One thing has nothing to do with the other.
It absolutely does. Many people have ditched radio for one or two reasons, but it ultimately comes down to radio no longer satisfying the target audience. Hires like these are some of those risky hires that have a strong chance of not working out and ultimately may force listeners to look for better alternatives (cough cough OTT media cough cough).
There was an article that came out in 2020 (I can't find it at the moment) that detailed listening habits during quarantine. It turns out that once people figured out that Alexa could play audio, people started listening to content you couldn't find over the airwaves. Podcasts about murder, music that was popular 10 years ago (but no longer gets radio airplay), and even internet culture talk was extremely popular content for those who began working from home.
You can't find that type of content on the AM/FM dial.
(In an unrelated note, a lot of the new music discovery is no longer happening over the airwaves. It is happening on YouTube, TikTok, Facebook, Twitter, etc. Radio is now playing catch-up in some instances.)
People started leaving radio in the 80s when they had other options, such as personal mix cassettes, MTV, or video games.
Not to the effect you're seeing today. The internet has opened an endless amount of opportunities that weren't alive during 80s or 90s. In those days, you eventually came back to radio after you grew tired of cassette tapes or limited reruns.
The internet is truly limitless and just about accessible in most urban areas and major highways.
In recent years, people have stopped buying music, and prefer to stream. It has nothing to do with radio.
It has everything to do with radio. Why else do you think these people made the switch?
Corporate radio isn't interested in saving radio. It is interested in squeezing every last ounce of profit from the industry before they abandon it. This is why Audacy, iHeart, and even Univision push their OTT apps over the air now. They're setting themselves up for a future without terrestrial radio.
Statistically, most people use radio in addition to other devices, it's not a one-or-the-other thing.
There's an obvious shift. You can't capture a screenshot of today and say
that's that. Yes, today there is coexistence. But in a decade or two that may no longer be true for radio.
Radio has an inevitable death. That's a fact. It is a trend that won't be reversing and may blow up any moment now. It all depends on the affordability of mobile internet access and the ease of access. We already see a ton of new "Radios" whose main selling feature is integrated Spotify, Pandora, Apple Music, etc. rather than HD Radio/FM/AM/XMSirius.
And questionable hires that have a higher chance of failure just fast tracks that shift.
Hiring country music experts with deep resumes who are based in Houston will not improve the usage of radio or even make a difference at KILT. It was a snarky comment that has no basis in fact.
I never said they had to be from Houston. The hires just have to make sense.
This one doesn't. It is a risk that may result in some listeners going to KKBQ or exploring OTT content (hence my comment original comment).
Your criticizing a decision with no idea how it was made.
And you do?
You have no idea what he does.
His resume is out there. For the better part of the two decades, he has starred in TV shows and done radio in a part of the country that is a polar opposite of Houston.
Wouldn't you agree that hiring someone with actual experience in Country radio would have made more sense? Yes or no?
Your comments are based on geographical prejudice that someone from LA can't relate to people in Houston.
I think you mean cultural and not geographical. You keep getting stuck on one point of my overall argument.
Can the move be made? Sure. But is it a risk? Absolutely! Why not play it safe and hire someone with experience working a country crowd? Why is this even a controversial observation to you?
Once again, he's the third banana joining two others on a morning show. I doubt his role will have anything to do with country music.
You keep saying I have no clue how or what the hire will do, yet you keep going back to the music.
Not once have I said he would impact the playlist. Let's stop straying away from the subject.
Once again, if he fails, he gets fired.
No one is disputing this. But can you at least admit that the chances of him getting fired are higher due to his inexperience working in a country station in a region that is worlds apart from where he is coming from?
Had he been hired to work the morning show on KTBZ, then sure! Culturally speaking, rock listeners in Houston and Los Angeles probably have more things in common than rock listeners in LA and Country listeners in Houston do.