All this bloviating on the board reminds me of one of the reasons why music radio is so dead today.
To bloviate is to speak empty or exaggerated words with an absence of facts. That's not the case in all of this thread, except in your own posts.
The facts are different, and show that what you think is wrong with radio is both self-centered and naive.
Fact: Any radio station with a competitive signal must direct its programming at some group of listeners advertisers wish to reach. The suggestions and implications in your posts do not take this into account as you talk about formats and presentations that attract small or unsalable audiences.
Fact: The LA market is now approaching 45% Hispanic. Of those Hispanics, over two-thirds speak Spanish and over half are Spanish dominant. Thinking that any large part this huge group of people... over 5,000,000 of them... want to hear 50's and 60's American oldies is disingenuous. With an average age that is under 30, less than 15% are even in the age group that could have heard those songs when they were first released.
Fact: Radio has been using research for going on 85 years now, so it is a bit late to blame research for the problems you perceive radio to have. And individual stations have been doing proprietary research for about 70 years, starting apparently with that Seiler guy at at WRC in DC in the 40's.
Fact: Radio research is all about finding out what listeners do and what stations should or shouldn't do to get more of them. You are saying that radio stations should not find out what listeners want or what they don't want.
Fact: Tastes change. Population groups grow or shrink. Music genres come and go or broaden or contract in appeal. Radio has to follow listener preferences, changing as they do.
Fact: Your "facts" are inaccurate perceptions based on your own limited knowledge of reality. FOr example, you stated that the Art Laboe show was nationally syndicated and did well in all demographics when, in fact, neither contention is true. So I assume many of your other feelings about radio are equally unsubstantiated.
Fact: Playing some old radio tapes for a different generation has considerable novelty value for a very brief time. I'm sure that you would find many Millennials who would sit through a screening of an Ed Sullivan show out of that same curiosity, but it is unlikely they would want to see one of those shows every day. Your example is defective in not just that way, but I'll leave it at that.
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