You were just saying that AM radio is doing fine with young listeners in the Message Board Dentist's thread.
I think that reference was to sports play-by-play, in markets that haven't seen it move to FM, that is.
You were just saying that AM radio is doing fine with young listeners in the Message Board Dentist's thread.
It seems that everyone has missed one valid point.
During the hours that WABC is airing pre-recorded infomercials, they not only make money from the sponsor of the program material .... they can also automate the playback of the programs.
They save money by not having to pay a board operator and (during talk shows) a call screener.
The infomercials may not attract the normal talk radio listeners but they do bring in money.
Sad that the business of radio is now so crass that the people running it don't care if anyone listens so long as the coffers get filled, but that's the way of the AM world, I guess.
Do you like to get paid for what you do? So do I. The business of radio has ALWAYS been about filling the coffers, going back to Marconi and Sarnoff.
True, but at least the stations in the early days and "golden age" of radio, when they turned over an hour to a local business, would at least partially fill that hour with music or talk that had nothing to do with the business or its product; in other words, entertainment.
As I said earlier in this thread, the problem at this station goes back many years, and has nothing to do with infomercials. The real problem is that next to nobody is listening during the week. Every talk station in NYC airs these infomercials, not just WABC. Even WBAI is running infomercials. .
Neither of WNYC's signals run paid programming of any sort.
... the problem at this station goes back many years, and has nothing to do with infomercials. The real problem is that next to nobody is listening during the week. Every talk station in NYC airs these infomercials, not just WABC. Even WBAI is running infomercials. It's what's keeping that station alive too. Personally I don't understand the issue. Treat them the way you treat anything else....switch the station.
It's sad that someone in the industry can feel that way and not even understand that there's an issue.
What are you talking about? They don't run infomercials on WCBS ...
If there's an issue with anything, it's with AM radio.
Um, WCBS-880 is an AM station last time I checked.
I wouldn't say WCBS-AM has a problem, would you? Why is that?
I'd submit that if they ran infomercials all weekend every weekend they would.
Necessity, greed, laziness ... take your pick.
If someone took issue with the way you made your living, what would you say to them?
No doubt you or someone close to you has some involvement with the decision making process at WABC that you defend weekend infomercials to such an extent.
No doubt you or someone close to you has some involvement with the decision making process at WABC that you defend weekend infomercials to such an extent.