Bro country was a trend a dozen years ago. Yes, there are holdouts still singing about hot girls in sun dresses sitting on pickup truck tailgates on a boozy Friday night, but more recent trends are toward an R&B/country fusion (Morgan Wallen, Jelly Roll) and a swing back toward the '80s/'90s style (Zach Top, Ella Langley). And there's a lot more emphasis on crossover in all directions (pop, rock, R&B, hip-hop, gospel, etc.) than there was in the "bro" years. It's unclear where it's all heading, and there's a strong back-to-basics subgenre operating independent of radio. Where this all leads for country radio is anyone's guess. Right now, the multinational music conglomerates hold the cards, but as we saw in the '70s with the "outlaw" movement, sometimes the outsiders wind up changing the established order.