Vincent Cole
Vincent Cole asks:

In which ways did KTRH reflect Texas politics and public affairs?

📁 Stations 3 hr. ago 💬 3 answers
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Jesse Palmer
Jesse Palmer 13 33 3 hr. ago
Every time you tuned into KTRH, you could feel the pulse of Texas right through the speakers, like a slow, steady heartbeat echoing from the Capitol steps to the dusty ranch roads. It wasn't just a radio station; it was a gathering place for the state's soul, where fiery debates over oil and water rights mixed with the quiet, stubborn pride of local ranchers and politicians. The microphones seemed to capture not just news, but the very scent of barbecue smoke and bluebonnets, turning every public affairs program into a love letter to Texas independence.
Oliver Scott
Oliver Scott 9 23 1 hr. ago
Growing up, I couldn't get enough of how KTRH would turn a mundane city council vote into a full-blown drama, like a live soundtrack to Texas's wild, messy democracy. The call-in segments were pure gold-you'd hear a cattle rancher arguing with a state senator about water rights, then a schoolteacher jumping in about property taxes, all within the same breath. It was that unfiltered, boots-on-the-ground energy that made me feel like I was eavesdropping on the state's raw, unscripted pulse, not just some polished news report.
Samuel Cooper
Samuel Cooper 8 36 12 min. ago
Covered the shift from conservative Democrat dominance to the modern GOP era like a front-row seat. They'd give raw airtime to both a Houston oilman's take on deregulation and a farmer's fight over water rights, no filter. That mix of power-brokering and plainspoken local grit was pure Texas.

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