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PocketRadio said:dbdigital said:I thought this quote by writer Ben Fong-Torres really sums up the troubled state radio finds itself...
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"Vanishing Fast: Radio Careers"
"We have had consolidation in radio for over ten years now and even after a flirtation with virtual voice tracking, the industry is fast becoming a nonstarter for serious careers."
http://insidemusicmedia.blogspot.com/2007/05/vanishing-fast-radio-careers.html
Interesting post today by Jerry - looks like he agrees with you...
Here Del Colliano is talking about how consolidation is killing radio as a career choice for newcomers and those who have been in radio for years are getting out. What we are seeing is a talent vacuum occurring in radio, a condition Jerry sees as a by-product of the Telcom Act of 1996.
The point that I was making concerns the abandonment by radio of those who are (or were) most loyal to it, older listeners. In Los Angeles, for example, we have no less than 6 FM stations playing urban. Now why in the hell do we need a half dozen stations playing this format, when there are zero FM stations playing adult standards? This is not serving the public interest but only those of a few faceless, monolithic conglomorates desperate to court a young audience who are already listening to urban by other means. As it is, there is very little variety in the L.A. market anyway and certainly nothing to attract older listeners.
Will HD-Radio with its extra channels mitigate this problem? Hard to say since those who broadcast HD-R are the same ones causing the problem. I can tell you one thing, the vast majority of older listeners won't be buying HD-R to find out.
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