HD is not a priority to anyone. It's just an added feature that gives more functionality to your radio. It's not the end of the world.
Making my point. So much for "the stations between the stations".
No, I'm not making your point at all. I'm putting a dose of reality into it. Do you expect broadcasters to make HD streams a PRIORITY?
The priority is where the most listeners are...and that's analog. You expect a different priority?
They aren't stations to broadcasters, who don't take them seriously. Since this is about the only advantage of HD, and it is being sacrificed by short sighted station management.
I don't know where Bruce works...but every station I am involved with them treats them as real programming....and every platform of the programming is treated seriously. Where you see "short-sightedness is beyond me. Most broadcasters have kept their HD2 streams commercial free (or close to it) to preserve their value. Short-sightedness would have been to sell out their HD2 channels at a dollar-a-hollar..which I don't see anyone really doing.
HD acceptance would have taken dedication to reliability on the part of broadcasters, that obviously never happened.
HD Radio acceptance...and any changes to radio listening would have taken a lonnnng time and is an uphill battles, because people don't change their habits quickly, and most people don't think about radio, except that it's there. So, "acceptance" overnight was never going to happen, and the pros in the industry knew that. No one was expecting it. They knew it was going to take a long time.
But FM HD is now part of the infrastructure of broadcasting in the USA (FM HD anyway, AM in general is a different story).
It's not going away.