You didn't respond at all to what I said about your example of KALL in Salt Lake City. People stopped listening to the station long before it was sold. The station was still all local, and people stopped listening. Why? Explain that to me. They stopped listening, the revenues went down, and they had to cut costs. That's what happens in every business. Not just radio. Why can't you understand that? You can't pay people when the money goes away.
Actually there HAS: They've created podcasts, online content, even streaming services. In fact the digital sources of revenue are growing while broadcasting continues to fall. In some companies, digital now makes more money than broadcasting. Once again, that's why radio companies are diverting resources away from the business losing money to where it's making money. That's how business works.
Broadcasting has no other source of revenue. Radio stations can't add more commercials. They're at the limit, and they know people hate commercials. They can't send people a monthly bill. They can't ask their listeners for their credit card numbers. They can't put their air signal behind a pay wall. But they can online.
Really? What happens when people stop buying radios? What happens when electronics manufacturers stop coming up with fun, exciting radios that make people want to own them, the way they did with the Sony Walkman. That was the last creative radio device that was made. Now people buy phones. Radio companies tried to get the phone manufacturers to activate the FM chip that exists in phones, and they refused. So radio was forced to go online. The FCC didn't step in and require phone makers to activate the FM chip. The FCC didn't mandate HD radio. The FCC forces radio companies to do lots of things the audience doesn't want. Meanwhile digital broadcasting has absolutely no regulation. They can have as many stations as they want. They can broadcast obscenity. They can charge people anything they want. No regulations. And they're thriving, while radio is declining.
They are. They're using NEW MEDIA instead of outdated platforms like AM Radio. You say they're outdated, and you want them to continue spending money on outdated technology. Even NPR is online, where they can say and do what they want and not have to worry about the government shutting them down.
Maybe you don't know this but iHeartRadio owns a streaming platform. It's very popular. As far as I know, the company has no rules that stations can't use video. Most iHeart stations have video in their control rooms. Lots of other companies do the same. As I said, digital revenue is growing while broadcast is declining. At some point, they'll be able to shut down the transmitters and just go online.
Yes. I find IHeart streaming easier to access than Cumulus or Entercom.