What 20 year olds are taking from this conversation is that radio is in such disarray that it ain't the place to put the time and effort required to build a career. And, if you do, the suits in the corporate suite are more likely to pay the big dollars to a "name" like David Lee Roth or Donny Osmond - with little or no radio experience - than a guy who's paid a lot of dues and cranked out a fine track record in the biz. How's that worked out for them so far?
As far as "programming to the masses" is concerned, why use radio? If you've got something "for the masses", why use a signal that has limited reach? Go right to the Internet, and you're world-wide.
Radio's big strength is ease of use. It's more and more obvious that morons reading - or worse, sending - text messages while driving end up causing pile-ups on the freeway. The water main break in the next town over isn't of interest to me unless I have to drive through that town to get home, or the road I'm on is backed up because of the water main break there. The reason you hire PROFESSIONALS is to sort out the important from the unimportant for your TARGET AUDIENCE. Hard to do that on a VT, podcast, or from another time zone. Anyone who's been a SUCCESSFUL talent understands that.
As far as "programming to the masses" is concerned, why use radio? If you've got something "for the masses", why use a signal that has limited reach? Go right to the Internet, and you're world-wide.
Radio's big strength is ease of use. It's more and more obvious that morons reading - or worse, sending - text messages while driving end up causing pile-ups on the freeway. The water main break in the next town over isn't of interest to me unless I have to drive through that town to get home, or the road I'm on is backed up because of the water main break there. The reason you hire PROFESSIONALS is to sort out the important from the unimportant for your TARGET AUDIENCE. Hard to do that on a VT, podcast, or from another time zone. Anyone who's been a SUCCESSFUL talent understands that.