>>>' ....The demo is the demo, regardless of the number of owners or stations. It's what advertisers are willing to pay for. They don't want to pay for anyone else. Don't blame the owners for the situation created by advertisers. You can have one station per owner, and they'll all program the same format to the same demo. Is that better? ' <<<
Essentially, that's what's being done now, Big A.
I was addressing the paucity of the farm system. If that can be traced to cracks of the advertising-money whips, so be it. But it's a separate issue. All of the erosion factors, from whatever directions and origin, contribute, of course. Yet, the parched farm system, per se, remains a problem.
I'm not familiar with Leslie Gold's show ; perhaps that's my loss. But the thread is about her return, and about the various posters with their opinions regarding how snug the fit is. There seems to be a finite number of show hosts available who are acceptable to the audience, the programmers and the advertisers -- and none of them is getting any younger. If a relatively known NYC name like Leslie Gold cannot get the job done in NYC, then Mutt & Jeff from Single-A Wichita or Richmond certainly aren't likely to, either.
The talent pool is not producing enough replacements to stock the rosters over time. And there are too many rosters to fill.
My other point was that no one held a switchblade to the throats of these big companies or eventually forced them to go into annual cutback mode. These folks knew the rules and the balances of business, media and advertising when they first entered the vocation. If there are staffing problems, that goes with the territory .... and a crucial part of that territory extends to the smaller markets where the number of younger people who desire to get into radio is dwindling.