Bill Wolfenbarger said:
You guys are spending a lot of time splitting hairs over the definition of radio. In fact, there's now a plethora of media forms that compete for the listeners' ears, and each new form of delivery competes with all the others. We should expect that all this competition would bring a serious downturn in hour listening to conventional terrestrial radio, but it hasn't. There's been some attrition, but not like you'd expect, given all the choices we now have.
One thing we need to keep in minds is that most of these delivery methods are not capable of being a "companion". Only live radio can do this, and live and local radio can do it the best. I say "can do it" because many don't. And the ones that don't will fall behind.
To the listener, or at least the non-luddite music listener, there are two forms of audio entertainment: the playlist and radio. A playlist is just one's own selection of songs, Radio is a selection of songs that generally fit the listener's taste. An iPod has a playlist, and a cloud based storage system does not change that. Configurable Pandora is viewed as radio, just as AM and FM and satellite is.
The next generation of non-AM/FM will be a total companion, but made to order. If you look at how the Seacrest show is delivered, in work parts, or how satellite does weather and traffic, it's easy to see the next step. I like, let's say, alternative rock, but not the harder stuff. I want traffic when I get in the car, and weather, too. And I like Seacrest, as odd as that may seem. So I get in the car, push a button and say "radio" and it beeps. I say "morning station" and I get my blend of alternative, with the precise amount of Seacrest I asked for previously... and the first thing I hear is the current trafffic and weather. And if I don't pay for the service, i get 3 or 4 commercials, probably 30's, an hour. For most people, that is as local as they want and need... for "community" they have Facebook, because communities are not geographical today as much as they are affinity groups.
I can't wait for this to be reality. The two places where I live are both rated markets, but not in the top 100. The radio is, for the most part, unlistenable. I got satellite, but that's still a trade of too many songs I don't want to hear for none of the horrible, badly produced local commercials in never-ending stopsets. The local news is seldom given, but when it is, it seems to consist of New York Times length stories about irrelevant things. One local paper was never readable, and the other, chain owned, has gone from outstanding to less than mediocre in the last few years.
We are probably entering the dawn of the least informed generation of Americans ever. But with so many choices, many will never be exposed to news because they will tune out if they can find music... just as teens did in the 50's and 60's in markets where there were several Top 40's and the FCC mandated news came on. then, you somehow got some news. Today, you can avoid it totally.