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Chris Kinard Enjoying the Best of Both Worlds as New Format VP of Audacy Sports

For the last 26 ½ years, he’s been employed by the same company which is now Audacy so it’s been home…and home is where the heart is.

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Chris Kinard

Life is good for Chris Kinard.

Already the Vice President of Programming and Cluster Operations for Audacy in Washington DC, Kinard added a new title to his resume on June 21st when he was named Audacy’s Sports Format Vice President. 

He will continue his day-to-day duties with the DC cluster of Audacy radio stations, but now he’ll lead brand and format strategy for Audacy’s sports portfolio.

“I’m so excited,” said Kinard.  “There’s no better learning opportunity than to learn from our other company’s brand managers.  The sports format within Audacy is home to the most talented brand managers, the most talented hosts, content creators and producers so the opportunity to learn from them across the entire country and to work with them on a daily basis is a dream come true.”

While Kinard will be spending a lot of time talking shop with brand managers from all of Audacy’s brand managers around the country, he’ll continue to be based in Washington DC operating stations like 106.7 The Fan.  But, staying in our nation’s capital means more to Kinard that just his job.

His family is there so continuing to plant roots in DC was very important to him.

“My parents still live in Washington,” said Kinard.  “I’ve got two brothers that both live in the Washington DC area.  I have a son that I would not want to move to another market at this point in his life.  For me, staying in Washington, at least for the next several years is something that I want to do and is very important to me.” 

Kinard has spent his entire career working for one radio group and that’s not about to change anytime soon.  For the last 26 ½ years, he’s been employed by the same company which is now Audacy so it’s been home…and home is where the heart is.

“I’ve been incredibly lucky in my career to be with one station group,” said Kinard. “It’s pretty crazy.  I love what I get to do on a day-to-day basis.”

Kinard certainly knows what works and what does not work in DC but now he’ll be communicating with the brand managers from all of Audacy’s sports radio stations about the company’s general philosophy.  There are a lot of common denominators that can make a sports radio station successful in any market but there are also things that can differentiate one market from another.

Kinard believes in consistency across the brand but there is also the challenge to be unique in each market. 

“Sports radio needs to be entertaining, fun and interesting,” said Kinard.  “Hosts need to be opinionated and informative.  Then you get into how do we do that?  That’s where the different flavors come.  There is no one size fits all.  Every market is different.”

To the point of every market being different, every fan base is different as well.  Even within a market, one set of fans can be different than others.  Adapting to those variations of fan bases and markets is key to the continued success of the Audacy sports format.

“That’s where the challenges come in,” said Kinard.  “That’s where you need to really think about the different challenges and the unique circumstances in each market and each competitive situation.”

At the end of the day, Kinard, along with everyone else in the company, are all interested in the same thing.  They want their shows to be fun to listen to, interesting, entertaining and informative.

Kinard is able to hit the ground running in his new role because he is already surrounded by extremely talented teammates.

“We have the best hosts in the business and the best minds in sports media so I think we have a great track record of delivering that for our audiences,” said Kinard.

Kinard already had a lot on his plate operating the DC cluster of stations, but now his to-do list has expanded with the addition of his new role in charge of Audacy’s sports format.  A couple of weeks in, Kinard is focused on the task at hand and has been in contact with many of the brand managers with plans to talk to the rest in the very near future.

“Everyone knows what a great team we have, that we all already kind of lean on each other and that’s a great culture,” said Kinard.

It’s a winning culture that Chris Kinard has been a part of for over a quarter of a century.  With additional responsibilities and the ability to stay at home in DC, that’s not about to change anytime soon.

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Nate Bukaty is On the Road With MLS After 810 WHB Exit

“It was becoming too much, so something had to give, and that was kind of the choice I made.”

Derek Futterman

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Nate Bukaty
Courtesy: Major League Soccer

Over the last several years, Nate Bukaty has earned a plethora of frequent flyer miles through his global travels to call soccer games. Although being away from Kansas City on a regular basis is something he considers to be the most challenging part of his job, he understands that everything comes at a price.

Realizing a sustainable work-life balance is essential in ensuring he can achieve his professional aspirations without sacrificing time with his family, which represents the top priority in his life. Bukaty tries to make his trips worthwhile by doing something unique to the location; in fact, he keeps a map in his basement with pushpins denoting the places he has visited over the years. Aside from his business-related travel, he also tries to take every member of his family on a trip throughout the year.

The amount of travel in sports broadcasting during the season renders it more complicated to remain committed to local Kansas City sports full time. Over the previous year, there had been episodes of The Border Patrol morning show on Sports Radio 810 WHB for which he was absent because of his play-by-play obligations.

On top of that, he is trying to ensure that he is present for his family when he is in town. Bukaty estimates that he is on the road for more than 100 days amid the season, underscored by his role with Apple TV on its MLS Season Pass property. At the end of May, he officially announced his exit from the full-time hosting position on the program alongside co-host Steven St. John and producer Jake Gutierrez, marking a seminal change in the Kansas City sports radio landscape.

“It was very difficult,” Bukaty said. “Talk radio wasn’t something that I necessarily wanted to get into in the first place, and honestly if it hadn’t been for the right fit with Steven and Jake and the rest of our staff, I’m not sure I would have ever done it.”

Bukaty considers himself fortunate to have worked in sports talk radio and is remaining with the show as a regular contributor. Moreover, he is focusing on his role calling games for Apple and hosting SCORELINE for the CBS Sports Golazo Network. In moving away from his position on The Border Patrol after 17 years, he finds it hard to believe that all of the time passed by. 

“Just from a time management standpoint, trying to stay up on all of the local sports to the point where I can host a four-hour talk show, let alone the four hours every morning, from a time commitment standpoint cuts into my preparation for getting ready for the games,” Bukaty said. “It was becoming too much, so something had to give, and that was kind of the choice I made.”

Throughout his professional journey, which has been grounded in versatility and consistent adaptation, hosting sports talk radio had long been a constant with an indefatigable mindset rooted in advancement and humility. Part of the reason he decided to make the announcement on his final day rather than doing so ahead of time was that he did not feel it would surprise the audience. St. John, Gutierrez and his colleagues at the radio station were aware of his decision and remained familiar with the process.

“I kept them involved with everything that was happening because I would never want to put them in a situation where I blindsided them because they’ve been so great to me for so long, and I want to stay involved with the radio station because I love the place,” Bukaty said, “so I wouldn’t have wanted to do anything that blindsided them at all.”

Bukaty started hosting The Border Patrol in 2007 upon the departure of Bob Fescoe when he relocated to St. Louis. Moving into a space giving his opinion while trying to remain objective in his other work indicated a new predicament within his work. After providing his authentic thoughts on players, coaches and executives, he would then proceed to cover those personnel shortly thereafter.

“I really loved the opportunity to have access to being on a major league television network and being on a successful morning show, and I loved all those things,” Bukaty said, “but that’s one thing I didn’t like about it was trying to balance two very different jobs at the same time.”

Having worked with St. John throughout his entire time on The Border Patrol, Bukaty regards him as both the funniest and wittiest sports personality in the area. The dichotomy between their personalities and professional backgrounds, he believes, fostered a synergy among the show that facilitated success and captivated the audience.

“We’re not the type of hot-take guys that are going to try to stir up a whole bunch of controversy and get everybody fired up and wound up,” Bukaty said. “We’re more likely to try to make you laugh or put a smile on your face and find a humorous spin on things while still giving people good information.”

Bukaty does not remember having a conversation about the ratings for the show in many years, nor does he believe the station subscribes to the metrics in the first place. In considering competition within local sports radio, including Audacy-owned 610 Sports Radio, he has nothing but respect for everyone at the station. Early in his career, he hosted Bulldog and Bukaty with Fescoe, whom his show has gone up against in morning drive since 2010.

“Honestly, this might sound like B.S. but I swear it’s true, we never spent any time talking about what they were doing,” Bukaty said of 610 Sports Radio. “We just focused on trying to do the show we thought we wanted to do [and] a show that we thought was entertaining, so if we think it’s entertaining, then hopefully the audience does too.”

Rather than measuring success by quantifiable data such as cume, average quarter-hour persons and time spent listening, Bukaty evaluated the performance of the show through the station clientele. While he is not sure it is the right approach, he was interested in ensuring clients received the response from the audience they were looking for. Bukaty always checked in with his clients, who he said felt they were getting a positive return on investment in working with him. An aspect of that success came through their genuine dispositions and candor.

“We have events where we get to meet a lot of listeners,” Bukaty said, “and I think they appreciate we were a couple of authentic Kansas City guys that weren’t really trying to be something that we’re not.”

Starting in the 2015 season, Bukaty served as the lead commentator for Sporting Kansas City within Major League Soccer. A few years later, Bukaty added to his workload by delivering play-by-play for FOX Sports broadcasts of Major League Soccer games and also covered international competitions including the Gold Cup.

“I try to tell my kids all the time, ‘Step outside of your comfort zone – that’s when personal growth happens,’ and I did women’s MMA for a year, for example, and I didn’t have nearly enough education on that at the time and it helped me grow as a broadcaster,” Bukaty stated. “It helped me grow as a soccer commentator by doing that because it caused me to look at things in some different ways.”

Bukaty desires to make an impact beyond the broadcast booth, a principle instantiated by Kansas City Royals play-by-play announcer Ryan Lefebvre. As Bukaty began to experience success, Lefebvre called to congratulate him and then asked what he was going to do with it. After losing a close friend to cancer, Bukaty decided to start the Sean D. Biggs Memorial Foundation to raise money and awareness for cancer prevention research. Throughout the year, the charitable organization hold events and fundraising efforts, along with three scholarships a year for college students to study abroad.

“[The foundation has] also helped me – it was really just a big coping mechanism for me,” Bukaty said. “All the pain I felt when my friend died, it’s not pain anymore. It’s like just this deep sense of gratitude for everything that’s come ever since, which is a nice place to be. I like being in that place better than just being angry.”

Through his play-by-play announcing and hosting ventures, Bukaty is living out his childhood dream and wants to make sure that he does not have any regrets. Yet he also wants to keep learning, remaining attuned to new innovations and aware of what is coming next. He does not subscribe to the common maxim, “You can’t teach an old dog new tricks,” instead asserting that it comes down to whether or not someone wants to learn new things.

“I don’t want to just coast at any point in my life,” Bukaty said. “I just want to keep growing, and that, I feel like, is a good place to be because I think earlier in my career, I probably was a little more focused on, ‘Oh, I’ve got to get this job.’”

Even though Bukaty understands that it will be competitive to earn a spot on the broadcasting roster for the 2026 FIFA World Cup, being selected for the coveted assignment is a goal that he hopes to realize. If an opportunity to return to sports radio on a full-time basis becomes available, he would never rule it out, saying it would depend on the options, family priorities and other circumstances.

“I’m always feeling like, ‘Well, I’m not as talented as everybody else, so I better be willing to outwork everybody and take any opportunities that come my way,’ and I’m glad I’ve done that because the industry changes constantly,” Bukaty said. “It’s constantly evolving, and if you can do more things, then you have a chance of surviving longer and also growing.”

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Sports Radio Hosts Need to Start Thinking About a Future Beyond AM/FM Radio

Look around you. Some big names and big brands in big markets have lost their radio jobs. It’s time to think about alternatives.

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It’s not exactly a banner time to be in the sports radio business for talent these days.

Any given day here at Barrett Sports Media, it feels like we’re writing a story that involves a host exiting the station they’ve been at for any decent amount of time due to budget cuts.

If it was due to saying something stupid on the air, getting a DUI, a domestic violence incident, or something similar, it wouldn’t make me question the medium’s future. Unfortunately, the departures are almost universally tied to budget cuts in an attempt to juice an already comically low stock price, with the hope that — despite decades of evidence showing you that it isn’t the Secret Stuff needed to bring the price back up — this will be the time that eliminating jobs will help make radio more profitable.

Just take a gander in recent days. Darren Smith out at San Diego Sports 760. Everybody out at 590 The Fan in St. Louis. The Blitz 1170 in Tulsa? Shut down to run a 24-hour simulcast of local TV news broadcasts. Seriously.

Despite no longer being in a building on a day-to-day basis, if I were a sports radio host, I’d be looking around wondering ‘Am I next? Is our brand next? What can I do to mitigate any potential job loss?’

Because, more likely than not, the decision isn’t going to be yours. I’ll never forget sitting in a department head meeting and receiving word that our traffic director was going to retire. The business manager perked up in her seat and said “I’ve never thrown a retirement party before!” She had worked in radio for more than 40 years.

If that isn’t enough evidence for you to question what the future looks like, I don’t know what is.

There are a whole bevy of options out there to control your own destiny if you feel the AM/FM Radio walls closing in around you.

Start a video show on YouTube, Rumble, Twitch, X, Facebook Live, or all five. You’d be amazed at how little the start-up costs can be.

I know that everyone has a podcast these days, but it’s because the barrier to entry is so incredibly low.

You can start a Substack and write about … whatever you want. Utilize Patreon to go with it.

The options are bountiful. They increase if you have a loyal sponsor –like many sports radio hosts do.

I can completely understand how scary the idea of jumping out on your own can be. But many folks in the industry have created a blueprint for you. Whether it be Scott Kaplan, Mike Taylor, Landry Locker, or any others in a long list of hosts who have left the corporate world behind to do their own thing, it’s never been easier to monetize your own content and be your own boss.

Even starting something on the side — obviously that doesn’t break any stipulations in your contract — right now is a good idea. Just as a fallback plan. And who knows? Maybe someday it isn’t a fallback plan. It could be a nice leverage play in your next contract talks. Having a platform with a decent-sized audience can give you a “If you don’t hit this number, I’m just going to walk, do my own thing, and take some of your advertisers with me,” card that can be invaluable.

It’s a dog-eat-dog world out there. You can have a fantastic working relationship with a Market Manager, Program Director, Producer, co-host, or insert any other job here, but all of that can change in an instant. And if you don’t have someone fighting for you in a top position, it’s possible your days could be numbered just simply based on how much money you take home each paycheck.

Is that fair? No. Is it right? Hell no. But it is reality. You can guard against it, though.

Branch out and be the creator that you already are. If you’ve got listeners, there’s a reason for it. Leverage them and do something for you. I doubt you’ll regret it.

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Bronny James Will Be a Featured Summer Attraction on ESPN and NBA TV

This is a public player who has lived in the public eye.

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Screengrab of Bronny James from the NBA Draft on ESPN
Screengrab: NBA Draft on ESPN

Look, it’s a storyline.

Is it a concocted storyline? Oh, yeah — but you already knew that. You knew it when Rich Paul, the agent for both Bronny James and Bronny’s father LeBron, reportedly started telling certain NBA teams to not bother drafting Bronny.

You knew it when the agent further said that Bronny would not be signing a two-way contract, meaning he wouldn’t agree to any deal that could involve him playing in the NBA’s G League. That might have given a few teams pause, considering Bronny’s college averages of, let’s see here, 4.8 points, 2.8 rebounds and 2.1 assists per game.

You knew it when Bob Myers, the former top executive at Golden State, relayed during ESPN’s draft coverage that Paul was telling some teams, “If you take him, he’s going to Australia.”

And you knew it when the Lakers inevitably selected Bronny with the 55th overall pick in the second round, making this father-son thing official once LeBron re-signs. Woofed Magic Johnson on X, “Watching Bronny suit up for the Lakers during Summer League in Vegas will be must-see TV!”

So — yeah. Storyline.

The only questions now are who gets the rights (I’m going with SpringHill Company, but hey), how much access they’ll have (let’s assume total) and how soon we can expect a full series rollout. In the meantime, NBA TV and ESPN will reap the short-haul rewards.

Without a doubt, the NBA 2K25 Summer League gets a bump here, although I’ll be curious to see how fascinating people find it to watch Bronny play without his father. The bigger narrative arc, the one more people will warm to, is the idea of LeBron and his son on the court together — but that’s not what this time of year is about.

Also, Magic’s enthusiasms notwithstanding, Las Vegas won’t actually get the first crack at BronnyTV. That will almost certainly happen during the California Classic, an outgrowth of the Summer League that begins this weekend. ESPN goes first, then NBA TV:

Saturday: Lakers vs. Sacramento Kings, 4:30 p.m. ET on ESPN.

Sunday: Lakers vs. Warriors, 6:30 p.m. ET on NBA TV.

The Lakers’ first appearance in Las Vegas is set for Friday, July 12 against the Houston Rockets. That’s a 7:30 p.m. ET tip on ESPN, and the summer games then roll on for 10 days.

That is a lot of Bronny, assuming he plays and plays often. The Lakers will decide that. All that is known right now is that the younger James – whose lone season at USC was shortened by a serious health scare (a cardiac arrest during a summer workout), which was diagnosed as a congenital heart defect and required surgery to repair – is good to go.

Fair to say that Bronny never found his footing in college after that difficult turn of events. As the eldest son of LeBron, though, there’s a strong belief by some scouts in his upside, and Bronny reportedly helped his cause with a good showing at the pre-draft combine in Chicago. I mean, we’ll see.

Bronny can shoot the three and has court sense, and the Lakers’ Anthony Davis told ESPN before the draft that he supported L.A. taking LeBron’s kid.

“He’s very good defensively,” Davis said. “He can read the floor very well. I think he’s a really good playmaker. I saw him work out a couple times besides the pro day, and working with a big…His reads, reading the defense, making the right passes — that was really impressive to me.

“I think he’s going to be fine, man. Obviously, it’s a lot of pressure on him with his dad being who he is.”

You’d think so, but for Bronny and all the James gang, this is closer to situation normal. Their father has been famous for all of their lives; they’ve had cameras around them for all of their lives. Whatever Bronny has become as a basketball player, he’s achieved in the midst of that — or in spite of it, depending upon your view.

Microphones and stage lighting probably aren’t going to affect him much, considering that Bronny spent his high school years being featured in the LeBron-co-produced docuseries Top Class. This is a public player who has lived in the public eye.

Is he good enough to play in the NBA? Despite all the words spewed and images projected, it’s honestly anybody’s guess. But you won’t have to wonder for long — it’ll all be available to you, one way or another. In a different Lakers era, somebody would’ve called it Showtime.

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