90 percent of Americans listen to "terrestrial" radio, if one believes in the Arbitron "talking points."
Funny, but the very same Arbitron notes that 40-million people a month also listen ... and longer ... to Internet Radio in some form or another.
And funnier, I can barely hear my community's AM 1kw blowtorch which is only 6 miles away ... and with all the development here, can hardly hear it at night on a graveyard channel (1230). It's said it loses about 10 percent of its "pattern" a year. I can tell.
In fact, I was a guest on a talk show on a station some 25 miles away and couldn't hear the station at all, except on it's Internet stream. I mentioned that, and the excuse was, "Well, yeah, we have to <gulp> power down to 500 watts on our 920 frequency ater 5 p.m.
Funny, too, that the next four callers all said the same thing, "Yeah, we can't hear your station very well anymore." This, being, the biggest news/talk station in the market.
And this funny note, I listen to Wilmington, Philadelphia and Jersey Shore radio ... plus am a big fan of Hy Lit Radio ... and hear it all in near studio quality, on a Roku Labs Internet radio (complete with AM & FM which I never use ... no need for it, since I get better quality and no IBOC hash from the terrestrial "stream" anyway.)
I listen to my favorite "back home" stations without the frenzy of DXers-gone-wild because that's what they listen to radio for ... how far a station "gets out."
I live, incidentally, in California. Pretty damn big signals, it sounds to me.
I believe Sam's correct and that some comments from others are fear that it may be true ... AM is dying, FM isn't what the "younger demos" care about anymore and Internet Radio is rapidly becoming the "independent" voice of "new" radio ... and the merging of "terrestrial" signals that just don't "make the trip" like they used to.
Imagine, having to listen to a radio station via the Internet ... from a transmitter just five miles away.
Radio ... is sure a "funny" bisuness these days, especially at $.11 cents a share. Now, THAT's "Tru Value."
Gimme the Internet anytime.
You go, Sam! And keep up the good work.
If some of wisenheimers would stop stealing copper from under the towers, maybe the signals of these stations would get out like they should.
Sam, how you doing on that "salt water sprinkler" to mount at each tower's base to help aid in the irrigation of those signals on AM, anyway?
My best, my friend.