Just a jukebox. Well, an approximation of an iPod, maybe. Music, music, music. No human beings involved.
The radio industry has lost thousands of broadcasters in the past dozen years, including thousands more in the recent Clear Channel/Citadel slaughters. Radio is quickly boiling down to a very small group of people running a whole bunch of machines.
In threads below I've seen a number of poster who seem to be excited about Dayton's new humanless FM iPod on 92.9. Running this kind of "station" requires no thought & no effort, beyond an initial format research study and a call to TM Century. Very much like plugging an iPod into a transmitter, then walking away.
Is this what broadcasters want the industry to be? If not, what can be done to bring people back into the business?
The radio industry has lost thousands of broadcasters in the past dozen years, including thousands more in the recent Clear Channel/Citadel slaughters. Radio is quickly boiling down to a very small group of people running a whole bunch of machines.
In threads below I've seen a number of poster who seem to be excited about Dayton's new humanless FM iPod on 92.9. Running this kind of "station" requires no thought & no effort, beyond an initial format research study and a call to TM Century. Very much like plugging an iPod into a transmitter, then walking away.
Is this what broadcasters want the industry to be? If not, what can be done to bring people back into the business?