A
awj223
Guest
ChickenLittle said:AM is rapidly losing the last of its sales demo audience because people under 45 or 50 do not like listening to analog AM. Yet when "AM" formats like news / talk or all-news are moved to FM, in the same market, the 35-54 audience increases enormously.
The only chance the decent AM facilities (less than 300 in the top 100 markets) have of survival is to improve the quality via HD. Otherwise, the AM formats that work will move to FM and the entire band will die.
Translation: "The sky is falling! The sky is falling! The sky is falling!"
PocketRadio said:You and other IBOC supports give this doom-or-gloom scenario for AM, when the major AMs are alive-and-well - yea, good way to justify HD-AM, like anyone cares about audio quality for news/talk/sports.
Yes. Who cares? Music doesn't sound too good on AM, but I'm in the youngest age group that counts in the ratings and I don't care if the sports broadcasts I hear are cut off at 5-7 kHz. I care more about being able to drive for 250 miles without losing the signal.
How about this: stop programming mainly 50+ formats on AM and maybe you'll get something other than 50+ listeners. It's a self fulfilling prophecy. Content drives listening, within reason (if the band can't make the content sound good, this doesn't always hold true, e.g. AM and music). So put content on AM that 1) appeals to all ages and 2) doesn't require high fidelity. Here's a clue: SPORTS.
DavidEduardo said:The only chance the decent AM facilities (less than 300 in the top 100 markets) have of survival is to improve the quality via HD. Otherwise, the AM formats that work will move to FM and the entire band will die.
Okay, but if that is your goal the way to improve quality is to use FULL DIGITAL, not this inferior HYBRID crap that has less range than digital and makes analog sound even worse than it already does. Oh, and aren't you forgetting HD radio's fatal flaw? http://www.radio-info.com/smf/index.php/topic,67494.0.html People HATE delays. I was at a major retailer and there are still zero HD radios on sale there. To most, FM sounds good enough for anything, and AM sounds good enough for sports. The entire band won't die. The 50 kW flamethrowers will always be there. Put every professional basketball, baseball, and football team on a Class A AM.
Find a way to sell ads to a wider audience than just the ratings defined immediate metro area. The radio industry reminds me of the music industry. Run by people who aren't creative enough to adapt to changes in the market. If the large corporations can't change fast enough, the value of AM stations will fall to the point where some young, creative entrepreneurs purchase them and put some decent content up there, find a way to make money off it, and laugh all the way to the bank.
First, TV was supposed to be the end of radio. Now FM is supposed to be the end of AM radio and iPods are supposed to be the decline of FM radio? I don't think so.