She's on her way to KING in August, but Patreons on ftvlive.com show several colleagues complaining about bullying tactcs and not wanting to work with her. It may explain why she moved from station to station in Seattle back in the day and wound up in a podunk market for years. Here's the post, you be the judge: FTVLive has heard from a number of staffers who described Lewis as a straight up "Bully." Now, normally, when someone reaches out to FTVLive and describes a co-worker is "mean" or a "bully", we don't pay it much attention. Not everyone likes each other and in a business full of big egos, there will be friction. But, the word "bully" kept popping up, when talking to people inside the WYFF newsroom. One insider shared a story in which WYFF Anchor Destiny Chance was to read a story while standing in front of the chroma key. One WYFF staffer described it this way, "Destiny had a shot at the chroma key after weather. The pr...
I remember when the Cowles family owned KHQ-TV, KHQ AM and Fm, The Spokesman Review, and The Spokane Chronicle in Spokane. That was quite a hold on the media.
ReplyDeleteThat was far too much of a hold on the media in Spokane for the Cowles family to have had. No single entity should ever be allowed to have that much control over the media in a single market, no matter how well they run their outlets.
DeleteThe Baker family in Tacoma owned The News Tribune, AM 1400, 97.3 FM, Channel 11, the cable TV system, and a mobile paging service.
DeleteIs KSTW one of Seattle's top four rated stations? I'm pretty sure KIRO is being a major network affiliate, but KSTW is an independent with next to no local or significant national programming these days. If not, then it could have been scooped up to be part of a duopoly a long time ago.
ReplyDeleteKSTW probably is not in the top four, but KIRO being a CBS affil and KSTW being CBS owned certainly would make for an interesting marriage where the network gets all the revenue from both stations and could also add programming to both.
ReplyDeleteThe CBS owned stations group that KSTW is part of is no stranger to such arrangements. They have them in most of their markets. The main station is typically your standard CBS station with a mix of local news, network programming, and syndicated programming, while the secondary station usually offers up more local news and a much heavier load of syndicated programming.
DeleteTwice the stations, half the employees. That’s the math of this move.
ReplyDeleteAnyone here remember when KSTW’s news department ended? Remember Don Porter as the main anchor and Rod Simmons doing sports.
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