radio...not red hot anymore..its ice cold..
I tend to agree, Sam... but, was there something specific that prompted the comment?
i know everything changes as we move on, but it should change for the better. radio, in my opinion, has not done that.
Has radio (overall) gotten better or worse?
That's a subjective judgment based on the opinion of the listener. To the boomers who want to hear older music and stimulating talk, it's probably gotten worse. To younger people who want current music for free on a convenient device, it's probably gotten better. The fact that audience levels have remained basically unchanged in terms of a percentage of the population who listen to radio, that says to me that radio has remained unchanged. What HAS changed is the age of the specific people who listened 25 years ago. And the amount of competition for the people who listen.
The major difference in radio then and now is engagement and today it is almost totally missing. And listening to the radio as a child, teen and young adult sets the stage for a whole lifetime. It isn't happening today and so, when today's young people reach their 50's, 60's and 70's they will have no radio to fall back on with fond memories and great tunes. The industry, at least the music part of it, will have died.
A big part of that though is the audience. Radio set the stage when you were a kid because there was nothing else. There was no MTV. There were no cell phones. There were no video games.
The engagement you talk about has been replaced by real people. Young people in the 60s were isolated. Talking on the phone required using the family phone, typically located in the kitchen. Very few young people were fortunate enough to have a phone in their own bedroom. If they did, it wasn't a private line. Kids don't want to engage with other adults. They want to engage with other kids. People in the 60s were the same.
The main purpose of the DJ was it got them in touch with their favorite artist. Today, young people can tweet their favorite artist directly. No need for an intermediary.
The amazing thing about teens today is they still listen to the radio. We know because they show up in every survey that's done. But they don't listen to it via a transistor. They listen in cars, on phones, or on computers. Twenty years from now, that's the memory today's young people will have. Their use of the content has changed too. Most boomers still own the vinyl records they bought as teens. Not so with teens. They download songs, and delete when they're tired of the song. Or they don't even download. They just stream it from a cloud site. No storage. No memories. It's all very disposable. That's how today's teens are treating music. Why should they have more engaged memories from the thing they hear that music on?
You missed the point. It wasn't about the music (entirely, although the music was profoundly better) but rather the engagement of the hosts, be they on radio, TV or some other medium.
You don't find Boomers (or in my case, pre-Boomers) doing that. They will also, in all probability, not be reminiscing over the likes of the personalities they identified with so strongly as kids because, like the music of today so is the talent largely disposable.
I get what you're saying 100%, and I'm glad you brought it up. You talk about the "engagement of the hosts." A lot of that was in your mind. Because it's doubtful there ever was any REAL engagement there. I had the chance to work for the radio station I listened to as a kid. I thought, as you did, that the hosts "engaged" with the listeners. Then I got to work there, and realized there was no real engagement from their end at all. It was all in my imagination. I asked them about it, and they didn't see it the same way. Today, on air hosts engage with listeners directly using social media. That's direct, one on one, two way engagement. It really didn't exist in the 60s, except in listener's imaginations.
We all have to live in the time that we live in. That's just how it is. Yes today music is disposable, and so is everything else. That culture was created by boomers and post-boomers. We can't go back to the past, and we can't make radio today as though it's still the 60s. So yes, everything is disposable. But the fact is that the personalities you identified with as kids were figments of your imagination. Kids today probably don't have that.
More than a few times the "figment of my imagination" would invite me into the studio to show me the workings of his show.
Radio may be dying for you, it's still pretty alive for these people.
The only thing I notice in my market are the "current junk" music stations (what DO you call today's terrible music anyway?) with their wild-haired, pierced and tatted 'role models' holding "find me" contests for trinkets. Appearances don't seem to draw crowds any longer and the only advertising you see for these people is at events like Country Thunder where they may emcee but not perform.