overcome every military or | political challenge." -- Geoffrey Parker, | "The Army of Flanders and the Spanish Road" (1972) Permission to archive this article in any form is hereby explicitly denied. |
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