radioskeptic said:
It's also the result of changes in radio itself -- chages that are the baleful effects of consolidation. Those changes followed passage of the 1996 Telecom Act.
Sorry...I don't see that at all. Lots of radio stations are exactly the same as they were 20 years ago, before consolidation. Sure their owners have changed a few times, but their on-air staff and sound is exactly the same. However their audience got older or died. There are thousands of stations like this. It has nothing to do with ownership. Radio became a place of the older generation. Radio didn't adapt to the young. So the younger generation came along, and all they saw was old people, talking about their stuff, playing their music, and completely ignoring them and their culture. Had this happened in the 60s, radio would have died then. But radio had already cleared out some of the older generation after the rise of TV. But it has nothing to do with corporations and consolidation, because the exact same problem has happened at stations owned by individuals, churches, community groups, and public radio. Out of 14,000, less than 2,000 are owned by the big consolidators. In fact, if you go to small town America, there is no such thing as corporate radio or consolidation. But regardless of ownership, the station sounds old. That's no way to attract a young audience. And this process didn't start in 1996. It actually began ten years earlier. In the late 80s, radio stations were already ignoring new music from a new generation. The Gen Xers were developing their own culture and music, and it didn't get played on the radio. If you really want to know what happened to radio, you need to look ten years before 1996. Look at staffing, look at music policies that began before consolidation, and look at ownership trends that began when companies like NBC got out of radio. The irony is that the generation that grew up on radio ultimately killed it because of their refusal to share their medium with the next generations. In some places, you see the exact thing now. Boomers trying to hold on to their youth, demanding radio sound the way it did 40 years ago, while it's obvious what today;s audience wants. It's an absolute shame, because polls show that younger people would listen to the radio if it didn't sound and act so old. So don't blame corporations, bean counters, the NAB, or some Act. Look right in the mirror and ask, "What did I do that opened radio to a new generation?"