Did any of us see that coming in the 1980s and 90s when Clear Channel was, with the help of financing, buying up stations and small ownership groups? I didn't.
A few people saw some things coming, at least in the 90s after the Telecom Act hit the industry like a nuke from space. I remember when the station I worked for got gobbled up and at least one veteran talent who refused to sign his new contract was shown the door. Then the faxes flew fast and furious (remember faxes?) welcoming new properties to the "Clear Channel family of stations." I joked that one day we'd get a fax from corporate saying "we'd like to welcome the Moon to the Clear Channel family..." and that got a laugh. I also remember the foreboding when the business manager (of a station that used to hand out cash to the employee of the month at staff meetings) sent out a memo sternly instructing us to conserve paper clips. Turns out the nickname "Cheap Channel" was dead on.
The other interesting thing that happened that year was that I was at a morning show conference and one of the panels featured the aforementioned Kidd Kraddick (who was a terrific guy and a real visionary, RIP Dave) and he did a little presentation on this new "internet" thing and warned that if radio wasn't careful, it was going to eat our lunch. It didn't happen exactly the way he predicted, but...well...here we are.
As far as blame, goes, I think it can be spread around to a lot of places including basically everyone ensconced in corner offices who didn't listen to people like Dave and others....insisting for too many years that nothing was wrong and ignoring disruptive events like Napster upending the record industry. Radio was not alone in this. I remember sitting in a meeting with a local TV executive in the late 90s who brought out stats that showed that OTA viewing still dominated the market and that all this talk about broadcast media being in danger was just a lot of talk.
Change is hard. Unfortunately this week a whole lot of iHeart employees are going to have to deal with change imposed upon them by forces beyond their control. Been there, done that. I hope they can land on their feet.