As for AI on air, I really don't know where we're going. I expected more stations to pick up either AI Ashley or someone else, but adoption has been slow. Even Alpha has pulled back on her use in Portland. For about the past year now, AI Ashley has only been voicing weather reports while on normal Ashley's shift. The rest of the day, weather reports are done by AI powered meteorologist Gusty Winds.
As for your other questions, I really don't have an answer as I don't fully understand how radio revenue works. I do have one question that I've been meaning to ask for a while now, and that is how is political money actually a boost in revenue? An organization I used to be involved in did advertise on a local station. The GM told me at one point that we were paying about a tenth of the value of the spots we were getting. We were getting quite a few free spots that political organizations cannot get, but it's my understanding that without those, we would have had 3 spots a month at $12 each. If I manage to call up there in the next couple of days, I can confirm this, but I've got quite a few other things on my plate right now, so let's just use those numbers. If a station has to offer the lowest rate available for political spots, it's my understanding that they would get the $12 per spot rate we got. Based on what he told me and the number of spots we got though, I suspect the normal rate would be $20 per spot. So, how is filling your breaks with $12 political spots better revenue for the station than the $20 car dealer, lawyer, or whatever else spots run on that station?