>>They're called "ratings," and Air America doesn't get them.
I'm trying to be objective myself. Sometimes I find myself chuckling over the lack of success prog talk has had
in this blue-est of areas, being mostly of a conservative bent (but lib/moderate on a couple issues). But sometimes, since I find it's an interesting topic, I try to look at why it hasn't been more successful and what
maybe can be done to remedy it. Not all will agree with what I have to say:
--CC didn't promote it as much as they should have (despite some good press in the Globe, etc.) and it was on weaker signals. BIG MISTAKE: No local daily show.
--Mistake: trying to win elections (no prob for the Dems in this state!) rather than be-entertaining,
though many may feel the likes of Franken are hilarious. All up to one's opinion.
--People who haven't done radio (whether it be talent or producing/programming) suddenly getting
thrust into it, with mixed results. Miller, Schultz, have done radio. Franken hadn't. (Rhodes has some
experience) Some feel the Jones shows worked better; other preferred the AAR shows.
--In the past there have been liberal talkers, locally and nationally, but the conservative ones tended
to click. Well before AAR started, Ann Coulter wrote a piece in one of her books about the failure of
the likes of Cuomo, Jesse Jackson, and Hightower
--I'm sure we can all agree that "the other side" is strident, that they aren't funny, that they're
extremist wackos (Malloy, Savage), that they can be annoying, and so on. All depends on the side
of the street you're on.
Fact of the matter is, if stations like WRKO or WTKK wish to give one or two shows or the whole network
a try, so be it, but they may feel conservative talk works better. Generally it has. But times do change
and for all we know, libtalk may eventually be all the rage.
There were some interesting opinions on the following page:
http://usconservatives.about.com/b/a/257335.htm
One person, who said he considered himself a social liberal, said that while Franken was funny, his show wasn't as entertaining as that of O'Reilly or Hannity. He claims that liberal hosts don't have conservative guests on as much as conservative hosts have liberals on (I'm sure many will disagree with that) and also brings up
the point that maybe many liberals prefer to listen to music.
Another said he was "mildly left of center" and while he found conservative talk shows were obnoxious,
he found them more entertaining than AAR. And one comment was from someone who felt that while,
yes, O'Reilly and Hannity had hosts from "the other side" on, they then proceeded to shout them down or
use "yes or no" rhetorical questions.
Though I am reminded of some times when Ingraham asked someone on the Left something like "Are we
better off with Saddam out of power" several times, and they simply would not answer the question.
All she wanted was a simple yes or no, and they wouldn't oblige.
Though it probably happens with hosts on the other side as well.
All I'm saying is if a station like WRKO or WTKK feels it might get good ratings--and serve the audience
certainly--by putting liberal hosts on, then we'll see what would happen. And if the ratings then
plummeted you could say "well, they tried it with a more powerful station and it didn't work there,
either.
The real question may be what is best for libtalk: getting on a station that is all lib all the time, or trying to
share a station with conservative hosts? Would you want to be on a WXKS-AM (or "WSKS" as the
save prog. talk site says, oopsie...) with all liberal radio, or would you prefer to have a few left-leaning
shows on the likes of a WRKO? One you actually might be able to pick up?
Generally I enjoy conservative hosts though some Stephanie Miller and Alan Colmes in the past weren't
too bad. Keep in mind also not everyone is totally lefty or righty, too.
As Amy Hess, writer of the piece in the site I mentioned says, "The average American doesn't yell and shout and walk the streets about his or her beliefs. But, the average American does listen to conservative talk radio, and in relief says, "Wow. This talk show host is finally saying the things I've been thinking all along."
But maybe many liberals found themselves thinking the same thing when AAR came along...but were there
as many of them as there were conservatives...?