Radio_Realist said:
Is there some reason why a live-and-local talk show in a smaller market has to be nothing but phone-in callers chatting? Can't a live-and-local show include interviews and other spoken word content besides just callers chatting about things?
Been there, done that. A long time ago when talk radio was new. At a small local station.
Also occasionally work with a powerful station based in a remote community right up to now.
The caller base IS a major problem. This comes into focus when the small community is within easy listening range of a larger market. Potential callers from the larger market are not much on calling into shows where the primary sphere of influence is the smaller community. Especially when there are national syndicated shows on their big-town stations. A lot of it is interia; they aren't listening to partipate. They ARE listening to be entertained.
Also in the suburban markets many of the residents, likey a majority, are new to the community and identify with the larger city nearby. Though they don't vote in "Big Town", they can tell you who is mayor and how much trouble that mayor is in and the issues of that community. Unless their car is stolen from their suburban driveway they really don't care about what's going in in "Small Town" and aren't interested in hearing about it on local radio.
Notice that the "local" talkers in the big towns have an in-town larger listener base and make good use of toll-free numbers to encourage those small-towners who would like to participate to do so. Intriguing how many suburbanites jump into the fray when something controversial in "Big Town Where They Don't Live or Vote" comes down.
In the remote community, definitely too small a potential caller base to sustain anything constant. It works, and works really well, for one to two hours one day a week. But it does require a toll-free number to draw in those in smaller villages up to 200 miles away. In this kind of market, with no signals from "Big Town" (there being none), state issues ARE local issues and do draw in the more distant listeners. But again, a small base means frequent repeat callers and those breed boredom with the non-participant listeners. They might stay tuned because there's no other game around....but more likely they just turn the radio off and may not turn it back on until they want to catch some special favorite element like weather or other things that are unique to remote places...even fish reports.
Every now and again a smaller market will develop a really good talker. But, when they do, that talker isn't going to be there long. It's "off to Big Town" where the money is and the talk is more interesting.
My contention is that a small market station can afford to tackle local issues and stir the pot a portion of the time but can't make a living off exclusively that. Interviews? Nearby Big Town will get the good ones and small towns will get the folks pimping health-nut cook books.