I love the AAA format. It's refreshing to me and can be very well done.
It's also being done in New York at 90.7 with a very respected staff and a consultant I respect whose firm helped revamp them from the era of "City Folk" into what it is today.
And that station gets poor ratings. And just had to let staff go. And neither of those things are really their fault. To a lot of us, NYC is CBGBs, Lou Reed, the Ramones, and Lennon and Springsteen dropping by WNEW. WRXP thought they had an in with that, when you had a renewal of the indie scene with The Strokes and such, it was exciting.
And then came recessions, social media, and the demographics changed and the artists get priced out and go further underground. One of my favorite movies is Whit Stilman's "Last Days of Disco." At the end, a group of friends has lived through a cultural moment centered around a New York City club. And they reflect on having lived through something that just ceased to exist as a culturally dominant force, or ideal. Sure, there's some hope it will live again in some form, but it'll never be the same.
I try to not grow stereotypically old as I age. Or be resentful. I cringe at current politics, social media's abuses, and the devaluing of hard working local radio people who I respect and consider friends. One of the things I find most distasteful is greed, and I seek contentment in my career and life. So, I look at what's being done at WFUV, and WNYU - which plays new music, cutting edge, independent, unique stuff every single afternoon. Or WFMU which, though inaccessible to a lot of people, has managed to create a very loyal and passionate group of supporters. It's not just a preset - it's a club. People fund it, interact with the DJs, rave about the station, explore the archives.
That spirit is still out there. It's just not in places where most people look, or to their tastes. But I try to support it and enjoy it where I find it, because that's where that sort of radio still lives (to borrow from a WNEW slogan.)
Look, I have five ideas on my hard drive that I think sound great as "mixes" or formats. Maybe 2 at best could be sustained on local radio, under very specific circumstances. The others, would make great streams. I'm from a radio background, so they wouldn't be haphazard either. And I think even companies like iHeart could fill some interesting niches on streaming that they're not bothering with. Taking risks? I don't see them hiring young upstarts and doing the "format labs" like they briefly did with HD. But they're not in the risk business. They're in the business of extracting the max payout for people up top, just like most other businesses of their size.
All that to say, if I had won the lottery, I'd probably buy 98.7 and make it the next Indie 103.1 or WPIX (in the new wave/punk/soul era.) And it'd be a blast. But I've stopped expecting commercial radio with that much at stake to excite me. There's few benevolent billionaires or rock stars saving good old FM, and for some of us, it's reached the point of 57 Channels and (next to) Nothin' On, and that's the reality of our times. I'll just seek out the few bright stars in a dimming dial while they're there. Cause we seem to lose one every week.
Oh, and support 90.7 WFUV if Triple A is your jam. They could probably use it right about now.