That's all I ask as well. I wish we could all get together and make Radio viable for the foreseeable future, but that's something that's out of our hands. You see, nobody can agree WHAT path Radio should take towards the future. The FCC is holding us back, and the marketplace is so horribly fragmented due to forces beyond our control. I know what I can do TODAY, but tomorrow is another question. My younger brother grew up in this business just like I did, but he now listens to podcasts on his 45 minute commute to and from work. The only terrestrial station he's listened to in the past 5 years is WMOT at MTSU in Murfreesboro. I can't even talk shop with him anymore because he really doesn't care about the business. That's why I come here.
If you could tell me what direction to go, and how to combat Pandora, Spotify, SiriusXM and the like while fighting a government that looks at us like a piggy bank and only cares about Radio when someone threatens to do away with AM Radio in a vehicle or when a Country musician tells them we don't already pay our fair share to them, please do. I welcome it. We all would. I started out when we still used 45's and LP's and worried about cue burn, and we manually wound carts to get past the splice or replaced the pressure pads ourselves. Now we're worried about digital, hacker attacks and AI. I shudder to think about the next 10 years and the advancements. Thank God I'm not a corporate GM having to worry about investors or share price. I only have to worry about keeping the lights on, and for the majority not named iHeart, Cumulus, Audacy or the like, that's what we do