What time is it now?I'd be curious to hear what people think. I don't know the answer, but wonder how long FM radio as we know it exists.
I'd be curious to hear what people think. I don't know the answer, but wonder how long FM radio as we know it exists.
Nope, sure wasn't. Referring specifically to commercial radio formats that play music.Were you not satisfied with the answers you got from your previous post?
Do you consider K-Love to be a music based format?
My answer is that there is no lifespan for the radio spectrum. It will always be there. How people use it will change. But that's a different question.
Referring specifically to commercial radio formats that play music.
Were our answers not simple or specific enough for you? Do you honestly think any of us are capable of predicting the future?Nope, sure wasn't. Referring specifically to commercial radio formats that play music.
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Music fading from FM that sounds like it's going to happen sooner than we are considering given that there are auto manufacturers lining up to put their latest cars to include Android Auto and Apple Carplay on the dashboard and make that the standard.
Not all of them play music. The premise of music formats is becoming obsolete. The idea that people are still interested in waiting through long commercial breaks just to get to a song they don't like is outdated. Younger demos want what they want immediately. They also may like multiple genres which is something that a "Format" cannot really deliver...All commercial radio formats are not being used equally.
I am curious to hear other people's take. In 2019, I didn't think cord cutting in cable would be that big of a thing than it was then, but people's predictions were right. Some people have more insight than I do.Were our answers not simple or specific enough for you? Do you honestly think any of us are capable of predicting the future?
They also may like multiple genres which is something that a "Format" cannot really deliver...
Sure, did anyone in the 90's predict streaming would become so popular for video and audio? What about literal supercomputers that you could carry around in your pocket that does so much more than make a phone call? Did Henry Ford imagine that one day someone would build a car that could exceed the speed of sound?I am curious to hear other people's take. In 2019, I didn't think cord cutting in cable would be that big of a thing than it was then, but people's predictions were right. Some people have more insight than I do.
If it makes money, it'll stay (generally speaking, current formats being played on "FM radio")I'd be curious to hear what people think. I don't know the answer, but wonder how long FM radio as we know it exists.
Sure, did anyone in the 90's predict streaming would become so popular for video and audio?
No, AM started losing listeners to FM in the early 1960's. The expiration of the key Armstrong patents and the creation of FM AFC made radios better. Solid state made them smaller. And scale made them cheaper.I expect FM will die faster than AM did.
AM started losing listeners in 1978 but its descent to earth was slowed by the parachute that was everybody still owning and using radios and being able to switch them from FM to AM mode when desired.
Those who grew up on radio continue to use it extensively. Those who grew up on iPhones and streaming don't. This is not an immediate process, but one that increases incrementally each year.(Popular stations on AM act as cume magnets for the lesser stations there. In that sense, it should be recognized that FM -- or in actuality, the mere desire to own radios in order to access the FM band -- has been acting as a cume magnet for the entire AM dial since 1978 and still is.) That said, FM has no such parachute. If any negative tipping point is reached that sours listeners' opinions of it, they could begin an evacuation of the FM band that's as rapid as cable's rate increases drained the linear cable television industry of its viewers.
Or stations will switch to different sponsorship models. Or we will end up with "national" stations made up of hundreds of FMs all simulcast... such as is working in Europe, Latin America or elsewhere.Since I don't see anything other than sudden increases in advertising loads being capable of souring people on FM who've always listened to it, FM's future will probably be a slow decline followed by a sudden thermal runaway of decline. As in, advertising loads are holding steady now, but if revenue keeps dropping, a point will arrive where increasing commercials won't be avoidable any longer.
People don't buy stand-alone radios. And it will over a decade for even half of car radios to have the new band unless it is software upgradable.Without yet another draw (like a third band) built into AM/FM radios to take over the role as parachute, FM will then begin a rapid fall to earth.
And people get one year older with each year that passes. So this is not an instant occurrence. What we will see first is the end of AM and FM and the move of all audio, whether curated or personalized, to new distribution channels.Unless radio can be re-invented somehow to appeal to the young, so revenues can start going back up again...
And we have to remember that "radio" is not just "FM" and "AM" since we can put the same content on streams. While there are horrible issues based on government controlled royalties, we can see "traditional radio" in a new incarnation on streams. There will generally be opportunities for curated playlists that can be sustained by either sponsored or subscription based revenue concepts.People were saying newspapers were dead 30 years ago. Well, they are almost totally dead and buried but it took a good 20 to 25 years. I expect FM to last anywhere between 10 to 20 years in it's somewhat present form.
A fellow former station owner after selling his stations to religious broadcasters used the money to purchase a porta-potty franchise.If it makes money, it'll stay (generally speaking, current formats being played on "FM radio")
If it's dragging corporations to the poor house, it'll go.
We're simply watching 'dead men walking', aren't we?
Those who grew up on radio continue to use it extensively. Those who grew up on iPhones and streaming don't. This is not an immediate process, but one that increases incrementally each year.