Drive-in theaters had their heyday from the late 1940s to the early 1980s. Whole genres of movies, from
50's B-classics to 70's gore-slashers were aimed solely at the "ozoner" audience.
Beginning in the late 1960's, they came under long term attack from several cultural and technological shifts, including daylight saving time, the maturing of the baby boom generation, and smaller cars. The real estate on which they sat became more valuable for other purposes.
Before the great mortality, in the 1970's, one could see signs of impending doom. Many drive-in's still had their 1940's-50's original signs and technology, with the only addition being FM radio to replace the speakers. They looked rundown. Their owners were not investing in the business. In 1980, Sumner Redstone himself proclaimed "drive ins will soon be a part of our nostalgic past." While his prophecy did not exactly come to pass, as we still have a few drive-ins around, in the macro sense he was right.
Drive-ins had their big die-off in the 1980's when the VCR and video stores broke their moat -- a cheap way to see a movie. All the chains closed their theaters, and only a handful of small, family-owned locations kept the phenomena from going extinct entirely. Drive-ins ceased to be a driver of culture, and the movies that were made specifically for that audience shifted to VCR and DVD release. The relative handful of drive-ins that exist today survive on nostalgia value.
Does anyone see analogies here for radio -- first with the lack of investment in the product and threats from new technologies (now), the abandonment of stations by the big chains (soon?), the real estate (bandwidth and in the case of AM towers, physical property) becoming more valuable for other purposes, leading to a final implosion that leaves only a handful of mom-and-pop stations feeding nostalgia for the days of a warm tube-distorted voice coming out of a speaker?
50's B-classics to 70's gore-slashers were aimed solely at the "ozoner" audience.
Beginning in the late 1960's, they came under long term attack from several cultural and technological shifts, including daylight saving time, the maturing of the baby boom generation, and smaller cars. The real estate on which they sat became more valuable for other purposes.
Before the great mortality, in the 1970's, one could see signs of impending doom. Many drive-in's still had their 1940's-50's original signs and technology, with the only addition being FM radio to replace the speakers. They looked rundown. Their owners were not investing in the business. In 1980, Sumner Redstone himself proclaimed "drive ins will soon be a part of our nostalgic past." While his prophecy did not exactly come to pass, as we still have a few drive-ins around, in the macro sense he was right.
Drive-ins had their big die-off in the 1980's when the VCR and video stores broke their moat -- a cheap way to see a movie. All the chains closed their theaters, and only a handful of small, family-owned locations kept the phenomena from going extinct entirely. Drive-ins ceased to be a driver of culture, and the movies that were made specifically for that audience shifted to VCR and DVD release. The relative handful of drive-ins that exist today survive on nostalgia value.
Does anyone see analogies here for radio -- first with the lack of investment in the product and threats from new technologies (now), the abandonment of stations by the big chains (soon?), the real estate (bandwidth and in the case of AM towers, physical property) becoming more valuable for other purposes, leading to a final implosion that leaves only a handful of mom-and-pop stations feeding nostalgia for the days of a warm tube-distorted voice coming out of a speaker?