I wasn't talking about the beginning but the trend.It depends on the market. At one time, WCBS was a FS station featuring Arthur Godfrey. It went all news in 1967.
The future won't be like the past. It takes a long time to create a habit. So even if a station invested the millions it would take to do local news and entertainment, there's no reason to believe it would deliver the size of audience it takes to sustain it.
My expectation is that AM will become a home for religious, ethnic, and brokered programming.
Having said all that, I see there's another thread on small market AM. I'm not in a small market, I've never been in a small market, so I have no experience to say what it would take to do small market full service. I just know it would be very costly and would be an uphill battle in a large or major market.
Nope. Liberal talk failed for the same reason conservative talk is failing in markets where it's primarily syndicated.
In 1990, a liberal person could find his viewpoint represented everywhere else BUT AM radio.
In that case, we will have thrown in the towel and it will have become the "buggy whip" capital of the world!
What do you suggest radio owners do? Spend millions of dollars on formats that once worked 40 years ago and act like nothing else has changed?
The future won't be like the past. Radio companies don't own the roads. Just the cars that drive on them. The road itself is owned by the feds. Radio companies are given licenses to drive on those roads. If the roads become eclipsed by high speed interstates, we simply take our cars over to the newer, faster roads.
Really? There were a lot of liberals on the radio in 1990. It took a few years before they were killed off by Rush. But Larry King was still on AM until the mid 90s. And there were quite a few local liberals on AM around the country. But as Rush became so popular, that's all anyone in radio wanted. That's when all the copy cats started appearing.
Way to completely miss the point. So the liberal viewpoint was on 95% of media instead of 90%. Doesn't change the argument a bit.
I addressed the point directly. You said there were no liberals on AM in 1990. That's not true. There were also a lot of conservatives.
But it's also not true that the rest of the media was liberal. You're just using Roger Ailes talking points. That doesn't mean it's true.
Are you honestly going to deny that the vast majority of broadcast media is left leaning? Because if you can't even admit such an obvious truth, it's going to be hard to have an honest conversation.
Are you honestly going to deny that the vast majority of broadcast media is left leaning? Because if you can't even admit such an obvious truth, it's going to be hard to have an honest conversation.
Are you honestly going to deny that the vast majority of broadcast media is left leaning? Because if you can't even admit such an obvious truth, it's going to be hard to have an honest conversation.
Call me old fashion but I'm in my middle 30's, I still like to listen to FM and AM over any internet service. I never did like Pandora very much. never liked XM radio but the dance selection. Only thing I really have now is the wwe network off the internet that I stream to.
If they are number one by a mile, (which seems to be the case) then why are we concerned about "saving" them? How would we save them? Turn back the clock thirty, forty years?The latest data shows that AM and FM are still king. The most listened to, period. There is still time to save both services.
Last time I read the Constitution, the President isn't "in charge" of anything except his staff. If Congress can't pass a bill, nothing happens.
If they are number one by a mile, (which seems to be the case) then why are we concerned about "saving" them?