Meanwhile, KTSU's recently fired engineer Dave Biondi is worried about the station from a nuts-and-bolts perspective.
Though the cash-strapped university has spent countless amounts upgrading its facility from analog to digital, it hasn't applied the same amount of attention to maintaining that equipment, Biondi said.
The Concerned Legends of KTSU claim that Donna Franklin, KTSU Assistant General Manager, has ruined Texas Southern University's radio station by firing established DJs and replacing traditional jazz and soul with smooth jazz.
Troy Fields
Ex-KTSU jock Chris Tucker says that his former colleagues that continue to work at the station are miserable because of Franklin's heavy-handed managerial style.
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A particular low point was reached last summer when lightning or a voltage overload knocked out the digital transmitter and the backup analog unit exploded when Biondi tried to bring it back on line — it hadn't been repaired in two years. No one outside of the Loop heard anything from KTSU for the five days it took to get things fixed.
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KTSU DJs Chris Tucker and Steve Crain once spent hours at the station, programming cuts by Arnett Cobb, Illinois Jacquet and Eddie "Cleanhead" Vinson. After the jazz tunes, the funkiest bass line this side of The Headhunters's Paul Jackson leaps out of a standard blues progression, signaling the start of Johnny "Guitar" Watson's "Ain't That a Bitch."
Watson, Cobb, Jacquet and Vincent were all either born in Houston and/or made a lot of music here. According to the Concerned Legends of KTSU, you can't talk about American jazz — or blues or gospel or hip hop — without stirring Houston, Texas and KTSU into the conversation.
According to Tucker, spending every spare hour laying down soul dusties and straight-ahead jazz tracks was how things went down at KTSU for more than 35 years. The Houston-born entertainer worked at the station from 1990 to 1998; Crain, who always signed off by saying, "I love you, Houston. Don't hurt nobody," died in 1997 after suffering a heart attack.
It's much different today, according to Tucker, who says that he's not a member of the Concerned Legends but that many of his friends are KTSU employees. "The quality of the music has really declined greatly and the employees are under siege," says Tucker. "[Franklin] runs that place like it's a concentration camp."
KTSU became a Federal Communications Commission-approved station on June 23, 1972, and fully operational in January 1973. The 18,000-square-foot facility, located on the Third Ward campus at 3100 Cleburne Street, is licensed to the TSU Board of Regents and controlled by TSU's School of Communications. KTSU is 40 percent funded by the university; listeners who sign up for annual pledge- and donation-based memberships supply the remaining 60 percent.
From the beginning, thanks to DJs like Myron Anderson, The Original Sinbad and Dr. Freddie Brown, the station distinguished itself for playing traditional jazz while mixing in gospel, blues and soul. The Concerned Legends say it's this formula — and not smooth jazz — that attracted listeners to the station's "Jazz in All Its Colors."
Albert admits that college radio's modern struggles to remain afloat — which Rice University experienced firsthand in April with the sale of its FM frequency to the University of Houston — may be contributing to KTSU's ratings slump. (Full disclosure: The author of this story currently volunteers for Rice's ktru.org and its HD2 station.) However, the Concerned Legends and KTSU employees say it's not KTSU's business model that's the main problem. It's Franklin and Rudley.
"When [Franklin] first came in, she took programs off the air and fired people that had been here 15 to 20 years and working for free. Anybody who didn't kiss her ass were the ones that had to go," says Albert, who says that he's a member of the Concerned Legends. "She replaced them with people who have no knowledge of public radio, any other radio or even radio at their house. They sound like clowns trying to imitate a real radio person."
"In my estimation, the problem really stems from the top, and by that I mean [president Rudley], who doesn't have a grasp on broadcasting and what he wants to do with the radio station," adds former KTSU engineer Biondi.
The Concerned Legends also contend that Franklin's position was never made available to the public. According to a page on the TSU Web site, the university is required to advertise job openings for seven days.
"Everybody knows the job wasn't posted online," says a KTSU employee we'll call Donald. "It was a hire from within the president's office. To this day, there hasn't been a formal introduction for her as the assistant general manager. The interim just dropped off one day."
The Concerned Legends believe that Rudley, who became TSU's president in February 2008, targeted Franklin from the start. Before replacing Priscilla Slade — who was fired in June 2006 and indicted on four felony counts for allegedly misusing more than $500,000 of the school's money for personal expenses (a plea agreement had her paying a lesser fine and she was placed on ten years deferred adjudication) — Rudley had served as interim system chancellor and interim president at the University of Houston.
Franklin, who previously worked at CBS radio affiliates KODA "Sunny" FM 99.1 and KHJZ "The Wave" FM 95.7, says that she's doing what has been asked of her. According to documents acquired by the Press through an open records request, Franklin's starting annual salary as a development executive/jazz announcer was $43,634. When she was promoted to interim assistant general manager in July 2010, her annual earnings increased to $52,360.