Then radio truly is dead. Go to any other message board and ask people if they listen to radio at all, you’ll probably get a lot of no’s. Are there even any kids nowadays who aspire to work in radio?
I did aspire to work in radio when I was young. I remember back around 1999 or so, I became
really fascinated by radio (I'm not sure why or what prompted it), and I wanted to run a station. I had a couple of those old two-way wireless intercoms (well, I guess they were still relatively new back then) that I would set up and pretend that it was a radio station, and I'd "broadcast" music from the main intercom using a hand held tape player that I had recorded either from a real radio station or the TV to the distant intercom, located in another room. It was extremely crude, but enjoyable nevertheless.
My ambitions never progressed far beyond that, because I never really had the opportunity to explore them, but, almost by accident, I did get to volunteer at an LPFM for a couple years about 15 years ago, which was fun except for the people (I suspect a properly run commercial station would've been at least
slightly more organized, with proper checks and balances to keep employees and personalities from running amuck, but perhaps this is a bit naive, given some of the stories I've read on these forums.
Anyway, looking at the industry now, it's nothing bit a disappointment. Nobody cares about doing anything new, and most who try end up going under because they lose listeners (and thus ad revenue). And this is in a time where the overall share of listeners is much lower than it was in 1999.
From time to time, I do still toy with possibly applying to work at a local station somewhere (and, if the opportunity arises, I very well may give it a try!), but it seems like by the time I finally do get around to it, I might as well not bother, since it'll all be internet-based anyway, and where's the fun in that? The thing that still excites me about analog radio (especially AM, but FM too) is how one can turn on a radio and, almost like magic, tune into a station that's maybe hundreds of miles away and hear things from a different perspective, or hear music and things that I don't hear locally (which is not so common nowadays, with so many stations under common ownership all airing the same thing).
Internet radio is OK, but it makes the act of listening to the "radio" way too easy and boring, and it all sounds the same. And there's so much variety, that it's kind of irritating, kind of like how having too much of a good thing can sometimes be worse than not having it at all.
I might get an amateur radio license, but what can I do with it? It seems like there's not much to do there other than talk to people about the weather and constantly slave over expensive equipment, which doesn't excite me too much. i like broadcasting, but that's explicitly forbidden on the Ham bands, so that's out.
Oh, well.
c