But the horse is out of the barn. Those good old days are gone and when you pick up one of these giants today, it isn't anything special. Sad, but time marches on.
Those "good old days" only lasted about 25 years, from the end of most prime-time network radio in the mid 1950s to rock's almost total switch to FM in the late '70s and early '80s. Before that, there were four major program services, aka networks, that aired on 95% of the stations then on the air: NBC (Red), CBS, NBC Blue/ABC, and Mutual.
If you were DXing the AM band on a Sunday night in the late 1940s, you'd hear Jack Benny on 1 or 2 dozen stations if you lived in the East or Midwest. Today, you'll hear ESPN Radio or a "best of" talk-show rerun on 1 or 2 dozen stations. And there was a reason for having the 50kW blowtorches then, and it wasn't just to cover a major market. In many small cities and towns, those stations were their only access to network radio since a lot of their own stations were daytimers or there was no local radio at all.