oaktree said:...and then they will discover the AM band...
<sarcasm monitor on> Yeah, in our dreams. Our getting very lonely dreams. If Arbitron is right in stating, as it has, that Persons-Using-Radio declines in the last 8 years equals a loss of 17% of the radio audience, that 80 percent of radio listening is to FM and the other 20% (with a healthy does from that 80 percent not listening only to radio, but to other means,) is true ... it doesn't take a mental giant to see that AM is dropping off the charts faster than a Fergie hit.
With the even faster introduction of new modes of "entertainment" and media choices, 51% of the radio audience as we know it today will be mostly non-existent in 15 years from now. Of that, you can well bet that as gen Y turns 35-40 in that time frame, they're attention spans that are obviously dwindling today will not become any better and their choices will be more personal and immediate.
And for that which they don't know now (AM Radio) will become, out of that 49% of listeners available ... largely non-existent whatsoever. And for those thinking that it won't affect the small markets ... think again. The proliferation of outside syndication and cost cutting will reduce the radio landscape markedly ... and AM will become a huge vast wasteland.
FM could make it until then ... but it will be so generic and "safe" (such as how AM started its rapid slide inside of five-to-ten years,) that that band will have similar problems by then as well.
The alternatives will be quick to materialize; much faster than they were thirty years ago. Twenty years ago. Ten years ago ... even five years ago.
It's going to be a wild ride in the next decade for radio. 60 year olds will be 70. 50 year olds will be 60. 40 year olds will be among the uncounted and uncared for...and below 40 ... they just won't care, because they will, literally, be held "to their own devices."
Think about how change has affected this industry and how quick that change has established itself to put us in the shape and condition we're in now.
With conditions as they are ... remember, KGO has seen change, too, through that time, and is not immune to more. The loss of the 49ers may have been just one of the early signs of change. There will be more to come.
Just a couple of things for clarification. The 49ers was a Pure Money Thing. Just to be clear, it was going to be a bad deal for the station which at the time was paying a little north of 5 million a year for what turned out to be a 2-14 season. When Luckoff had an opening in the contract to re-negociate, The niners wanted even more money, he said no. KNBR et all needs to spread it over 3 stations to make it work due to the Giants Schedule, Plus the niners sell much of their own time now, so there is even less for the station to recover. The good news for KNBR is thay can just add all kinds of Niners Programing to help cover their costs. That would have been a problem for a NewsTalk, not a problem for a sports talk.
Bay to Breakers, A one day event that was costly to do, KGO covered it as a News/Sports event. Lots of bodies and
locations. Now, If you can get the rights for a decent price its an OK deal. But KGO did not get to sell advertising for the race, that was sold by the promoters that also got KGO inventory to run their ads. They also held the rights and sold those to KGO. (It's been the ING Bay to Breakers for about 3 years) This year they wanted even more money for the rights, They also wanted their spots to run on KGO, no upside for the station there, so, they said no thank you. It was a bad deal so we walked.
Is radio in trouble, Hell Yes . The 12-18 year olds who were the end users when I was growing up, and who would listen to radio throughout their lives are almost gone. Todays 12-18's have The Internet, IPods, Cel-phones, Gameboys...you name it. They all help pull people away from the Radio. So many choices, and depending on what you call content, so much content, who the hell needs radio...or for that matter newspapers. The 2 mediums that depend on Circulation and Listeners that can be counted so we/they can go to the advertisers and ask for money because we deliver these many ears or eyes who may see/hear their ads.
KGO has reached a time where the "Prestiege" of having a team or event "Just to say we have it" has passed. If it no longer makes business sense we just don't do it. And that started long before Citadel, and Disney, that started with CapCities.
As for the small markets, They are Gone. It's Satelites and Syndication everywhere. I guess the good news is that
there are so few places to get a career in radio started that soon even the broadcasters will be gone.
Now, Just a point of Personal Opinion. I have been in broadcasting for about 38 years. I've been a listener my whole life.The one thing that always draws me in is superior content. That is the one thing that is so sadly lacking in/on the radio. It has been sanitzed and lobottomized by Corporations, Legal Depts. and Managers with no ideas. No one takes a chance anymore. If you try and fail, well, at least you tried. Now Reasearch sez...do this, read the card, open the 55 gallon drum with the format in it, add call letters and hope for the best. The bar has been set so low, the bigest danger is you'll stub your toe on it.
I have had the honor of working with most of the best Air Talent and B'cast management in the Bay Area. Some are gone, many have retired a few are still fighting the good fight. For them, I will continue to create content to be proud of untill it's time for me to go. They are the reason I got into this business, they are the reason I stay, they are the reason I fight the good fight too. KGO Radio survives in this enviorment because it is somthing special. AND It's aging, AM radio listeners recognize it. If the Digikids don't recognize it, I'm sorry for them. Perhaps when they are ready for
answers and ideas there will be someplace to get it.