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The thing is, regardless of the technical details about isolated stations here and there, to the ears of the average, ordinary radio listener, turning the dial on the radio in the dashboard of his car, AM never sounded as good to his ears as FM did. I don't much care about how it sounded to an oscilloscope or some other piece of electronic equipment. Nor do I care about the technical details of why AM sounded worse, or what hypothetical events might have happened differently to change things. The point is that right now, in the year of our Lord 2014, listening on the the radios currently in use to receive the signals, AM radio sounds pretty bad compared to FM.
On top of the bad sound, there is very little compelling programming on AM that would make most listeners put up with the crappy sound. Sure, aliens who can't speak English, or who are nostalgic for anything from the old country will listen to programming in their native language on AM, since the alternative is not listening to any native language programing at all. And old people (and we know how much advertisers love them!) listen to AM because they don't know how to switch to FM, or the only station playing Perry Como is on AM.
This thread is full of isolated anecdotes about the few AM stations that are making money. And I suppose that "dollar a holler" brokered-time preacher programs, or running a station with a fully automated satellite feed and no live humans collecting paychecks, and maybe a volunteer "intern" doing all the work for the thrill of working in radio are interesting. But what no one as posted is a ratings list for a major or semi-major market where there are more AM stations reaching the money demos than there are FM stations. No one has posted a comparison ratings list that shows the AM stations in any major or semi-major market experiencing an increase in listenership in the money demos.
When a collection of businesses are sliding into oblivion, with a tiny handful clinging to the top of the slippery slope and therefore sliding a little slower than the rest, trying to isolate one single factor is a waste of time. There are multiple factors at play in the decline and fall of AM radio.
On top of the bad sound, there is very little compelling programming on AM that would make most listeners put up with the crappy sound. Sure, aliens who can't speak English, or who are nostalgic for anything from the old country will listen to programming in their native language on AM, since the alternative is not listening to any native language programing at all. And old people (and we know how much advertisers love them!) listen to AM because they don't know how to switch to FM, or the only station playing Perry Como is on AM.
This thread is full of isolated anecdotes about the few AM stations that are making money. And I suppose that "dollar a holler" brokered-time preacher programs, or running a station with a fully automated satellite feed and no live humans collecting paychecks, and maybe a volunteer "intern" doing all the work for the thrill of working in radio are interesting. But what no one as posted is a ratings list for a major or semi-major market where there are more AM stations reaching the money demos than there are FM stations. No one has posted a comparison ratings list that shows the AM stations in any major or semi-major market experiencing an increase in listenership in the money demos.
When a collection of businesses are sliding into oblivion, with a tiny handful clinging to the top of the slippery slope and therefore sliding a little slower than the rest, trying to isolate one single factor is a waste of time. There are multiple factors at play in the decline and fall of AM radio.