redneckriviera said:robfwb said:I sometimes ask myself.. how is radio still surviving?
Are people really that conditioned to accept this crap??
-Rob
(Yes, I saw Tibbs' & rdxr's replies, but I wanted to go back to Rob directly)
Huh? What are you talking about?
Radio is still surviving because 93 percent of Americans (yes, 12 & over) listen to it on a weekly basis... and their time spent listening is still at 90 percent of the level it was a decade ago.
And you're one of those people, Rob. At least you sure seem to be a voracious consumer of radio. If it's all "crap," you're spending an inordinate percentage of your life listening to it. If you are wasting that much of your life listening to "crap," turn the thing off and put that chunk of your life to better use. Help the poor, feed the hungry, go back to school.
As for what radio content really is or isn't, sit down and take inventory of the radio stations serving your community (Navarre?). According to radio-locator.com, you should be able to receive 25 local-quality signals + another 21 more distant signals. Listen to each of those signals for a reasonable period of time and determine for yourself what different kinds of programming are being made available to you by those 46 radio stations--and what isn't. By my quick count, I identified at least 19 different program offerings.
How well IS the radio industry serving Navarre? How many do you want? What's missing? And among those program niches that are missing, how many would attract a large enough audience to be financially viable in Navarre?
I eagerly await your report?
LOL! Yeah, I'm "quoting" myself. Maybe I misunderstood you, Rob.
Were you talking about employee turnover? If so, I apologize. Never mind.
Radio survives the constant turnover because it's an abnormally profitable business (usually)... and because so many people think it's "Show Biz!" and want to work in "Show Biz!" In whatever capacity... for whatever the pay is...