Savage said:
Well, assuming your blanket declarations about AM to be universally accurate - which I don't do, for what that's worth
Believe what you want to believe. But every few years another AM station disappears from the ratings books. Even you recognized it and smartly bought an FM translator. You're one of the lucky ones. AM is in trouble, and has been for 30 years. It needs something to revive it. The government hasn't helped. Technology hasn't helped. Changes in ownership haven't helped. The public has no reason to be interested in AM radio. Any more than they have a reason to be interested in manual typewriters.
Savage said:
it was hardly productive for HD Radio to accelerate the decline by dramatically increasing noise and interference.
Doesn't matter. The audiophiles left AM for FM back in the 50s. The death of AM happened long before HD Radio. The fact that HD failed to help is not something to celebrate. The history of inventors who have sought to improve AM quality is filled with failure. At some point, a smart person stops banging his head against a brick wall. I think we've reached that point with AM. There will be no Leonard Kahn who will come along with a great idea to bring AM into the 21st Century. That time has passed.
Don't misunderstand this as some defense of HD. That's not the point. It was a fultile ambition in the first place. Improving AM might have been useful ten years ago, but not now. In the current technological and media marketplace, AM radio is one step above the afternoon newspaper. For now. You can debate or attack that point of view, but it's true.
Savage said:
Just tune across the AM band tonight between 660 and 1200 and you'll hear what I mean.
Yep...do exactly that tonight, and tell me about all the compelling programming you hear. THAT says more than the noise and interference. No one is investing in programming for AM. The current hosts will continue to do what they do, and milk it as long as they can. Then one by one, they'll fade away. When they're gone, it'll be over.
So all the DXers and purists who want to keep AM the way it was can watch as it continues its downward spiral. Because no one will be coming to preserve it.
Savage said:
While we're at it, BigA - HD was not "new technology" for AM. It was simply and starkly: a scam. It never would have worked.
I don't care. Unlike you, I don't have a dog in this fight. It doesn't matter to me if it was new, old, or a scam. It doesn't matter. That battle is over. So HD will die. But so will AM with it, and that's the undeniable truth.
You can decry "radio's digital future," but there's no need to synthesize it any more. It exists. The owners know it, and they've already begun the transition. You either grow, or you die. The growth is not in broadcast.