Bengalsfan said:AAN failed in that one missive, to make programming people want to hear.
X-14 said:On another forum elsewhere a poster opined that the reason for Air America's going dark was because their listener died.
;D
Your last clause pretty much says it all. From day one it was all about getting back at Rush et al., not trying to build a business in radio (insert liberal joke or commentary here).gr8oldies said:They were TV people doing radio and the agenda was more important than doing good radio.
In the beginning AAR was said to have so many writers on staff they didnt have room to sit.
TheBigA said:Bengalsfan said:AAN failed in that one missive, to make programming people want to hear.
I don't think so. The mistake they made was thinking they could fund a radio network with low rated, poor signal AM stations. Lots of similar networks have failed in the last few years. An all-female network comes to mind. The only "success" is the Talk Radio Network, which is mainly done as a series of successful individual shows, rather than as a single network brand. That could be the lesson here: The network brand name is far less important than the brand names of its shows. Once Randi Rhodes and Al Franken were gone, there was no Air America.
Bengalsfan said:Air America was more concerned about hating conservatives and attacking George W Bush than they were about compelling programming.
I think both of you have half a point. AAR was trying to have this huge radio network to first and foremost serve as a counterpoint to conservative talk radio, to fill what they saw as a void in the marketplace of ideas (if not the marketplace of radio), to give those ideas more exposure. AAR's backers thought that conservative talk radio drove The Right's thinking, rather than the other way around.TheBigA said:Bengalsfan said:Air America was more concerned about hating conservatives and attacking George W Bush than they were about compelling programming.
What you don't understand is that to some people, that is compelling programming. Just as the opposite (hating liberals and attacking Clinton or Obama) is compelling to others. But "compelling programming" is not going to change anyone's opinions, or get a conservative to listen to a liberal or vice versa. That's a fact of life.
My point was about funding a 24/7 network as the brand, rather than the shows.
lilburncommunityradio said:X-14 said:On another forum elsewhere a poster opined that the reason for Air America's going dark was because their listener died.
;D
I vote for post of the year on this ONE!!!!!!! LOL LMBFOAO
TheBigA said:Bengalsfan said:Air America was more concerned about hating conservatives and attacking George W Bush than they were about compelling programming.
What you don't understand is that to some people, that is compelling programming.
Bengalsfan said:That very well may be, it just wasn't compelling enough to enough people.
TheBigA said:The Democrats are pushing diversity...
X-14 said:TheBigA said:The Democrats are pushing diversity...
Uh, yeah?
Until you disagree with them. Then so much for independent thinking and 'diversity'. Look at the reception that conservative speakers tend to get when attempting to speak at predominately liberal campuses.
BTW, I lean towards libertarianism, so this isn't coming from a hard right perspective.
'm glad you offered this topic for discussion, because I've got a theory that has absolutely nothing to do with politics in general.
I don't suggest this is true in 100% of the cases (so, partisans on both sides - hold your fire, please.)
But, I think it has something to do with AM vs. FM.
What? (you say). Let's look at fact:
It is said (though not in all cases) that one tends to become more conservative as they get older. And, it's also fact that few people under the age of 45 ever listen to AM radio! (Case in point: I have a good friend in his early 40's. The only time he listens to AM radio is over Memorial Day weekend to catch the broadcast of the Indy 500, which is on a local AM station.)
Is it just possible, these prog-talkers (in an attempt to go "head to head" with Hannity, Limbaugh, etc.) have been talking to an audience that would, largely, never be receptive to their ideas?
No, the under 45 crowd listens to FM. (Duh!!!) Look at that sea of youthful faces of all races that we saw on our TV's on Inauguration Day. How many of them do you think listen to AM radio? Hmmmm?
Case in point (and I know this is only anecdotal): that FM progtalker in Madison, Wisconsin that's #6 overall age 12 plus. I don't care how you splice it and dice it, those are serviceable ratings, if the demos are right.
Is is possible: the progressive audience is more on FM, than AM? We know listeners will go from AM to FM, but few will go from FM to AM for any reason. (other than a specific program).
I realize this doesn't fit all cases, but perhaps progressive talk is made for FM.
Far as AM goes: you can lead a horse to water, but you can't make him drink..
X-14 said:On another forum elsewhere a poster opined that the reason for Air America's going dark was because their listener died.
;D
So True So True... Thats the reason it failed oh and extremely poor show hosts..Bengalsfan said:TheBigA said:Bengalsfan said:AAN failed in that one missive, to make programming people want to hear.
I don't think so. The mistake they made was thinking they could fund a radio network with low rated, poor signal AM stations. Lots of similar networks have failed in the last few years. An all-female network comes to mind. The only "success" is the Talk Radio Network, which is mainly done as a series of successful individual shows, rather than as a single network brand. That could be the lesson here: The network brand name is far less important than the brand names of its shows. Once Randi Rhodes and Al Franken were gone, there was no Air America.
You think Rush started on 50,000 clear channel AMs? Hardly. Plenty of programming has started on the graveyard stations and after proving itself moved up to the bigger stations. Had AAN programmed what folks wanted to hear, it would have eventually moved off the poor signals to better ones. Air America was more concerned about hating conservatives and attacking George W Bush than they were about compelling programming.