That all sounds nice. It goes against all the data and most all of the buying decisions being made. If we were a clothing store in a ranching community, its like you demand we sell 3 piece suits versus cowboy books and blue jeans. We simply are stuck with the world as it is and we don't know how to make an entire industry ignore what they do to make an exception. We are told to bring in a certain group of listeners and what we do turns a profit. You might think the station is lousy but if it is making it, simply put, we're doing our job just as our owner instructed us. It's not easy but easier than what you suggest. I'm not saying you're wrong but you seem to be saying we can just choose to do something that is not frequently found in radio because it doesn't work in most cases. Radio stations are just as much a business as Walmart, McDonalds, Whole Foods and the like. The whole idea is to be profitable, even making more than you need if you are a non-commercial. It is not to be a jukebox for a group we can't find a way to monetize. And that's too bad. That means there are fewer and fewer stations playing what I prefer musically. Let's put you in the owner shoes: you buy a station for millions. Will you try to get as many of those ad agency dollars as you can get or will you say you don't care? Can you afford to risk what might be millions more to wind up having to do what everyone else does after learning you don't control buying decisions. As a business owner what would you choose?