ctk said:if liberal talk is put on the air, promoted just as well as conservative stations and has about the same coverage area and still bombs, i'd say that the area couldn't or doesn't or wouldn't support liberal talk. the only problem i perceive is that more times than not, the liberal station isn't promoted well if at all and has a horrible coverage area. it's like taking freshwater tropical fish to the arctic, dumping them in the water and expecting your tropical fish sample to grow. the conditions are stacked so much against liberal radio more times than not that it fails to pull in ratings.
that brings me to another thought. say a conservative station had no promotion and no signal area. considering the nature of talk radio today, would that station get flipped to something else?
kaysguy said:Air America content bombed in Cleveland. Springer tanked the morning ratings at WTAM, was replaced with Glenn Beck, then local programming, but they are back to Beck. Akron's "progressive" station, which had a signal that covers the Cleveland area, also has given up the ghost and is all sports. It just didn't draw an audience, even when they moved from the amateurs like Franken and Garafolo to the Stephanie Millers and Thom Hartmans.
two questions for you:
are you from cleveland and what by what standard other than lack of airtime can you call al franken and janene garafolo amateur? if you want to argue airtime, then explain why rush limbaugh or glen beck got started in the business. by the way, from what i hear, the ohio massacre of clear channel progressive stations was done despite showing up in the local books.
The problem with the original comment here is that conservative talkers used to be on those "lousy signals" but got better ratings than the progressive talk did. The better ratings is what led to the conservative talkers being placed on bigger signals.
I think the problem, overall, is that most progressive talk listening goes to NPR. Prog-thinkers are satisfied with the programming and, because many progressives are younger and, frankly, may never have listened to an AM station, are not going to seek that kind of talk out on AM. It may, however, be more successful on an FM stick. Progressive talk may be shooting itself in the foot by going after AM stations and trying to go head to head with Rush, Hannity, etc. Go for FM. I think that's where the progressive audience is, for the most part.