TheBigA said:
Here's the key thing to know: If listeners go to other media, they're going to find the programming isn't built like a traditional radio station with DJs playing music and giving news & weather. So if that's what they want, they're not going to find it on an ipod or at pandora. The real fact here is that the audience for what traditional radio has been doing is going away. They don't want what traditional radio has been doing for the past 50 years.
What I'm talking about is a complete sociological revolution in what the public wants. It's very different. So losing staff or programming only matters if the public actually wants it, and if it's available in the traditional sense somewhere else. So far, it appears the answer to both of those is no.
And that might be the most fundamental thing here--courtesy of one of those so-called "corporate shills".
Look at it this way, re these arguments on behalf of "immediacy" and "relatable personalities" and whatever else: roughly similar arguments might have been voiced decades ago on behalf of the continued survival of, say, vaudeville entertainment. Didn't matter; what killed vaudeville was an earlier "complete sociological revolution in what the public wants". Ultimately, the fix was in...
everyplace, big or small. That's not to say that the best elements of vaudeville didn't survive in some form in what replaced it: cinema, radio, television...but vaudeville
itself was dead, except as an archaism.
In this light, it may be saying something that perhaps the biggest boon the internet's been for radio hasn't been in the realm of streaming audio or interactivity or added platforms ad infinitum, but
as a readymade radio museum available to all. Pre-WWW, we simply didn't have the readily available resources for radio history and radio greats and the vintage airchecks--now we do, and it's incredibly fascinating. But it also has a way of framing the medium and its past greatness as more of a "museum piece" than we counted on through our raw memories--not in a
bad way, mind you, but perhaps for those still in the profession or with an investment in its current survival, it's an inadvertently mixed and blurry blessing. With a documented/presented past this illustrious--or in certain lights we're only discovering now, this anachronistic (would today's audiences
really go for those old Sklar/Drake-style pitches, PropaPHgandaistic corporate shills and all?)--who needs a present that's only weakly, awkwardly recollecting said past that it's self-consciously hitching itself to?
Sure, this on-line museum may not have the type and scale of mass audience that we remember: what matters is that
it has an audience at all, and is readily available to said audience--besides, in the Web era, the old economies of scale don't matter unless you're actively investing in them. It's no longer like when a station or format just dies or a song falls off the charts, it's totally lost to posterity, never to be heard again--something which might have been my naive assumption some 30+ years ago.
Now when it comes to that derogatory (or at least, reflective-of-a-derogatory-attitude) previous post of mine re college radio listeners vs "redneck hillbillies from Jesusland", remember that there's a
vast in-between demographic out there, i.e. the sort who indeed find that Rush/Delilah/K-Love to be the epitome of Commercial Terrestrial Radio Hell these days--but
not on behalf of college-station talking-about-nothing marginalia. Even if certain of them might have idealized that realm once upon a time, particularly in the 80s when it seemed the logical furthering and continuation of pre-AOR free-form FM. And if certain of them have "graduated" to a more "professional" level of listenership, it might just as well be as part of NPR's increasing demos. But by and large, that "vast in-between" is what fuels the current and impending universe of post-terrestrial, of downloads and Pandora--something that's born of the limitations of
both commercial
and college-style terrestrial. In its curious way, it represents the effective trickling-up into the masses of the 80s DIY college-radio spirit--even when the music and entertainment fare is anything but, uh, "alternative" or "left-field" or "weird". So, as a harbinger of the future, those ad hoc hippies and punks on campus radio actually
won.
And what you find these days that traditional radio's spokespersons and critics and Jerry Del Colliano-esque barb-tossers are increasingly speaking in terms of "available audiences", which is but a nice way of saying "remaining audiences"--because for most of those who've decried radio's suckage in the past, that issue's resolved itself through technology and sociology. They're no longer "available". Radio people have to make the most with whomever's left; and that "whomever" is increasingly of the so-called backwoods, even if they exist in apparently considerable numbers. Roughly speaking, if we were to transcribe 60s culture to today, radio's realm might be Lawrence Welk, and the rock revolution, Beatles and all, would be totally elsewhere...