Echoing and expanding on earlier comments, radio eats its young. And its veterans, too. If you love what you do, it wipes out your world when someone calls a meeting and lets you and the rest of the staff know after it's done. There's always the fear that someone will go ballistic if they find out beforehand, but professionals who value their audience at least deserve the chance to say goodbye, if nothing else.A few years back in another city, I found out from a recently hired saleswoman that the satellite was coming, and the vacation date, which I'd given my bosses way in advance as a courtesy, was going to be my termination date.Fortunately, I confirmed it with the manager a few days before my last scheduled day because it was eating at me that I didn't know for sure. But I did know -- not specifically that I was being fired, but that it was likely. How? For three weeks, they left the open shipping box containing the satellite receiver on a desk in the lobby.They weren't a 24-hour station, and I had a key. I really wanted to come in after hours and smash the contents of that box into a thousand pieces. But I didn't. And, probably because I didn't, and kept my cool on the air, I at least got to bid the audience goodbye and walk away sad, but proud.Depressed as hell, but at least I got to make a somewhat graceful exit.The KIXI staff deserved that much, and frankly a lot more. They were doing extremely good radio, and it's a sin to let excellent talent go. But typical of the industry.I love the entertaining part of the work, but I haven't done it since. I miss it. But I don't miss putting my heart and soul into it without as much as a thank-you on the way out.I'm not as familiar with the staff as other people here are, because I'm not a resident. But I've heard the station over the years when I've been here and in other parts of the Northwest, and it was a class act.When radio execs wonder why listeners are going away, they should look in the mirror for the answer.They began blowing off young listeners years ago because they weren't in the key ad demographic.Now they're blowing off their most loyal listeners for the same reason, and those replacement listeners aren't there, because they've already been taught that they don't matter.What's killing radio isn't the iPod, the Internet, mp3s, XM or Sirius. It's the lack of passion and interesting content. Whether old or young, the people who care the most about the audience often come back from lunch and get their walking papers, often after someone has cleaned out their desk and put their possessions in a sack.Enough of that, and the passion just dries up. You'd expect that if you were a criminal, but that shouldn't be the fate of folks who give it their all, day after day.