Wolf! (sorry, couldn't resist)
The latest good news for radio is that AT&T is no longer going to offer an unlimited bandwidth wireless plan. If other wireless providers follow AT&T's lead, listening to Internet streams on wireless devices will become less attractive. I have long felt wireless Internet is not the radio-killer that many have made it out to be; it is too inefficient of bandwidth.
But radio is an art, and its future success or failure is in the hands of the artists, that is, the programmers. 90% listener satisfaction is not good enough; radio must attract and hold new listeners, especially younger ones.
Perhaps the blackest day in Boston radio history was the day WBCN's owners took over that station's arch rival, WZLX. Rivalry among stations created a degree of tension, of excitement, that is gone from today's radio dial. The efforts of individual broadcasters to promote their stations at rivals' expenses combined, I feel, to promote the medium as a whole and invite frequent tune-ins. Pretty much the last such rivalry left in local radio is WGBH versus WBUR; it will be interesting to see how that plays out.
The latest good news for radio is that AT&T is no longer going to offer an unlimited bandwidth wireless plan. If other wireless providers follow AT&T's lead, listening to Internet streams on wireless devices will become less attractive. I have long felt wireless Internet is not the radio-killer that many have made it out to be; it is too inefficient of bandwidth.
But radio is an art, and its future success or failure is in the hands of the artists, that is, the programmers. 90% listener satisfaction is not good enough; radio must attract and hold new listeners, especially younger ones.
Perhaps the blackest day in Boston radio history was the day WBCN's owners took over that station's arch rival, WZLX. Rivalry among stations created a degree of tension, of excitement, that is gone from today's radio dial. The efforts of individual broadcasters to promote their stations at rivals' expenses combined, I feel, to promote the medium as a whole and invite frequent tune-ins. Pretty much the last such rivalry left in local radio is WGBH versus WBUR; it will be interesting to see how that plays out.