Just to play devil's advocate: How do you know they walked much of it back if you never went back?
Haha, good point!
I should clarify a bit, as I was rather vague and overly general. Cumulus lost me as a regular listener after the Purge, but then I'd check in every now and again to check it out and see if anything changed. I started listening again semi regularly to the likes of John Rothman (sp?) and Pat Thurston (who is a news anchor at KCBS now, or, rather, she
was; I haven't heard her lately, so she may have been let go) until a year or two before the full execution of KGO as a proper radio station (that sports betting junk was little more than bottom-budget filler in my opinion).
Here's what we know: They're not coming back to broadcast. It's not because of the content. It's because of the concept of real time radio. Same with TV. Linear is dying, and it's being replaced with on demand. The future won't be like the past.
I demand my good, old fashioned linear TV back! The cable company stuck me with this Android TV-based TiVo box, and I can't say I like it. I will often let the TV go in the background, but it only does that for an hour or two before going into "standby mode". Why? I don't want standby mode! And it does this
despite the fact that I actually turned that setting off. Either it's hardwired by the cable co, or the box's software is somehow defective.
At any rate, I miss the times where I could just switch the TV on, set a channel, and expect it to carry on more or less indefinitely without interruption until I changed it. and this wasn't just analog: at our old house, the cable box we had there was of the more traditional type, and with it's highly advanced electronics managed to master that simple concept. Why can't this box do the same?
It feels like a giant leap backward, if you ask me. I'm not arguing that Internet-based On Demand is the future, but can't they at least get it
right?
c