1st Edition

Sports-Talk Radio in America Its Context and Culture

    234 Pages
    by Routledge

    234 Pages
    by Routledge

    An inside look at the hosts, hot spots, and history of sports-talk radio

    Sports-Talk Radio in America looks at major-, medium-, and small-market stations across the United States that feature an all-sports format, with a focus on the unique personalities and programming strategies that make each station successful. Broadcasters, journalists, and academics provide insight on how and why this media phenomenon has become an important influence of American culture, examining the “guy talk” broadcasting approach, the traditional sports-emphasis approach, “HSOs” (hot sports opinions), localism in broadcasting, how sports talk radio builds “communities” of listeners, and how reckless, on-air comments can actually build ratings.

    For better of worse, millions of (mostly) male listeners indulge their obsession with sports to the exclusion of virtually everything else available on the radio dial-music, news, and political talk. This unique book examines how this “niche of the niche” has formed a bond between its hosts and their rabid, passionate, and loyal audiences, spinning the dial from the largest, best-known stations in big-league markets to smaller stations in Collegetown, USA, including Philadelphia’s WIP, “The Ticket,” KTCK in Dallas, WEEI in Boston, “The Team,” WQTM in Orlando, KJR in Seattle, KOZN “The Zone” Omaha, Nebraska, WGR and WNSA in Buffalo, Kansas City’s WHB, and “The Fan,” WFAN in New York, the first all-sports radio station and the blueprint for the format. Sports-Talk Radio in America puts you in the studio with Mike and the Mad Dog, Angelo Cataldi, Howard Eskin, “The Musers” (“Junior” Miller and George Dunham), Norm Hitges, John Dennis and Gerry Callahan, Dan Sileo, Howard Simon, and Art Wander.

    Sports-Talk Radio in America examines:

    • how stations create an environment in which listeners become part of a social group (social-identity and self-categorization theories)
    • personality-driven programming
    • the station’s commitment to local teams and their fans
    • how exploring controversial topics beyond sports broadens station’s appeal and attracts upscale, affluent audience
    • how an abundance of live, play-by-play broadcasting, creating plenty of available content
    • college sports in a town without a major professional sports team
    • how local sports is framed by hosts and callers
    • the conflicted relationship between sports-talk radio and the print media
    • and much more!
    Sports-Talk Radio in America is a must-read for academics and professionals working in radio-television and popular culture.

    • About the Editor
    • Contributors
    • “Sign On”
    • Chapter 1. KTCK, “The Ticket,” Dallas-Fort Worth: “Radio by the Everyman,
      for the Everyman” (J. M. Dempsey)
    • Chapter 2. WEEI, Boston: “Men Are Adults, Too” (Ron Bland)
    • Chapter 3. WFAN and the Birth of All-Sports Radio: Sporting a New Format (Paul F. Gullifor)
    • History
    • Current Programming
    • Conclusion
    • Chapter 4. WQTM, “The Team,” Orlando: Sports-Talk Radio in a City Where Sports Are Not King (Alma Kadragic)
    • Orlando As a Sports Town
    • Competition for “The Team”: WORL, “The Fan”
    • Chapter 5. KOZN, “The Zone,” Omaha, Nebraska: “Unsportsmanlike Conduct” (J. H. Lipschultz and M. L. Hilt)
    • College Sports in a Non-Pro-Sports Town
    • Framing and Sports-Talk Radio
    • Content: Unsportsmanlike Conduct
    • Conclusions and Interpretations
    • Appendix: An Interview with Neil Nelkin, Program Director, “The Zone”
    • Chapter 6. KJR, Seattle: “It’s Our Job to Provide the Biggest Menu” (Troy Oppie)
    • Introduction
    • Part One: Roots
    • Part Two: Sports Radio 950, K-J-R!
    • Part Three: The Future
    • Conclusion
    • Chapter 7. WIP, Philadelphia: “The Station with the Big Mouth and Even Bigger Heart” (Douglas Pils)
    • Chapter 8. WGR and WNSA, Buffalo: Sports-Talk Radio versus Sports-Talk
      Radio—Competition Within the Sports-Talk Format (William Raffel)
    • Buffalo Sports on the Radio
    • Economics and the Birth of Full-Time Sports Talk
    • The Nature of the Competition
    • WGR Fights for a Second Look
    • Epilogue
    • Chapter 9. WHB, Kansas City: “World’s Happiest Broadcasters” (Max Utsler)
    • The Early Days of WHB
    • KCTE: Radio on a Shoestring
    • The Competition Heats Up
    • Chapter 10. WWLS, Oklahoma City: Unleashing “The Animal” (Shelley Wigley)
    • “Sign Off”
    • Index
    • Reference Notes Included

    Biography

    Hoffmann, Frank; Dempsey, Jack M.; Manning, Martin J