A TV station with better writing than a newspaper? The apocalypse now must surely be upon us!
"AM radio? We don't need that! Music's been crap since 1692."There are thousands of Dunkers, Amish, and Mennonites in my state. It would be easier to find a horse and buggy versus an AM radio listener.
I agree, but the translators would need a boost in power IMO, which could be tough considering how some were wedged into markets.But if the AMs with linked translators were allowed to keep the FM and turn off the AM, I think we would lose 40% to 50% of all AMs in the first week.
I was a psych minor but had been a good writer and excellent speller/grammarian since grade school, so I still wound up being an unpaid copy editor for my two college roommates, both TV/radio majors, every time they had term papers due. Just as radio was a refuge for people who weren't good looking enough for TV, both TV and radio attracted people who couldn't write well enough to succeed in print. But as you say, that doesn't matter now, as no one is coming out of college looking for a newspaper or magazine career.I hate to say it, but yeah---it's gotten to that level.
Newspapers relied on proofreaders and editors for a long, long time. Those were among the first to be fired. So print journalists coming out of J-school into their first gigs probably out to at least minor in English Comp. But I'm guessing only a few did.
FM radio will be in big trouble very soon as boomers head for the nursing home and the grave.
I was a psych minor but had been a good writer and excellent speller/grammarian since grade school, so I still would up being an unpaid copy editor for my two college roommates, both TV/radio majors, every time they had term papers due. Just as radio was a refuge for people who weren't good looking enough for TV, both TV and radio attracted people who couldn't write well enough to succeed in print. But as you say, that doesn't matter now, as no one is coming out of college looking for a newspaper or magazine career.
And, that forces even older people to discover streaming. So, I doubt FM will survive the 25 years you predict. Perhaps, 10 or 15 years instead.We Boomers are irrelevant to FM radio. The youngest is five years out of the demo. They make next to no money from us. It's when Gen X ages out (they don't need to die, just turn 55) that FM's in trouble.
Does the spectrum have a use after it all dies. Can it be repurposed into another level of theIt's a chicken and egg scenario: The band only survives if there are viable stations on it. Like shortwave, if stations eventually vacate, it becomes just useless spectrum.
Grandkids will force older people to discover streaming.And, that forces even older people to discover streaming. So, I doubt FM will survive the 25 years you predict. Perhaps, 10 or 15 years instead.
And, that forces even older people to discover streaming. So, I doubt FM will survive the 25 years you predict. Perhaps, 10 or 15 years instead.
This is very true. I’ve had to write content for both print and video, sometimes simultaneously, in my career and those are two entirely different frames of mind that are darned challenging to switch between. Now throw in the web content and it’s another lens to view content through.So from day one (college?) they've been trained to write for the ear. Print and broadcast writing are (or should be) different animals. And if you look at broadcast writing, most of it will probably not jump out at you as impressive. But if it tells the story clearly and understandably in 20, 30, 40 seconds---it's well-written and is doing its job.
Grandkids will force older people to discover streaming.
All the ones I know stream their music to a bluetooth speaker. I never see a radio in the wild anymore.But after that come Millennials (now 27 to 42 years old). It's a huge demographic, so there's that, and a decent percentage of them are clearly listening to radio now, or 18-34 and 18-49 numbers would have cratered.
All the ones I know stream their music to a bluetooth speaker. I never see a radio in the wild anymore.
Older people learn technology from the younger generations. They will force the older crowd to adapt.Huh?
Do they have a phone that has the internet.They're 27 to 42 years old. Do they drive?
(Pro tip: Anecdotal evidence based on "all the (blank) I know" isn't really evidence)
Just how old are we talking here? What age range do you think doesn't know about and understand, if not use, streaming?Older people learn technology from the younger generations. They will force the older crowd to adapt.
EVERYONE has a phone that has the internet. A slight exaggeration, but only barely,Do they have a phone that has the internet.
60 and above.Just how old are we talking here? What age range do you think doesn't know about and understand, if not use, streaming?