Wow, part time hours, 17.60 an hour, and no benefits. In California, fast food workers start out at $20 hourly. So someone flipping burgers at Jack In The Box, gets paid more than a news editor starting out at iHeart.
Yep, I can't imagine anyone trying to make radio a career in 2025.
And, look---to some extent, there's always been an element of that.
I burned a lot of my goodwill with my bosses at a large-market network TV affiliate that made money hand over fist by arguing----for a year---that competing with Taco Bell in terms of compensation was a bad idea for videotape editors who pretty much determine what your final product is gonna look like at 5, 6 and 10 every night.
If you added up my salary, the photog's salary, very often the helicopter pilot's salary, the cost of however much Jet A we burned that day, it wasn't cheap. We shot the stories on $30,000 BetaCams. But the final product was in the hands of someone making $7.25 an hour.
And I lost that argument.
But I've also worked for people who didn't low-ball me, who opened with a decent offer and explained that they thought that they'd get better work from someone who wasn't worried about paying their bills or working a second job.
A final bit of context:
KSLY, San Luis Obispo (1974)---a 1,000-watt station in a town of 30,000 people---paid me $450 a month. $35,093.82 a year (adjusted). $16.87 an hour (adjusted).
That wasn't epic money then, but I was 18 years old. It was just enough---51 years ago---for a young man to begin to go out on his own, feed and clothe himself and have an address other than "Blue Ford Mustang, California License 625 NCS".