calguy said:But I do have a life experience here and I can tell you that my feelings about radio are a lot more common than you might believe.
One of the problems of radio is that there is a feeling that radio can use the same model it used in the past in this recessionary, new media environment.
When most of us talk about radio, it is with people who are closer to radio than our "informal surveys" should be. When talking to people in the younger demos who are brought in to a discussion (think "focus groups" here) based on the same kind of recruitment techniques used by Arbitron, we find a huge lack of passion for radio. And we see huge passion for FaceBook and things like streaming sources ranging from Pandora to iHeart radio as well as iTunes. Radio's place in younger consumer's minds is quite a ways down the "importance list" from where it was in the past.
Among older consumers of radio, we do see lots of people who don't get the fact that radio that sounds like it did in the 60's or 70's does not get the under-50 demos and does not do well in ratings any more.
Somewhere in the middle are many people who want radio with an element of humanity but which addresses the interests of today in a style that is not what is associated with radio in the past.
Then there are those who still like what most of us would have called "good radio" in the pre-consolidation years. Yet consolidation is blamed for "killing radio" while really changes in technology and the way people form communities and seek entertainment are the real causes... complicated by a major recession.
It's easy to blame managers, owners and even programmers. But the fact really is that the big shift is in what listeners want and how they want it delivered.