In what came as a surprise to many — but not to me — CBS is selling off its radio holdings, more than 117 stations in 26 markets, including Boston.
The reason the decision isn’t surprising is simple — the bottom line.
The old model of so-called terrestrial radio — which you tune into in your car on your way to work — can’t be sustained anymore. Radio stations have become depressingly less profitable over the past decade.
So why is terrestrial radio headed south? The reasons are many but basically boil down to one factor, the same one that’s disrupting so many industries, including the new business — the Internet.
How dim is the future for terrestrial radio? Pretty dim. In the near future, AM radio stations like WBZ Radio will likely be relegated to niche-casting — foreign language programming, specialty shows like finance and infomercials. Indeed, in the next year or two, many new cars will not include AM stations on their radios.
As for FM stations — including CBS’s 98.5 The Sports Hub — they will stay with sports talk and live sports broadcasting, except for those programming music, which will slowly disappear.
http://www.bostonherald.com/news/columnists/2016/03/shaffer_old_am_radio_model_is_broken