The Tech Guy

The Tech Guy is hosted by Leo Laporte formerly of TechTV and now TWiT.tv fame. The show, which was first exclusively broadcast on KFI AM 640 in Los Angeles, California, was picked up for syndication by Premiere Networks (then Premiere Radio Networks) in February 2007. The show currently has over 160 terrestrial affiliates in cities including Los Angeles, California, San Francisco, California, Houston, Texas, and Washington, DC. Laporte streams video of his side of the show on TWiT Live, including caller audio. Anyone can watch the show live on weekends at 11:00 A.M. PST at live.twit.tv The show reaches 500,000 people through its affiliates,[1] placing it second behind The Kim Komando Show (with 2.25 million weekly listeners) in the tech radio field.[2]

The Tech Guy
GenreTalk, Call In
Running time3 hours (with ad breaks)
Country of origin United States
Language(s)English
Home stationKFI AM 640
SyndicatesList of Affiliates
Hosted byLeo Laporte
StarringLeo Laporte
Recording studioPetaluma, California
Original releaseJanuary 3, 2004 – present
No. of episodes1601 (As of 16 June 2019)
Audio formatMono
WebsiteAudio Download Page
Tech Guy Labs
PodcastRSS Feed

The show is a mixture of interviews and call-ins, as well as Leo's own thoughts and opinions on current events in technology. Several regular guests often appear during the show via Skype; AVSForum Editor Scott Wilkinson, Dick DeBartolo of Mad Magazine, and Johnny Jet appear on Saturdays while Chris Marquardt of Tips from the Top Floor has a Sunday segment. Former guests include Steve Gibson, Paul Thurrott, and Ron Rosberg.

The show originates from the TWiT Eastside studios in Petaluma, California, a community north of San Francisco.

History

Leo Laporte has been doing one version or another of his technology talk show since 1990, including a syndicated show originating from KGO. The current incarnation of the show began on KFI weekends in 2004, only months prior to the cancellation of Call for Help and The Screen Savers from the newly merged G4techTV in the United States. According to Leo, he had to find a way to keep talking about technology, and facetiously mentioned that if it wasn't for KFI green lighting the show, he would have ended up "having to talk to [his] wife about it."[3] The show ran weekends on KFI at 11 AM. Leo also appeared on Bill Handel's morning show on Fridays for The Laporte Report segment, and continues to do so. Leo also does a Laporte Report live segment for CFRB in Toronto, Ontario on Saturday mornings.

In late 2006, Leo notified his audience on net@nite that his contract with KFI was going to expire soon, and it was hinted at that he would only continue with Clear Channel if The Tech Guy was syndicated. With the help of management at KFI, Premiere Networks picked up the show for syndication, and it was announced on January 27, 2007 that it would roll out nationally.[4] On February 17, 2007, the newly syndicated Tech Guy radio show launched nationally on eleven radio stations, including KFI. The show has added many affiliates, and has grown sharply from the original twelve to over one hundred (as of the summer of 2010).

Live chat

There is a public Internet Relay Chat that takes place when the show airs live on the server irc.twit.tv in the #twitlive channel. Leo participates in the chat during commercial breaks and often refers to the chat to give him additional information to assist with some of the callers' questions. The channel is moderated to keep the chat clean and on-topic.

Podcast

Every show is available as a podcast on the TWiT network, distributed via RSS feed at twit.tv/TTG. Until June 2011, shows were posted intermittently up to a week after their first airdate in order to meet the requirements of Laporte's Premiere contract for exclusivity purposes for the radio affiliates, and the live and taped video versions of the show required caller audio to be muted.

After Laporte renewed his Premiere deal that month, these conditions were relaxed, and the show is now allowed to be posted hours after first broadcast to TWiT, and caller audio is now heard on the live video and TWiT.am audio feeds. The new deal also allowed Laporte to solicit his traditional TWiT advertisers to sponsor the podcast feeds, while retaining his advertisers for the radio version.

At the end of 2015, The Tech Guy was number 10 on the Top 40 US Technology Podcasts, making it the third highest weekly Twit.tv podcast.[5]

Technical details

The show was produced from Leo Laporte's "TWiT Cottage" at 8 Keller St. but moved to the new TWiT studio known as the TWiT Brick House at 140 Keller St. in late July 2011. It is streamed to Premiere Networks via ISDN to Premiere at 64 kbps. From there Premiere uplinks it to their satellite network for distribution. Leo also streams the show on the TWiT Live Website.

July 24, 2011’s show was the last program produced at the TWiT Cottage, with Laporte parading through downtown Petaluma after the end of that day's show to the Brick House with his staff and onlookers to inaugurate the new facility, which opened an hour later with that week's This Week in Tech. The first The Tech Guy show produced at the TWiT Brick House was on July 30, which also was the first broadcast from Leo's office set, which was built to resemble the former Cottage studio.

Radio affiliates

The Tech Guy radio show is syndicated to several affiliates across America, including the show's flagship, KFI in Los Angeles, California. While formerly on KGO-AM in San Francisco, California—the metropolitan area nearest TWiT's studios—it is now tape-delayed Sundays on KKSF-AM.

The show runs live for three hours weekends at 11 a.m. Pacific, 2 p.m. Eastern, with some stations delaying their airing until later in the day. Some affiliates opt to pick up both shows each weekend, while others only choose to run one day.

gollark: Hmm. Maybe.
gollark: What if there are recursive loops which result in more items? How do you use those right?
gollark: Sometimes there are multiple ways to craft a thing. What do you do? How do you pick the right one?
gollark: Not only is the actual tree-searchy thing moderately computationally expensive, but there are so many weird edge cases.
gollark: Anyway, autocrafting is very æ and difficult.

References

  1. Stevens, Loralee (February 3, 2011). "Leo Laporte expands to Keller Street building". The Press Democrat.
  2. "Top Radio Talk Audiences". TALKERS Magazine. 2008. Archived from the original on November 14, 2006. Retrieved July 8, 2008.
  3. , The Tech Guy #327
  4. , KFI Radio Show is Being Syndicated
  5. "iTunes Charts Top 40". iTunecharts.net. Retrieved 18 December 2015.
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