Savage said:
The good news about radio: nobody who's any good at this, is out of work for long.
That USED to be true provided you did not mind bring a frequent customer of U-HAUL, but it certainly is not true in today's radio. I know very good jocks on both coasts with great attitudes and reputations, fabulous backgrounds, etc. who are out of work or relegated to deadend jobs such as traffic reporters working split shifts reciting the same old traffic jams day after day (reminding me of the guy who had a job shoveling up elephant poop in the circus. A friend asked why he didn't quit that boring, stinky, nasty job, and he replied, "What and give up show business????").
Pay scales keep going down, the number of radio jobs - on and off the air - has dropped dramatically and a lot of that happened while the business was supposedly booming! Now the story is one of declining ad revenues and, industry-wide, no clues about how to reverse the perception of radio as a fading medium with little or no attraction to younger people.
If you are young and single and want to roll the dice with radio, make it your goal to get a morning show gig (and not as some second banana). Increasingly the morning show is the only live show on many stations and it's the one day part where stations still recognize that a particular talent can make them some serious money.
If you are married, do your family a favor and recognize that while radio was fun, it's not something that's going to position you as the breadwinner over the years. The best thing you can have for a long career in radio, is an understanding wife with a good career in some other business.
What saddens me to see friends approaching 40 who still have families and keep chasing yet one more shot at grabbing radio's brass ring only to see themselves once again the victim of mass firings. Most folks who stick to that will find that by about age 50 radio will toss them out once and for all and they are ill-prepared and too old to effectively transition to something else.
Which gets back to my belief that morning radio is the only place to be: I had fun doing morning and made okay money, but I used the rest of the day to learn other ways to make a living.