I'm not saying the bottom is going to drop out soon, but, maybe, the end of news radio is closer than we realize. Why do we need it when we have push notifications directly on our phone telling us about breaking news? Want the details? Tap the notification, and you can read the story when you want. Most of those stories even have audio and video so you can hear it if you’re not in a good position to read it. Why even bother turning on the radio and waiting up to 30 minutes to hear it when you can have instant gratification?
This argument comes up often but the same could be said for any format. Why do we need music radio when we can tap the songs we want to hear on demand online? Why do we need to sit through a radio talk show when you can listen to a more tailored podcast or read Fox Nation and X?
I hope your mind is not trapped in some kind of blinder box where you believe that since you have a phone you can't use any other kind of media. With regard to the news, sure I get it on my phone. I watch it on TV. I read it online. But your argument ignores the fact that it's perfectly valid to get news -- or music, or whatever -- from multiple sources throughout the day.
Listening to news on the radio is a totally different experience than getting it on your phone. The WCBS airstaff have big personalities and entertaining deliveries. Morning anchors Wayne and Paul have the kind of chemistry and banter typically heard on a music station, skillfully weaving music into their presentation of the news, talking about it in a way you'd expect from top-40 DJs. People commenting on this board who don't live in the market or listen to the station may not realize that.
Bridget Quinn, Steve Scott, Tom Kaminski, Craig Allen...they are all the types of familiar, relatable on-air companions that made radio such a great entertainment medium over the decades. In a way, WCBS was one of the best examples of personality radio left, even though it was all-news. While so many music stations have replaced their entertaining live jocks with voice-tracked liner-reading automation, WCBS was still a place to find live and local voices with something interesting to say, even though Audacy did its best to erode their schedule in recent years.
If anything, WINS with its straight-news delivery offers less of a personality value proposition so it supports the argument, "why is this needed on the radio" more than WCBS does. But either way, radio is still a valid place to consume news. You'd better not be tapping on notifications and scrolling your phone news feed while driving your car. And you might not have time to be doing that while you're trying to get ready for work and send the kids off to school either. So there is always the radio when you're on the road or making breakfast. But you're on a radio forum so you shouldn't need to have that explained to you.