Get rid of the consolidators and let someone who is passionate about the format do it correctly. We've seen what is possible with that approach at WABC where the owner is willing to invest in the programming as opposed to corporate radio's philosophy of constant cost-cutting, and who is willing to do the hard work of understanding the product and selling it to advertisers. Audacy's sales division never understood how to do that with Country in NYC.
No, local advertisers did not support it and the ratings were not high enough for agencies to be interested. In fact, it did better when it was part of the corporate "Nash" brand and sold as a network"
There is no evidence that WABC is making a profit. It is below 20th in 25-54 and many consider the station to be a personal pet project of the wealthy owner.
However, getting rid of consolidation is never going to happen, in fact it's only likely to get worse. So NYC is unlikely to ever see another FM Country station under the current situation.
A local owner would go for a format that appeals to a broader and salable audience group. History shows that any chance of a country station succeeding today is essentially zero.
The radio industry enjoyed decades where a small number of corporate broadcast conglomerates controlled a finite -- and in NYC's case, a completely insufficient number of radio frequencies,
New York got just as many frequencies as any other congested area of the country got. And those allocations were mostly dependent on the laws of physics, so saying they were "insufficient" is not a valid point
and the audience had no other audio outlets to choose from. Streaming is eating away at that old business model, and the broadcast oligopoly's grip is slipping away. People now have lots of choices for audio. Younger people in particular are abandoning terrestrial radio with its stale, repetitive playlists, canned talent and 12-minute blocks of huckester-laden commercials.
And those are separate challenges. Still, radio reaches 85% of adults each week and is a very viable ad medium.
By abandoning Country and Alternative listeners in NYC, terrestrial broadcasters have effectively invited their audience to abandon FM radio. They will endlessly try to justify their actions but all you have to do is look at the overall audience trends for FM radio over the past several years and the truth is clear.
There are all kinds of music and talk formats that terrestrial radio can't deal with as they are too small to attract advertisers. To zoom in on one area I am familiar with, I know or have met many Hispanics who hate the few choices they have and they stream all-salsa, pop/ballad oldies, all-vallenato, all-Argentine-rock, all-ranchera, all-regional-Mexican and a variety of others; each of those is a viable format elsewhere but is too small to be employed in New York City. Quite simply, alternative rock and country have joined those groups.