Katie Thornton has covered this issue for a while. Her podcast series The Divided Dial focused on conservative (and conservative-religious) talk radio on the AM dial. Her article in The Rolling Stone covered EMF's "takeover" of rock stations in major markets. In the upper Midwest, it started with WLUP 97.9 in Chicago, and then KQGO 96.3 in Minneapolis, and now WLUM 102.1 in Milwaukee. I'm sure there were more in smaller markets. Good, bad, or otherwise, there is an increasing saturation of religious content on the FM dial in most major markets. But that doesn't mean radio is dead. It's still out there. And it's evolving. WYMS is doing great job with a format similar to WLUM. The Hog is doing fine with a similar format as well. And as mentioned above, WPR is doing it's best to evolve while also facing tremendous headwinds with their budget.
I grew up listening to FM 102.1. I won concert tickets from them. I saw them in the van at local events. It's sad to see it gone. But it was also sad to listen to it for the past few years. Same rotation. Same talent. Same shows. Same revenue model.
Radio need to evolve. Otherwise, it dies (or becomes K-Love).
I grew up listening to FM 102.1. I won concert tickets from them. I saw them in the van at local events. It's sad to see it gone. But it was also sad to listen to it for the past few years. Same rotation. Same talent. Same shows. Same revenue model.
Radio need to evolve. Otherwise, it dies (or becomes K-Love).