MikefromDelaware said:
I listen mainly to news/talk (WHYY-FM, WDEL, WPHT, and WILM). I also have become a fan of Sports Talk Radio as you can get burned out from hearing the political ranting day in and day out and now find myself listening more and more to sport/talk (WIP-FM, WPEN-FM, and WWTX-1290).
The BBC (Radio 4, World Service), CBC (Radio One), Australia's ABC (Radio National, Radio Australia), and New Zealand's National Radio are all excellent public-service spoken-word stations in which you can get your fill of current affairs, global news, and engaging documentaries and analysis without having to put up with the quadrennial political blather.
For the most part this means streaming live, or capturing audio / podcasts and transferring to portable devices.
It's what got me started in shortwave listening decades ago...but there is very little targeting North America any more.
You'll also find that talk radio on these stations (CBC - Cross Country Checkup, ABC Radio National - Late Night Live, BBC - World Have Your Say) tends to be a lot more cerebral than what passes for talk radio on commercial US stations.
I'll listen to sports play-by-play but not sports talk.
For me, local radio is only useful for traffic and weather, aside from sports PBP.
As others have said, we aren't in the target demographic, so commercial stations don't care.
I am sure I am like most others in this age group -- commercial radio was meaningful when were were teenagers and has gradually lost relevance.
Richard in Allentown