That is not true. Lots of stations, new to the web, looked to Cuban's company as a way to get on the Internet and establish a presence.
That was not a "website" in the way we think about them now. It was an individualized way for each station to get a website with its own content. Radio.com was just an amalgamation of separate sites for separate stations. I looked at it seriously, even went to Dallas and met with them and decided to do my own site for KTNQ in LA around 1997 because I wanted more than a boilerplate site.
And until the advent of the smartphone, that was true. And it still is, but in a slowly decreasing percentage. About 85% of adults use radio weekly.... just less than before.
As an example, we started to see erosion of radio usage in the late 80's caused by video gaming. All new entertainment technology affects all other players in the field.
Wrong. It was already a major topic at the NAB and state associations.
Wrong again. Listeners, who used to have "friends on the radio" now have real friends on social media and via texting. So music radio has adapted.
And vocetracking was used by some very high rated stations going back to the 70's. It's just a lot easier now.
We quit playing requests in the 60's and 70's, too. It is tantamount to letting a 13-year-old or a drunk be your new PD for 3 minutes.
We've been paying the songwriters since the 30's with ASCAP and then from the 40's with BMI. You are full of wrong information.
- The FCC does not regulate taxes, rights payments, or any other business practice.
- Dollar General is a national agency account. They don't place local buys as far as I know.
Dollar General | Rebranding an American Icon | bohan
- Record companies have historically done everything possible in the past.. from payola to ticket giveaways to artist interviews to albums and CDs and other stuff to get stations to play records. Only since the three major labels have been foreign owned have they tried to squeeze instead of fertilize the radio fruit. Many of us have, historically, tried to limit the amount of time record promoters suck out of our workday.