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EbolaMonkey
Guest
No, it does not. Ingram was never a national star, and, without taking anything away from what he achieved on WABC, there were "Ingrams" at most Top 40 stations, from New York and LA to Albuquerque and Miami.
Stern did not come from TV, nor did Delilah, Paul Harvey, Rush Limbaugh, Kraddick, Kasem, Art Bell, Piolín, Dr. Laura, Pistolero, etc., etc. and the regional syndicated shows previously mentioned are legion and successful.
My spelling was wrong. It's Ingraham, as in Laura Ingraham. And she had a nationally televised MNSBC show throughout the Lewinsky saga. Talk listeners would know her from there.
Since my point was that today's biggest national shows were grandfathered in from the 90's, I'm not sure why you thought Paul Harvey, Rush, Delilah, Kasem, Stern and Dr. Laura would help your case. That's a head scratcher.
My main point is that the radio industry hasn't been growing Rush and Stern type shows on its own. The new, post-Telecommunications Act of 1996 radio economy doesn't allow for it. Since 2001 or so, established local talents, or talents with potential, aren't grown; they are cost-cut and shown the exit.
More recent shows like Seacrest's, Dennis Miller's and O'Reilly's were helped tremendously by TV.