And where it's been tried, it's either been against an established, formidable competitor or on a rimshot signal. Doomed to fail. It doesn't mean that the format itself is deficient or defective. In the case of KGO, it wasn't all-news: weekends were still talk shows and I believe overnights were syndicated talk.
In other words, if they lost MORE money, it MIGHT have done better. That's what you're saying. In the case of KGO, they put the best resources in the best dayparts, and it still wasn't enough. The real story was that the KGO audience was angry their favorite old talk show hosts had either been fired or died. Once those people were gone, they refused to listen, regardless of the format or the quality.
The point here is that when KCBS had competition, the audience gave excuses why they didn't listen, and the format went away. Now they want another idiot to come along and lose more money, and they still won't listen.
Part of the problem is that too many people in radio management have been trained to hate news and to disrepect news people. They have a bias against news and, if pushed into doing it, they do it badly. They refuse to figure out how to sell it. This has gone on for decades. It's a strong current that is nearly impossible to swim against.
And yet in San Francisco, Cumulus invested millions of dollars in news, hired experienced people, and the audience didn't care. You can blame unnamed radio management all day, but if they spend the money, and the audience isn't there, it's not management's fault, other than wasting money for five years on a format that was, as you said, "doomed to fail."
A lot of these same excuses can be given about why there isn't a country station in NY or SF. Management refused to sell it and didn't like the music. It really doesn't matter. The audience gave them a reason to drop the format by not listening. At the end of the day, it's really up to the audience. If they don't listen, everything else is just an excuse. In the case of finding competition for KCBS, it was tried, it failed, and it likely will never be tried again.
I've worked in all of the formats, from sports to music to news. You know how to get respect? Do good work that attracts audience and advertisers. That's my secret to success. It works.
If y'all think you're in a dying business, then why are you still in it?
I don't think I'm in a "dying business." But then again, I see it as a bigger thing than strictly broadcast radio. And I get a lot of "patronizing lectures" from people about that too.