However, I tried looking at the top 10 markets and aside from KRLD-FM and WEEI-FM, which are both sports talkers, I couldn't see anything that would resemble an Audacy FM talker. Are there examples in smaller markets?
One example would be KMBZ-FM. At least during the daytime hours, it's local talk and generally refrains from national politics. To some degree, KMOX in St. Louis does that, too. I understand Bonneville is testing a similar approach in some dayparts on KIRO-FM. Of course, you’re unlikely to see an approach like that in small markets. An approach like that costs money, and you can’t make enough to support a hyperlocal talk format on a small market's budget. Such an approach also requires seasoned professionals. Your kids just out of college aren’t likely to pull that off, and syndication opportunities are nonexistent because local issues, by definition, don’t resonate anywhere else.
The only other things I'll suggest/ask regarding 560 or any other AM as a lab for new programming - 1. Since most GenZ listening is on their phone, why is an app not an idea? I say this only because an internet station without a broadcast outlet is, for an advertiser, just an internet station among 1000 others. A San Francisco radio app with something you can also readily hear in your car is another thing, one of about 50 (is that not significant to an advertiser?).
If I were going to use an app, I wouldn’t need the AM signal for placement. TuneIn, iHeart, and Audacy allow you to be listed with local stations if you take a local approach.
2. As Mr. Fybush points out, once the license is turned in, it is likely dead. I don't think anyone would advocate for blowing up even a moderately performing FM to experiment. But if you have a decently powered property that is going to get canned otherwise, isn't that an opportunity to see what could play and transferred to an FM when the time is right? I think I heard that WTKS was in fact an AM station originally.
Not that it couldn’t have happened, but I don’t remember what’s now WTKS ever having been on an AM. Having said that, it was also a different era. That was roughly 35 years ago, and AM still had some viability. When it comes to seeing what could play on AM and move to FM, that was a great idea 30 years ago. It's just not realistic today. You’re not going to get enough of a sample on AM today to be able to tell, and you’d just be throwing that money away. It wouldn’t be fair to the people invested in it either. Maybe you could find a sucker, I mean volunteer, but most people with experience wouldn’t go anywhere near that idea. Even twenty years ago, the writing was on the wall. AM was still viable, and a few AM's were still successful. The audience, however, was aging, and even AM stations with high 12+ audience shares were rapidly aging out of the money demos.