If Madison was a one book fluke, how did their audience successfully protest a pending format change and keep it on the air longer than iHeart planned?
I suspect that, since it was a time when the FCC still had the last vestiges of format protection, Clear Channel just did not want the controversy at that moment. Remember, it is a Class A and its 65 dbu does not even cover 50% of the MSA. And, while Madison is a college town, the college age progressive thinkers did not usually get into the Arbitron sample.
The station performed decently. Not top 5, admittedly, but as long as there was a supply of syndicated shows that fit the format, they held their ground longer than most.
You could say the same thing about WKIZ in Key West. Some stations hung on hoping that either Air America would get the promised infusions of cash they needed or that something better might come along.
I don't deny that most liberal talk stations didn't succeed with the Air America lineup. That's a separate issue from the format. It's also separate from Patrick's assertion that Air America did "everything wrong." Maybe their management did. But not all of the hosts did.
I was doing talk radio in that era, and since the US stations I worked with were Spanish language, they leaned to the progressive side on most of the issues that Air America espoused. I'd listen to see how they were doing things, and found that, to some degree or another, all the hosts in my opinion were doing just about everything wrong. Some were not talking to the listener (singular) but were lecturing or addressing a crowd (Franken did this all too often). They did not establish themselves as people and sounded all too often like college professors, not "a friend on the radio". They did not chat as much as they addressed the audience.
Of course, a major problem was having mostly AM stations... and secondary ones at that... when the generation that had more progressive ideas was not in the AM demo and was not given to listening to talk radio anyway. In very few markets are there more than two or three full-coverage AM stations (There are about 180 day and night 80% of the market 5 mV/m coverage stations in the top 100 markets) so the first choices were conservative talk, sports and all-news in a few top 10 markets. That did not really afford a major opportunity to Air America, and nobody at the time wanted to dedicate a good FM to the format.