It's call conversation. Conversations have tangents. If this topic were as limited as you apparently want to make it, it would have been less than half a dozen posts long. Except that I had the suspicion all along that you had some agenda with your original question but you did not want to be out in the open with.
Don't start tangents if you don't want to see them through.
???
That doesn't have anything to do with the original topic. The question was about listening audience and what creates an engaging host.
The single most important thing that makes any radio talk show host "engaging" is the topics that he talks about. The three most important things, in the long run, for any radio host are content, content, and content. To discuss content is to discuss what creates an engaging host.
I disagree. If we were talking about a television talk show host, such as Ellen Degeneres in this scenario, I could just as easily argue that she is an engaging host without dipping into the content on her show. Her humorous personality is what makes her an engaging host.
It's both content and the host's ability to make it interesting. If the host doesn't seem interested in the content and doesn't bring his or her own perspective to it you might just as well listen to news radio.
OK, I'll give you that. After the three most important things, content, content, and content, then personality & perspective are fourth and fifth.
Yes, but there are hundreds of talk show hosts out there talking about the same content, content, content. Only a very few achieve any real level of success, and that is due to their personality. Content is the baseline. Personality is what sets a talk show apart.
And, given how few news/talk hosts there really are, since most news/talk stations simply plug into satellite feeds, I doubt if there are "hundreds" of news/talk hosts out there.
Personality is to news/talk what personality is to a music DJ.
No personalities mean musicradio has nothing unique and compelling to offer and that's why the musicradio audience has gone/is going to new media.
Both halves of that statement are false. There are lots of personalities in music radio, and the music radio audience as a whole is very stable. Some formats, like country, urban, and CHR, are very strong right now. There are entire companies, like CBS, Entercom, Cox, and Townsquare, that run their stations with a full roster of live and local personalities.
OTA musicradio provides a free CURATED music collection on devices that are omnipresent and easy to operate. In this world, that makes it unique and compelling. Some DJ reading liner notes or blabbering with his co-host about his vacation isn't a unique or compelling.
People mainly use new media because they prefer streaming music to owning music. That's more of a problem for record labels, who continue to see music sales fall.
You don't think streaming represents a problem for radio also?
When I read stats that say there are up to 76 million Pandora listeners nationwide, for example, that seems to be a figure that would indicate a cut in radio listening.
It does indicate a serious cut in OTA radio listening. But when it comes to being confronted with the truth about OTA radio's loss of listeners, the suits have only one response. They deny.
Funny how you don't accept the numbers or methodology presented by Nielsen, but you're willing to accept whatever Pandora prints in its press releases.
A little consistency would be appreciated.