Apparently homophobia and out-and-out neo-nazi talk is in......ultra-homophobe and anti-trans crusader Matt Walsh will be syndicated by Westwood One.....
And hence The Problem; Over the decades in order to get more listener ears in a format where talk show hosts and wannabes are a dime a bazillion, the hyperbole of right wing radio got ratcheted up. Because the more pointless anger you feed people, the more they want, the longer they stay for the MyPillow ads. It's a shorter leap from Rush Limbaugh to Alex Jones than it looks (and speaking of Alex Jones, how the hell is he still paying for airtime? I notice he's still got radio affiliates.)
With the internet and more of the younger, more angsty right-wing audience defecting to impossible to broadcast live extremist programming and podcasts on the dork web (Steve Bannon is even carried by some broadcast radio stations.), it's come to that inevitable point where terrestrial conservative talk radio can't possibly go any farther to the right without walking straight into an absolute minefield.
MOAR tax cuts for the rich are one thing. Getting people so worked up against the government or their trans neighbors that they go and violently attack them is entirely another. And with all these AR-15s out walking around with fully loaded people these days, all it takes is a few words to set them off. History has already demonstrated what repeated messaging intending to provoke violence can do January of last year.
But the problem is how does mainstream conservative talk radio take a step back towards common sense without 2/3rds of the remaining audience thinking these stations been taken over by people who are awake?
And I agree with TheBigA, you really do need both radio and a podcast to make it in talk these days. But a lot of podcasters are skeptical of radio, as many radio hosts are of podcasts. There's a gazillion brokered rent-a-stations. And a radio frequency and call letters still look spiffy on any professional resume.
But there's a number of people these days that just want instant viral fame on their own terms. They see what others are doing with podcasts, YouTube, etc. And they would rather cut out the middleman, the structured environment of broadcast radio and the FCC's hot language hangup for the benefit of complete, top-down creative control.
They are actually aware radio could be a faster way to access a broader audience and more $$$. But they don't want anyone telling them what to do or say. Even if it's their best foot forward to an actual career.
That's OK; They're not ready for it yet.