His comments foreshadowed a shift for the flagship television channel, as well. The previous chief executive of the company, Michael J. Kelly, oversaw the addition of taped reality shows and documentaries, some of which were only tangentially connected to weather. The changes sometimes lifted the channel's ratings, but alienated fans who wanted live weather news.Mr. Kenny seems to be pulling back a bit: taped shows in the future will have weather as a "main character," he said, not just a background character. A documentary series about ironworkers in New York is not being renewed, for instance. Some new programs will emphasize stories from Internet users who submit weather videos and photos."The TV division has really doubled down on weather enthusiasts as their core audience," Mr. Kenny said."We're not trying to serve everybody," he added. "We're trying to serve our core audience really well."
So they're dumping non-weather programs? Wow! That would be pretty much every show would have to go!
So does this mean long form programming will be totally removed?
i know this has been bounced around a couple times but wouldn't it make sense (if they're changing the programming) to just use instrumental music even if it's not smooth jazz instead of vocals?