NY, with relatively low power is forced to make the signal as "punchy" as possible. In LA, where you have a number of FMs over 10 kw at 5000 feet above the city, it is very different.
Oh, is
that why? It makes sense. In fact, I'm now thinking all those buildings must produce an incredible amount of multipath. Could that be another reason for their balls-to-the-wall clipping loudness -- overcoming a potentially higher, multipath-augmented noise floor?
I wonder how much stereo enhancement (222A/Stereomaxx style) is used there today. I do remember reading it has a negative effect in multipath-prone areas (with the "width limit" control on those boxes being meant to help address that issue specifically).
Most stations that need constant and consistent high volume levels in noisy car environments opt for some kind of AGC ahead of peak limiting, even if neither is terribly aggressive.
I hear that sort of processing on several stations down here, especially the more tasteful formats. However, there's still a lot of "dense and rich" old school processing going on (Jack FM, etc.). It's just that here, thankfully, they don't induce TSL-killing ear fatigue with their release timings or lean so heavily on their clippers that voices and pianos get ripped to shreds.
Incidentally, a follow-on, for anyone interested, to what I was saying in my last post. In addition to simpler spectral density being advantageous to low bitrate lossy coding, some here might also find it interesting to know that formats like FLAC -- which of course compress losslessly -- output fewer bits per second for the same compression level setting when fed spectrally simple as opposed to spectrally dense audio. For example:
https://files.catbox.moe/solcob.flac (flac compression level: max, 25.0 seconds of 48 kHz 16-bit stereo Ella Fitzgerald -- 2,079,981 bytes, a/k/a 665 kbit/s)
https://files.catbox.moe/6xxh2g.flac (flac compression level: max, 25.0 seconds of 48 kHz 16-bit stereo white noise -- 4,642,759 bytes, a/k/a 1485 kbit/s)
Were these WAV files, both would be identical in size.
So if we ever see the day when lossless compression replaces lossy compression in the online streaming and digital radio broadcasting worlds, the processing haters are going to have a field day. Stations will discover they can save bandwidth costs (online) or push out more streams (on air) if they don't turn their audio into a wall of sound.