Legendary Late-Night Radio Show for Japan’s Truckers Ends After 52 Years on the Air
"Strange though it feels to say, Millennials are possibly the last generation to understand the nostalgia for recurring radio shows. I may not have understood Lake Wobegon was a fictional place, but there was something comforting in knowing there'd always be a soft, friendly voice on the air the same hour each week. Radio, though, is a dying medium, one almost entirely supplanted by streaming music, subscription-model satellite radio, and even podcasts. One of the many casualties of this transition has been Japan's long-running, ultra late-night broadcast for truckers sponsored by truck-maker Hino, which after its March 27 show pulled the plug on Hino Midnight Graffiti Hashire! Kayōkyoku."Note that the article mentions the decline in use of broadcast radio as the main reason for ending the show.