I agree with you about the commercials. I would also add that what is being sold over the air (and also through online simulcasts) mostly has to do with sex and other bodily functions. I almost never hear McDonald's or Domino's Pizza ads anymore; in fact, out of all of the fast food franchises, the only group I regularly hear ads for now is Wendy's.The "two of us" were talking about radio on a trip from Palm Springs to LA and back today. My question, part way through the trip to LA, was "have you thought about listening to a traditional radio station instead of our car system's choices of Sirius/XM and Apple CarPlay?"
The answer was "no". The main reason was the 14 minutes or so of ads each hour. We talked about how ads "used to be much more fun" in the era of "sooner or later, you'll own General" or "Double your pleasure, double your fun..." Today's ads for "if you have been disabled or maimed in an auto accident" and other intense hard-sell messages are hard to listen to, back to back, for 7-minute stopsets filled often with 15 to 20 ads that are 30" and even 15" long.
Something else is bothering me about the current advertisement market that I think is also reflective of how many new radio stations wish to break into the field. When I listen to old top 40 airchecks on Youtube and other places, I'm strongly reminded about how many small local businesses advertised on the radio. Stations certainly participated in national ad campaigns from big businesses, but there was a very healthy dose of mom-and-pop ads as well from the smallest towns to the biggest cities. Now those mom-and-pop ads (and in some cases businesses) are almost completely gone from the ad buys, and more and more stations are relying either only or primarily on national ad buys.
So now, not only do you have to sit through 7-minute ad sets but they are all for the same body products from the same national advertisers you would hear everywhere else. And I can see nothing in the future that will buck these trends.