So, radio builds an audience for Tom Kent, Blair Garner, Delilah, John Tesh, and dozens of other "generic content providers".
What does radio do when they no longer need radio to distribute their product? When it's available on your Wi-Fi enabled cell phone for free, at the touch of an iPhone button? Oh, wait, that time is ALREADY HERE. As free Wi-Fi and reasonably-priced high-speed cellular access become more available, the distributors won't need radio.
There is a digital divide. There are a lot of places - especially rural areas - where the Internet means dial-up, and cell phone access is spotty at best. There is significant pressure on telecom companies to provide a minimum level of relatively cheap, high-speed Internet access throughout most of the country. As that occurs, syndication and centralized programming become less and less effective as RADIO programming simply because people won't need radio to access it, and likely will be able to access it on-demand - an option that radio doesn't offer.
What will local radio stations do at that point? Accept orders for local commercial inserts on the network radio feed via a website interface for advertisers? Boy, will THEY be motivated to log in an buy time, huh? After all, the audience won't need radio to get the content anyway.
Look down the road. Radio NEEDS content that can't be duplicated by centralized operations and distributed by the Internet. The real question is:
"What kind of content will radio need in order to establish itself as a media that has ANY interest for an audience?"
It sure can't be generic, good-anywhere-anytime content because that will ALREADY be readily available.
Of course, maybe the big companies are thinking that the government will let them sell off bandwidth for big chunks of money, or perhaps stop broadcasting in analog and establish 2-way digital channels - a complete paradigm shift in use of the electromagnetic spectrum. Perhaps, it they show that radio is no longer a viable medium, they'll get their hands on that bandwidth to do as they please...
Do you really think that the government is going to let YOU cash in when the government ITSELF can sell that bandwidth for BILLIONS? Remember, you don't OWN that bandwidth, you're a LICENSEE - and licenses get revoked.
What does radio do when they no longer need radio to distribute their product? When it's available on your Wi-Fi enabled cell phone for free, at the touch of an iPhone button? Oh, wait, that time is ALREADY HERE. As free Wi-Fi and reasonably-priced high-speed cellular access become more available, the distributors won't need radio.
There is a digital divide. There are a lot of places - especially rural areas - where the Internet means dial-up, and cell phone access is spotty at best. There is significant pressure on telecom companies to provide a minimum level of relatively cheap, high-speed Internet access throughout most of the country. As that occurs, syndication and centralized programming become less and less effective as RADIO programming simply because people won't need radio to access it, and likely will be able to access it on-demand - an option that radio doesn't offer.
What will local radio stations do at that point? Accept orders for local commercial inserts on the network radio feed via a website interface for advertisers? Boy, will THEY be motivated to log in an buy time, huh? After all, the audience won't need radio to get the content anyway.
Look down the road. Radio NEEDS content that can't be duplicated by centralized operations and distributed by the Internet. The real question is:
"What kind of content will radio need in order to establish itself as a media that has ANY interest for an audience?"
It sure can't be generic, good-anywhere-anytime content because that will ALREADY be readily available.
Of course, maybe the big companies are thinking that the government will let them sell off bandwidth for big chunks of money, or perhaps stop broadcasting in analog and establish 2-way digital channels - a complete paradigm shift in use of the electromagnetic spectrum. Perhaps, it they show that radio is no longer a viable medium, they'll get their hands on that bandwidth to do as they please...
Do you really think that the government is going to let YOU cash in when the government ITSELF can sell that bandwidth for BILLIONS? Remember, you don't OWN that bandwidth, you're a LICENSEE - and licenses get revoked.