That was some time ago. A/C has become more uptempo and contemporary, so now there is an opening on the softer, more relaxing side. This, if well done, fills the positions that, for decades, Beautiful Music and Smooth Jazz filled in their own way.I find it hard to believe iHeart would put soft A/C on a bigstick like 96.1. Just don't see it. Heck, WSB took soft A/C off their longtime staple of 98.5 HD2 and replaced it with a "hotter" A/C version of Star 94 HD2's "Star94 throwback". Just don't see any of these corporate conglomerates doing anything miraculous.
I find it rather tiring and juvenile to use names like "iHeart" and the like. All of these are companies trying to adapt to changing audiences and new technologies. Radio revenue just before the pandemic, in 2019 dollars, is off by around 60% so companies that have one station or several hundred have to make adjustments as they try to find a way to survive.I just don't have much hope. iHeart is known for aural flatus and not high quality radio. Yeah, I'm jaded. Go ahead and tell me to "enjoy SXM and STFU". But part of me WANTS local radio here like WELJ. We USED to have it before everything went corporate.
In fact, if you look at the iHeart stations in LA and New York as examples, they are very well done with well selected and curated playlists, talent in the proper dayparts and good engineering.
I'm glad you find Sirius/XM entertaining. A large percentage of Americans do not want to spend the extra money each year... either because they don't have discretionary income or they don't find satellite radio that much better than free, over the air radio. Of over 250 million US vehicles, only about 10% have a paid satellite subscription.