Is anyone requiring you to buy those products?
Those shows are the price that station pays for running losing talk shows during the week. If the talk format was doing better, they wouldn't air those shows. Those shows are likely bringing in more money than the daily talk shows. So get used to it.
No doubt the revenue does come pouring in from the pay-to-play weekend "shows.". As it stands now, it sure does look like we are at a crossroad for talk radio. The line up and audience that brought the industry into the year 2000 is finally at the point of no return and the attempts at creating the next great power stars are failing to catch fire in a way that big stations with big debt and overhead can really make huge profits. So, now WABC basically has to to cover millions by selling hours on two out of seven day slots because there will be little profit after the expensive weekday shows. That is not an affable place to be. 2019 will be a wild radio year if these stations start to gonthe way of the dinosaurs.