Most of those articles are opinion, not based in facts and data.
And there is actual measured data that shows that 89% of Americans over 18 use radio. They use it less time than before, but much of that is due to the pandemic, not to a radio issue.
The decline is in amount of time, not total person usage. And, again, we need to look at data up to February of 2000 before the pandemic to get an idea of what the "normal" radio usage is. In fact, January 2022 is about 25% higher than the same month in 2021, showing radio is gradually returning to the pre-pandemic levels.
It takes intervention. A button push, a verbal command. As people get older, that is too much work.
And country stations have been very current based for nearly 20 years. Gee, even when I supervised a country station in the early 90's we only played stuff from the last decade and were about 60% current and recurrent.
Still, the 18+ figure shows 89% of the population uses radio weekly. Sure, there are more alternatives. Back in the 90's, we believed that declining radio usage had to do with video gaming, which can't be played while listening to radio. It's not just music streaming, it is every thing from TikTok to YouTube to podcasts to Facebook and other social media alternatives... there are just more choices.