The biggest thing I hate about podcasts from Iheart & others is dynamically inserted ads. The host will be in the middle of a sentence, and an ad interrupts them. So podcasts aren't always a great alternative, either.
And honestly; I'm not a Millennial or GenZ, and I subscribe to several podcasts, have SXM in three of our vehicles, check out YouTube videos about various topics. I sample local radio on occasion, but I don't use radio anywhere near what I did even ten years ago. Radio is just another source of media or entertainment, not the only one.The biggest problem is that younger people, and older people, watch and listen on demand. Their "personality" is podcasts, YouTube and TikTok/Instagram creators.
Ironically, the best music I've found online is on YouTube. I just listened to a "video" someone linked to in a group where the people share my musical taste. Wonderful.The biggest problem is that younger people, and older people, watch and listen on demand. Their "personality" is podcasts, YouTube and TikTok/Instagram creators.
I don't know whether NPR is different, but old radio shows from NPR have the "ads" in the appropriate place, during the breaks the shows had back in the day.The biggest thing I hate about podcasts from Iheart & others is dynamically inserted ads. The host will be in the middle of a sentence, and an ad interrupts them. So podcasts aren't always a great alternative, either.
Absolutely correct. So the answer is for radio to find a way to make it attractive to listeners, or find the best broker to sell the land the tower is located on and turn off the lights. I know where listeners go. I'm one who went. I merely suggest that creativity could help save some of the stations. I don't have the answer but I know that it isn't another super set of 12 in a row.The biggest problem is that younger people, and older people, watch and listen on demand. Their "personality" is podcasts, YouTube and TikTok/Instagram creators.
Absolutely agree! YouTube Music is beautifully designed so you can find what you want without wading through lots of garbage. The interface is clean, simple and user friendly. The radio industry should take notice when it comes to streaming.Ironically, the best music I've found online is on YouTube. I just listened to a "video" someone linked to in a group where the people share my musical taste. Wonderful.
They also send you to a similar "video" when it's over.Absolutely agree! YouTube Music is beautifully designed so you can find what you want without wading through lots of garbage. The interface is clean, simple and user friendly. The radio industry should take notice when it comes to streaming.
What about KGO? Nobody I know of wanted sports betting being blasted 24/7!!!I'm not sure what that is what can lure the younger demos to use radio more than they currently do (and it's more than I thought). With the big companies researching radio to death and being accountable to stockholders, you can rest assured nothing hits the airwaves that is not what listeners want.
"Nobody I know" is usually a pretty insular group.What about KGO? Nobody I know of wanted sports betting being blasted 24/7!!!
But a format dedicated to sports betting? Nobody wanted that!
But there is revenue to back that format. Time will tell if it is sustainable and if the gaming industry finds it productive to support.What about KGO? Nobody I know of wanted sports betting being blasted 24/7!!!
The sports betting industry does, and radio's customers are advertisers. Listeners are radio's "product" and if gaming companies find that their biggest users also listen to sports betting radio, then we have a profitable format.But a format dedicated to sports betting? Nobody wanted that!