This line of reasoning is what is killing the broadcast industry as a whole. The fact that you can consider conservative talk a programing choice like choosing country music over rock and not thinking that your creating a propaganda base that can eventually change the entire direction of the country was just stupid and harmful thinking. You have to wonder how many programers from decades ago sleep well at night knowing that they help plant the seeds for the U.S. going in the direction of a dictatorship. I would feel grossly ashamed of myself.The idea is this: "skip" doesn't matter anymore. Even if you're a 50 kw blowtorch like WSCR or WGN, management now draws a hard geopolitical boundary on who they serve to their potential advertisers. It's no longer how far can we reach...it's can we reach our audience well. Which is why WBBM, WSCR, and WMVP are all going to cheaper real estate and rent for their tower. As long as they can hit northeastern Illinois and northwestern Indiana, everyone else outside that area absolutely does not matter, even if they can be heard in 42 states. And, sadly, very few listen to stations outside of their market via skywave at night. Plus, the nighttime audience has dwindled greatly. And listeners after the evening rush hour are frequently ignored until the crack of dawn. Thus, bland, low-budget simulcast programming is what you get in evenings and overnights.
And finally, in the spring book, I think WMVP or WSCR had more streaming listeners than those listening over-the-air by a slight margin. That may become the norm sooner rather than later...
Live and local programing after midnight is a loss leader getting who ever is listening be it night workers, people having trouble sleeping, people that are lonely just needing a voice to listen to keeping the radio tuned to your station in the day parts where the revenue is generated. Hearing Red Eye Radio or After Midnight on multiple stations is just plain boring and uninteresting. All of this just drives one to seek out alternative media such as podcasts and YouTube videos.
In the day parts does it make sense to have dueling conservative talkers trying to be more outrageous than the other or is it better to do a more public service type of offering giving solid news and rounded opinion like existed back in the 60s and 70s? I guess if Brendan Carr has his way we'll have even more conservative talkers as it appears he'll pull the licenses of those who dare to put a liberal voice on the air.
The broadcast industry is broken and the broadcasters have know one to blame but themselves for putting out such poor programing choices.
As for AM station moving to inferior sites, background noise is going to be a big issue as noise levels are more prominent than they used to be. One more reason to push the listener to the FM simulcast especially in the case of WBBM AM. I'm betting that WSCR will appear on 104.3 after their switch to the WYLL site as it's signal will be noisy south and southwest. WMVP has a noisier signal in general over Chicago since it's move to Joliet vs the old Downers Grove site. The only benefit to the Joliet move is the night signal improvement in the far southwest burbs where the Downers Grove site put out a deep null in that direction. Northern burbs, way nosier. So, yes you'll add to your bottom line by selling land and leasing a site from another broadcaster but you can count on your signal being degraded even in the local area where it matters. The old sites were designed the way they were for a reason which was to provide a full quieting ground wave signal. The night time skip was just an added bonus.