And the simple (and probably obvious answer) is no. I am an interested listener making my observations from the outside. Especially on these forums I am perfectly happy to be set straight (and learn something).What do you base that opinion on? Have you ever spoken with an executive at a radio company? Have you ever attended a radio conference? Have you recently visited a radio station and had an appointment with the PD or someone in charge? Those are a few simple questions.
I would suggest those are not viable formats if ratings and what I figure should be the following revenue are a factor. The ratings for any sports gambling station are always at the bottom. . Do sports book companies pay big money for a small group of dedicated gamblers? It would seem to me targeted internet advertising would be cheaper and better. BIN is an embarrassment if people really looked at it for what the mission was supposed to be, getting Black Voices Heard. I could think of several improvements there for which money wouldn't be a factor, as the corporate sponsors apparently don't care about ratings.In just the last few years, several radio companies have developed sports gambling formats that have attracted a lot of sponsorship dollars. In addition, iHeart launched it's BIN service. Both of them were new in formats other than music. The format you seem to like is game shows on the radio. The research I've seen is that would appeal to 55 plus, and would cost more than it would make.
As a listener who wants to see your business succeed, the format I am interested in is what will get younger people tuning in, and I don't think they are. Can someone cite statistics that, outside of morning drive, the under 30 crowd listens to radio in significant numbers? (If you can't on this public forum because of proprietary reasons, I understand).
Do you figure that the revenue derived from streaming and podcasts does (or will) equal what that of OTA can (or could do)?I would say the main area of growth for radio in terms of new products is in programming other than music. But most of that investment has been done in podcasting or streaming, not broadcast.