As much as I love radio, and in many cases stations that used to be or represent a certain thing, at this point...
If you're a serious fan of whatever branch of rock, why is it worth the time as to how a corporation chooses to program one station in Dallas? Even if they're absolutely wrong, $10 a month or thereabouts will get every flavor of rock one could want, curated by people who are far more passionate and invested in it than whoever's scheduling the stuff KEGL plays.
I mean, I very much enjoyed KDGE when it started in 1989...but...that was 25 years ago. I can hear The B52s, The Smiths and the Clash on a good non-comm music discovery station or music service, and not have to sit through ED med and tax relief spots to hear it. Dallas used to have solid rock radio of every variety - KZPS, KDGE, KEGL, Q102. At their peak, these were all well programmed stations with local talent, big promotions, the total package.
Music radio now by and large isn't designed for people who consider music one of the most important aspects of their lives. It's so people in their commute can hear something they're likely to at least tolerate, so they hopefully will hear a spot or register on the meter. I love great entertaining, interactive radio, and there's still some places that do it, but generally music radio is a convenience for casual consumers, not the "lifestyle" product it used to be. Most of us have more time to post about music and think about these things than the available audience, or even the programmers who have many other things to do just to keep the station profitable in the era of 1,000 choices.
I used to be a huge fan of alternative/modern rock radio. I'm in a market with a heritage alternative station and a thriving music scene, that attracts critically acclaimed artists to great venues. Our once famed "alternative" AND our "classic rock" stations each have one local daypart with the rest nationally tracked, and they both are still playing the Red Hot Chili Peppers roughly every two hours. Their owners regularly have less than great financial news to report.
It's not even an age thing. I'm still as interested in new and good music as ever, and I've loved radio since my childhood, but for various reasons a lot of it is no longer "for" people like myself. Fortunately, I have options. I used to get really upset about the state of it, but you can't turn back the tide. KEGL will never be as "good as it once was" to those who have great memories of it - nor can it be the 2024 version of it. And if it was, that's no guarantee of anything other than that it would cost more to operate, and we all know that isn't happening.
So, I give money to non-commercial stations with DJs that champion new or deeper tracks, follow curators on streaming services, and remember fondly what I found great about the medium I loved. And still do, but it's like meeting your first love after so many years. You may reminisce and have some good interactions, but you're not able to go back. Ultimately that's radio in 2024. I still think some of the hosts and DJs I grew up with were great - but if I heard them now, I'd probably find them tacky or dull.
Nothing, including KEGL, can ever compete with how we remember it.