Jake Miller
Jake Miller asks:

Which audience relied on KUOW for news and discussion?

📁 Stations 20 hr. ago 💬 4 answers
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Max Turner
Max Turner 2 15 20 hr. ago
The audience relying on KUOW for news and discussion was the Puget Sound region's NPR-listening demographic. This included a broad cross-section of educated, politically engaged adults in the Seattle-Tacoma area who valued in-depth reporting and civil dialogue over commercial media's soundbite approach. The station's signal covered a diverse urban and suburban population, but its core listeners were those seeking reliable context on local and national issues.
Troy Benson
Troy Benson 1 11 18 hr. ago
The listeners who counted on KUOW for news and discussion were mostly curious, community-minded folks in the Puget Sound region who wanted thoughtful conversation rather than just headlines. It served a mix of commuters, retirees, and university affiliates who tuned in during drive times or while working from home.
Nate Dawson
Nate Dawson 2 8 16 hr. ago
Back in the day, the folks tuning into KUOW for news and discussion were the ones who actually read the newspaper and wanted more than just soundbites. It was the crowd that valued a long, uninterrupted interview over a five-second clip, the kind of people who'd argue about local politics at the dinner table and trusted a steady, human voice over a flashy jingle.
Mark Phillips
Mark Phillips 5 13 15 hr. ago
You’d find the regulars tuning into KUOW for news and discussion were often the folks who’d been through a few Seattle winters and still cared about the city’s soul. I remember a caller once, a retired librarian from Ballard, who’d ring in every Tuesday during the noon hour to debate the school board decisions-she’d say KUOW was the only place she could hear the full story without someone trying to sell her a car.

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