Letter: AM's Downfall Is Poor Programming, Not Audio Quality - Radio World
In this letter to the editor, the author comments on Dave Bialik’s recent article "AMs, Don’t Be Passive About Your Fate."
Big A, I agree 100% with your post, but don’t fall for the AOR started hurting AM in the late 60s history rewrite that many FM rock fans believe.
Big A, I agree 100% with your post, but don’t fall for the AOR started hurting AM in the late 60s history rewrite that many FM rock fans believe.
If any station was responsible for starting the decline of AM in San Francisco it would’ve have been beautiful music KFOG. But as late as 1980, FM listening was not even half of total listenership in San Francisco.
In the Spring 1976, KFOG was the only FM in the top 6. The top 5 AM stations alone accounted for over 33% of the shares. Top AOR, KSAN was only at 14 with a 2.6.
Yep, guys, you are discussing a three year old article and letter to the editor.
Absolutely true. Where I live, about 30 miles from Sutro Tower, and ~25 miles from the antenna farm on San Bruno Mountain, all those signals are fine if I'm anywhere near the Bay. But 2/10th of a mile up the street from my house is a large hill, which effectively terrain blocks most of those signals. I'm effectively in a valley. Anything I receive is mainly via multipath (as opposed to South Bay signals which are direct line-of-sight). There are thousand upon thousands of other listeners who had similar problems with FM, which is why KGO and KCBS (pre-simulcast) and KNBR (pre-simulcast) and KSFO (pre-wingnut talk) survived well past their pull dates.Actually, I'm not sure that San Francisco is the best indicator of what was happening between AM and FM in most markets back then. Keep in mind that there is a lot of terrain blocking of FM signals in that city, especially in the Richmond district (where my brother used to live back in the 1990s). Most markets, such as my residence in Phoenix, AZ, while they may have had terrain blocking in some of the outlying suburbs, didn't have that problem inside the city itself and therefore FM took off much faster than it did in San Francisco.
True and where we are now when audio apps are common. Also in some cities like San Francisco and Washington DC their top stations in the ratings are local News/Talk NPR affiliates and All News Radio on the FM side. Some of it is that the niche music formats can be anywhere from Satellite Radio, HD Radio or Dashboard apps. Also the Audio content providers need to adapt to where the currents demos are at.Example 3: No one runs music on AM any longer, because stations proved music on AM would lose to format competition on FM every time back in the 90s. When AM started to fail in the 80s, lots of stations went to niche formats like big band or classic country. But today, those formats mostly run on Class A FM stations, if they exist at all on the radio. (Very few Big Band stations still exist)
Sounds like someone trying to rewrite history.
Radio, in Y2K, cumed about 94% of the population. Today, the PUMM figure for most markets is in the high 80% region (the lowest is NYC, which was always much lower due to people unable to use radio in subways and many trains) . That is not "half" but more like 8% to 10% less. What is painful is that they listen for about 75% less time per week.The bigger story is the number of people using traditional radio is about half of what it was 20 years ago. The programming isn't going to fix that.
Not only is your point valid in those rugged terrain markets, but we also have to consider that the "best AM signals" were licensed in the 1930's. Today, most of those do not cover their entire market any more due to urban sprawl and man made noise.Absolutely true. Where I live, about 30 miles from Sutro Tower, and ~25 miles from the antenna farm on San Bruno Mountain, all those signals are fine if I'm anywhere near the Bay. But 2/10th of a mile up the street from my house is a large hill, which effectively terrain blocks most of those signals. I'm effectively in a valley. Anything I receive is mainly via multipath (as opposed to South Bay signals which are direct line-of-sight). There are thousand upon thousands of other listeners who had similar problems with FM, which is why KGO and KCBS (pre-simulcast) and KNBR (pre-simulcast) and KSFO (pre-wingnut talk) survived well past their pull dates.