Now, as far as the premise above ---- "Radio - It's not a viable business anymore." It's not viable using any form of the old school methods. But, in America, business generally finds ways to evolve and make a profit. I wouldn't count radio out yet. But, I do think "we" need to look at the reality that the most profitable models are NOT stock owned, top heavy run dinosaurs. Sadly, EMF and similar models are healthy. Corp radio is more worried about shaving off and killing it's already reduced audience.
Tibbs said this more elegantly than I have ever read or heard before. Bravo!
Many.....perhaps most.....stations are operating in a manner that has not changed significantly in many years. They play some music, news, sports talk, etc., and run advertisements that are often irrelevant to the listeners. If they do so too much, those listeners tune out.
I have a 33 year old niece who does not listen to terrestrial radio (other than short road trips in the car) and who is busy making babies. Those children will be raised in a home where audio entertainment is only present via streaming or perhaps in-home recordings of some type. News is read on the internet, per political preference choosing the source. The kids won't know what radio is.
As I've said elsewhere during my short tenure here, I've made my money over 45 years in the broadcast industry, but rarely listen to terrestrial radio anymore. Annoying spots, poor music selections, limited playlists, and generic voice tracked announcers from distant locations are the cause. When I do, it's usually just experimentation when I'm driving through a new city, or my bride getting tired of my stream choices. When she's driving, it's just background noise. She will listen to any station that plays music she recognizes.
I will stream a local station from Wisconsin to hear local play-by-play of my beloved Packers.....I stream a local kilowatt AM in the mornings because they run a call-in "for sale" show called Tradio and I love it. Beyond that, Spotify and YouTube Music does a far better job of determining what I like and playing the music that I like. If I'm interactive with their choices, it just keeps getting better and better.
Most of us are in the business and the overall state of things goes down hard. The buggy whip people probably held on to the same hopes as cars were becoming more prevalent. I saw a post in Buzzstream here where a paid researcher determined that 13 year olds get 33% of their music from terrestrial radio. That is a stretch; most of those are likely not tuning in themselves but rather riding in a car with Mom. What is overlooked in the same article is that those same 13 year old's YouTube / Spotify / Pandora use exceeds that 33%.....and THEY are making those selections. The study was likely paid for by the broadcast industry, and results skewed to what they wanted to hear.
I love the history of radio, and loved working in the industry, but things are not going to get better. For all things there is a season, and radio's season is dramatically changing.