Ratings and share are the same numbers based on different denominators. Share is the percentage of actual viewers watching one particular channel. Rating is the percentage of all people, watching or not, who are watching a particular channel. When expressed as "persons" or "households" the number is the same in both cases.
And you had, what, 4 or 5 other channels to compete against? Today, you have not just dozens of local OTA channels and subchannels but hundreds of cable options and thousands of streaming video options.
You keep comparing today with situations from 50 years ago. Absurd.
Yes, it did. Even heard of YouTube or Netflix?
Because of streaming sources for news, classifieds, car dealers, weather forecasts and the like.
What the Internet did was offer many options. In particular, one-to-one options that give you my music and my content at the time I want it.
Actually, total radio users in 18-54 is off by less than 10% in the last 20 years. The real issue is that there are so many choices, people divide their time differently.
What nobody had brought up as perhaps the most destructive force against OTA radio: Docket 80-90. By 1990, we had so many new stations in most small markets and so many move ins and upgrades in larger markets that nobody was making money like before and half of all U.S. stations were not profitable.
If you want to place the blame for today's radio, look at the FCC and Docket 80-90 and not the good broadcasters who suddenly had less per-station revenue and many of whom could not make a
It is not a "national strategy". It is a corporate strategy in a limited number of markets with a wide variety of formats in each market.
They never did a "national" strategy because they had, nowhere, any single format that covered the whole country. "Never" is the keyword here.
When Clear Channel went for 7 AM to 7 FM to hundreds of stations (never thousands) was after the FCC allowed more stations per owner in the mid-90's. Initially, they did not cut local airstaff numbers but they did reduce management and back office staff. They did not start broad voice tracking until that became an economic necessity more than a decade later.
The Clear Channel bankruptcy was not due to operations, anyway. It was due to a sale to investment banks right at the start of the depression of 2008: the banks tried to get out but were legally forced to pay more than the enterprise was worth during the recession. In other words, a profitable company that banks overpaid for and not a "radio broadcasting" deficiency.
He was really a terrible programmer and is now just a bad manager. Just look at how Bill Tanner's AM Top 40 station in Pittsburgh beat his full FM over and over and over. Pittman just seems to fall upwards.
It