Who said go back to 25 years ago? Nice spin.
All I'm asking for is proof that doing what you say will work. You say it will, but you have no proof. I've asked this from you time and time again, and you keep changing the subject.
Who said go back to 25 years ago? Nice spin.
All I'm asking for is proof that doing what you say will work. You say it will, but you have no proof. I've asked this from you time and time again, and you keep changing the subject.
You also continue to do nothing but criticize my suggestion, while offering no solution at all.
I'm not criticizing it. Just asking for proof that what you want will work now. Which once again you haven't provided.
You keep asking for proof and I keep providing it, and you keep ignoring it.
You call it proof. But it's simply telling me how things used to be. That's not proof of anything. It's like buying a stock based on past performance. That doesn't work.
I'm asking for proof that returning to the way talk radio once was will bring back past results. Can you guarantee that if I bring back radio the way it was done before, that the previous success will return as well. That's all I'm asking. It shouldn't be tough, given that there are 15,000 radio stations, and about a quarter of them are doing some form of talk. You mean no one besides you thinks it's a good idea? That's the difference between fact and opinion. When you can point to others now who say that you are right. That's all I'm asking for.
Your idea to stay the course is death to the format.
Show me where I said that.
I haven't seen you suggest doing anything else.
Many of this nations biggest talk stations were doing fine before they followed the fad and went all-Limbaugh all the time. That is a fact.
Two thing that you are ignoring happened:
First, since that time that many of the "big" talkers were so dominant* the rest of the 25-54 demo that had some use for AM aged out of the demo.
Second, in the top 50 markets** PPM arrived, hurting the exaggerated TSL that talk listeners wrote into their diaries.