I said "Liberals (a) don't view their TV or radio choices as a political statement of what they are, and (b) don't gravitate to polarized media like conservatives do."
----You say: That is not a fact, that is a statement of opinion from you.
Statistical evidence? Look at the number of conservotalk stations. Far more than the proportionate number of conservatives.
----You say: If the average liberal couldn't give a rat's ass, as you say, then why was/is there such a cry and hew about "fairness" in/on talk radio, and fanfare in the New York Times, NBC's Today, e.g., about Air America starting up 3 years ago?
I said the average American liberal doesn't give a rat's ass about talk radio, because they don't listen to it. That's just a fact. I would also bet the average american liberal also doesn't know what the Fairness Doctrine is, was, or would do.
--->Whether TSL or cume, the net result is that the raw ratings number is the same.
No, it is not. Conservatives listen to more talk radio than do liberals, that has been proven over and over.
---->By the way, if an NPR show has such a high cume--and, assumedly is liberal, which I don't necessarily buy--then how does that square with your contention that liberals don't give a rat's ass about talk radio?
NPR is not talkradio. When I talk about NPR, I am talking about their newsmagazine and news shows. Their "talk" programming is C-SPANesque and not very highly-rated at all. Many huge markets don't even get it, LA being one.
---->Further, Democrats won this past November a majority of Congress, a majority of state governorships, and closed a significant gap in the statehouses. Howard Dean himself has credited liberal talk radio with having a significant impact on the election in Ohio (and, one assumes, in other states as well). Does that mean that liberals ignored the very prospect that Dean appaluds?
No. Dean himself credited Air America with energizing the party's activists. The average liberal doesn't listen to Air America, ever. If they did, Air America would be HUGE.
---->But what your whole contention is premised on is the idea that ONLY conservatives listen to conservative talk radio, and only liberals would listen to liberal talk radio (if they listen to any talk radio at all, as you allege).
Crossover is very low.
---->If Dean is right--and he may be, or he may be blowing sand--does that (a) prove your contention wrong and liberals do listen to talk radio,
Only liberal activists, a small percentage of liberal voters, listen to talk radio. The proof is in Air America's low ratings.
---->or (b) show that talk radio listeners are not corralled by affiliation as you also allege in your opening missive, but instead, listen to what they enjoy or want to hear.
Liberals do not listen to talk radio at all, much less conservative talk radio. NPR is not talk radio, like it or not, it is a whole different statiscal animal.
---->But this does not change the objective fact that Rush Limbaugh and his ilk are, AT THE MOMENT, more successful in ratings (and, as a sideline, in terms of affiliate numbers) nationally than liberal talkers.
That's right, Johnny, do the math:
The nation is fairly split politically right now. Yet more people listen to the conservative wing nuts than liberal wing nuts. Liberals and conservatives rarely listen to the other side - no one I know EVER listens to Rush. Why should we be insulted? And how many of your side settle down for a good hour of Rachel Maddow?
And the Pew studies and local ratings bear out this fact.