You just have to keep claiming you're right, don't you? Even when the reasons you state have nothing to do with the subject at hand. This thread is about the projected fate of OTA radio AS WE KNOW IT TODAY,
The thread title says "radio" and not "OTA Radio".
When FM was kickstarted in 1967, nobody said "radio is dead" even though, for most people, listening the the "new kind of radio" required a new piece of hardware.
Today, radio is not dead either. Listeners decided they liked multifunction devices that included "radio" in the options. They had to buy a new device, a smartphone, to get radio in the new way. But it's still radio to them.
Either you are consumer driven and say "if they think their phone is also a radio, then I will deliver my content that way, too" or you adopt a production based model where we know what the listener wants, and they are gonna' like it no matter what and then we give them an Edsel.
including the impact on the industry and the people in it when and if it changes. For the purpose of this discussion, if radio transitions from OTA broadcasting AS WE KNOW IT TODAY into some alternative mode of delivering audio content without pictures, then all of you suits with all your experience doing the same things over and over and over and over on OTA Radio will be out of work.
We are already transitioning. Clear Channel became iHeart because the new media platform is where they believe growth is going to be. CBS and Cumulus and Univision have "Radio" "Rdio" and "Uforia" with lots of additional channels and formats and very rich content related to the music and listener lifestyles. Many broadcasters have joined with Jeff Smulyan to push FM activation on smartphones; Emmis also has streaming products of considerable depth. Many smaller stations and groups have associated with bigger operations to stream and provide content.
The pureplays do not yet have a sustainable economic model. As it stands now, the viable model of OTA radio does transfer to streaming but may require some adjustments as to things like commercial load, geofencing, negotiating the DCMA payments, etc. But traditional radio groups are moving as fast as the audience to new media with the advantage of having sustainable positive cash flow.
So, that's one impact of the end of OTA Radio AS WE KNOW IT TODAY. I don't know how old TheBigA or any of the other suits are, but your age is obvious from your website. So just because you'll be dead or retired from radio when OTA Radio AS WE KNOW IT TODAY is dead and gone, that doesn't mean that for the purposes of this thread and this discussion, the subject is OTA Radio AS WE KNOW IT TODAY.
What possible difference does my age, or anyone else's age make in this discussion? Those of us interested enough in this discussion to post obviously care about the industry and the profession, not just our individual jobs and paychecks. There is no need to make this personal while ignoring the fact that those of us in the business today are taking part in creating the path to full new media distribution of radio. RADIO: No matter what distribution platform is.
As I said, the OTA radio companies have the only profitable streaming operations and they are looking for additional options in the new media area. But in the meantime, the OTA part of the business is making money and, even with gradual erosion, the OTA operations will be the most profitable for some time to come.[/SIZE][/FONT]