Archer's Line Podcast

Local TV Pushes Back

4 min · 23. juni 2026
episode Local TV Pushes Back cover

Description

For months, major media companies have seemed determined to avoid conflict with President Trump and his allies. Lawsuits were settled. Executives made visits to Mar-a-Lago. Media companies appeared eager to stay out of the political crossfire. Now ABC is doing something different. In this episode of Archer's Line, Rob Archer looks at ABC's new public campaign against the FCC, including ads running on ABC-owned stations and appeals to viewers to contact regulators directly. The campaign comes after the FCC subjected ABC-owned stations, including KABC Los Angeles, to an unusually early license review and opened a separate proceeding involving The View. The bigger question may be whether ABC's actions signal a broader shift inside the media industry. After months of accommodation and concessions, are some companies deciding that keeping their heads down isn't providing much protection? Rob examines the growing battle between media companies and regulators, the limits of corporate appeasement, and why television stations are suddenly asking viewers to help defend their licenses. For more articles, podcasts, and commentary, visit Archer's Line at TheRobArcher.com [http://TheRobArcher.com]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

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91 episodes

episode Is This the Biggest Radio Layoff Ever? artwork

Is This the Biggest Radio Layoff Ever?

Is iHeartMedia carrying out the biggest layoff in radio history? The latest round of cuts has eliminated local personalities and programmers across dozens of markets, with the list of affected employees still growing. But how does it compare with the massive Clear Channel layoffs of 2009 and iHeart's cuts in 2020? In this episode of Archer's Line, Rob Archer looks at the numbers, explains why this round may be unprecedented for on-air talent and programmers, and shares his own experience of being laid off twice by iHeartMedia. Topics include: Why the layoffs are still unfolding The $150 million cost-cutting plan behind the cuts Which markets have lost local talent How this compares with the 2009 and 2020 layoffs Why RadioInsight calls it the biggest purge in radio history What these cuts say about the future of local radio For more articles, podcasts, and commentary, visit Archer's Line at TheRobArcher.com [http://TheRobArcher.com]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

Yesterday3 min
episode The Price of Experience artwork

The Price of Experience

Experience Is Becoming a Liability Experience used to be something employers sought out. Increasingly, it seems to be treated as something to eliminate. In this episode of Archer's Line, Rob Archer looks at a growing trend that reaches far beyond broadcasting. Layoffs across radio, television, newspapers, and other industries are removing not just employees, but decades of institutional knowledge. Companies promise greater efficiency, but what happens when the people who know how to solve problems are no longer there? Rob explores why experience has become a target for cost-cutting, what businesses gain by trimming payroll, and what they may be sacrificing in the process. Plus, a preview of Monday's new episode of Archer & Feldman, featuring nationally syndicated broadcaster Mo'Kelly, discussing the latest iHeartMedia layoffs, the future of radio, and where the industry goes from here. For more articles, podcasts, and commentary, visit Archer's Line at TheRobArcher.com [http://TheRobArcher.com]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

28. juni 20264 min
episode "Maybe We Got Out Just in Time" artwork

"Maybe We Got Out Just in Time"

iHeartMedia has begun another round of layoffs, and for many broadcasters, it feels painfully familiar. In this edition of Archer's Line, Rob Archer reflects on his own layoff from KNX a year ago and the unsettling conversation he's heard repeatedly from former colleagues ever since: "Maybe we got out just in time." As radio, television, and digital media companies continue cutting staff, consolidating operations, and chasing efficiencies, thousands of journalists and broadcasters are wondering where the next round of job losses will land. Rob examines the latest iHeartMedia cuts, the potential impact of the proposed Paramount-Warner Bros. Discovery merger, and what these developments say about the state of the media business. He also highlights the latest episode of Archer & Feldman featuring SAG-AFTRA broadcast vice president Bob Butler, discussing what the merger could mean for journalists, broadcasters, and media workers across the country. Links: • iHeartMedia layoffs: https://radioinsight.com/headlines/360118/iheart-starts-programming-realignment-with-ongoing-cuts/ [https://radioinsight.com/headlines/360118/iheart-starts-programming-realignment-with-ongoing-cuts/] • Los Angeles County report on potential merger job losses: https://deadline.com/2026/06/paramount-warner-bros-job-losses-la-county-report-1236962892/ [https://deadline.com/2026/06/paramount-warner-bros-job-losses-la-county-report-1236962892/] • Atlanta concerns over CNN and Turner jobs: https://www.ajc.com/business/2026/06/warnerparamount-merger-threatens-more-cnn-and-turner-jobs-in-atlanta/ [https://www.ajc.com/business/2026/06/warnerparamount-merger-threatens-more-cnn-and-turner-jobs-in-atlanta/] • Archer & Feldman: "Merger Mania" with Bob Butler: https://youtu.be/daVIVjxNhnQ?si=gA1XSb0vK7xPW14K [https://youtu.be/daVIVjxNhnQ?si=gA1XSb0vK7xPW14K] For more articles, podcasts, and commentary, visit Archer's Line at TheRobArcher.com [http://TheRobArcher.com]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

25. juni 20264 min
episode Local TV Pushes Back artwork

Local TV Pushes Back

For months, major media companies have seemed determined to avoid conflict with President Trump and his allies. Lawsuits were settled. Executives made visits to Mar-a-Lago. Media companies appeared eager to stay out of the political crossfire. Now ABC is doing something different. In this episode of Archer's Line, Rob Archer looks at ABC's new public campaign against the FCC, including ads running on ABC-owned stations and appeals to viewers to contact regulators directly. The campaign comes after the FCC subjected ABC-owned stations, including KABC Los Angeles, to an unusually early license review and opened a separate proceeding involving The View. The bigger question may be whether ABC's actions signal a broader shift inside the media industry. After months of accommodation and concessions, are some companies deciding that keeping their heads down isn't providing much protection? Rob examines the growing battle between media companies and regulators, the limits of corporate appeasement, and why television stations are suddenly asking viewers to help defend their licenses. For more articles, podcasts, and commentary, visit Archer's Line at TheRobArcher.com [http://TheRobArcher.com]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

23. juni 20264 min
episode Gunfight at the AM Corral artwork

Gunfight at the AM Corral

There’s a bill moving through Congress that could determine whether AM radio survives the next decade. And there’s a station in Los Angeles whose numbers may be telling us whether that even matters anymore. The AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act [https://www.broadcastlawblog.com/2026/05/articles/this-week-in-regulation-for-broadcasters-may-18-2026-to-may-22-2026/] has been kicking around Capitol Hill for three years — introduced, stalled, reintroduced, stalled again. Last month, the House Energy and Commerce Committee folded its language into the pending surface transportation reauthorization bill, which improves its odds of becoming law this year. The NAB called it essential for public safety. The Consumer Technology Association called it a cost-raising innovation killer. Place your bets. The emergency broadcasting argument is the strongest card AM’s supporters hold. When Superstorm Sandy hit the East Coast, people didn’t reach for apps; they reached for AM radio. During the L.A. wildfires, the same story. There’s something about a 50,000-watt clear-channel signal that cuts through when cell towers go dark and streaming buffers. But when your ratings argument gets wobbly, you lean on public safety. Here’s Exhibit A: KNX. On May 11th, KNX News moved back to solely being heard on the 1070 AM signal, surrendering the 97.1 FM simulcast it had held since December 2021. That FM signal now carries sports. KNX goes back to being what it was for a century — an AM station. I worked there. It was a big deal for us when that FM signal went live. Yes, AM has reach, but FM has relevance, and these days, relevance is more important. KNX picked up a lot of listeners who didn’t care about AM or didn’t like it because of the sound quality. But I also know what an AM signal can do. On a clear night, 1070 reaches half the continent. In Los Angeles traffic, it’s the station on a million presets. But presets are set by people who remember setting them. The question is whether anyone new is setting them. Even in cars that still have AM radio, the AM dial is an afterthought. And that’s even if someone takes the time to bypass the CarPlay or Android Auto app and go directly to the car’s audio settings. In April — its final full month simulcasting on both AM and FM — KNX held a 4.1 share. In May, that number dropped to 3.5. That’s a 15 percent decline, measured over a survey period that captured only nine days of the new reality. Nine days isn't enough to call a trend, but it's enough to make you nervous. Now zoom out. Who is actually listening to AM radio in cars in 2026? The honest answer is: older drivers, rural communities, and people in emergencies. That's millions of Americans who depend on the format in ways streaming can't touch. The AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act has the support of farm broadcasting organizations and agricultural groups for this reason. In a tornado warning in rural Kansas, you aren’t asking Alexa. But here’s the tension the legislation’s supporters don’t want to talk about: the drivers most likely to need AM in a crisis are the least likely to be buying the new EVs from which it’s being stripped. And the buyers of those new EVs will never notice it's gone. What's really being settled here isn't technical standards. It's a gunfight at the AM corral — over whose listeners count, whose emergencies matter, and whether a medium that once defined mass communication deserves a legislative life preserver or a graceful exit. Momentum is building for the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act, and it may well pass. But momentum in Congress and momentum in the marketplace are two different things. KNX’s May numbers will tell us something. June will tell us more. By the time this legislation gets to a floor vote, we may already have our answer — not from a committee hearing, but from a ratings book. If AM radio goes, FM becomes the afterthought. How much longer can it last once half the dial goes dark? Speaking of radio, the new Archer & Feldman podcast drops Monday morning on YouTube and wherever you get your podcasts. Bob Butler (KCBS, SAG-AFTRA) joins us to talk about what the Paramount/WBD merger means for California workers and for journalism. We’re also talking about how much longer radio news can survive. Subscribe to the YouTube channel here [https://www.youtube.com/@ArcherFeldman]. This is a public episode. If you'd like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit www.therobarcher.com/subscribe [https://www.therobarcher.com/subscribe?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_2]

21. juni 20265 min