Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:terrestrial radio is like the buggy whip industry.
Once there was a great need for it.....but when engines replaced horses (as sat radio will replace terr radio), you don't see many buggy whips any more.
We understand what you are saying, and I would agree that terrestrial radio may indeed be in for some big changes. But I would suggest you have come up with a apples vs oranges comparison to use the old cliche.
I live in a county of 100,000 people out at the north edge of Metro Atlanta. If I am driving to work next year and the significant road that I normally drive has been closed by a traffic accident, are they going to interrupt ALL channels of satellite radio to make it possible for me to select an alternate route?
If we have a major thunderstorm and flash floods are headed for my house or my place of business, can I expect sat radio to bring me that news.
We have a volatile political climate in our local government. Can I expect election results for my county if I listen to sat radio while eating breakfast?
Granted, if terrestrial radio is going to survive, it is going to have to battle head-to-head with the cell-phone industry and streaming audio from various sources if it is going to survive..... and sat radio has no guarantee that it can survive against the cell-phone streaming juggernaut.
Maybe you can answer a question that no one else has been able to answer for me. What percentage of the people are "Music Centric". How many people will line up for whatever media brings them the music they want? 20%? 40% 60%? Much of the logic of discussion groups is that music is 97% of what people want from radio and the demand for news, for weather, for sports, for just some good conversation, is may 3% of what people want from radio. If that is true, then your scenario for sat radio is rosy.
Sometimes it's funny reading these Doom & Gloom prognostications and comparing it to Real Life.
GRC, you are down there in Class C Country where the large-market umbrellas extend way out into the countryside--far enough out that one can often go directly from umbrella to umbrella (Atlanta to Birmingham; Atlanta to Chattanooga; Atlanta to Greenville-Spartanburg... G/SP to Charlotte... Charlotte to Winston-Salem)--point is, The South is indeed a tough place for micro-small-town radio--and has been for about 30 years, now. Don't get me wrong: the Romes & Albanys & Athens & Annistons do okay; but the kind of stuff you've been talking about--towns of maybe 10,000--hey, it's tough. If the good folks who live in those small towns have a choice each day of listening to Top 10 Market radio or their little local station--and there's no charge for admission, either way--the big market guys are gonna win, most days. It's why local TV stations don't try to put local comics up against Jay Leno & Dave Letterman. Gonna get crushed.
Up here in the Land of Ice & Snow that you left for the Sunny South, those umbrellas aren't nearly as big. Class Bs get out about 35-40 miles, not 40-to-60, so when you get an hour or so out of The Big City, those "competitors" are gone. Especially if you're up in the mountains--which have a way of getting in the way of those out-of-town signals.
One of our stations a Country FM in a town of 8,000 out in the woods (a "non-rated market") and staff it with 4.5 people on-air, including a fulltime news/sports guy--so, yes, you'd hear about the storm, flash floods, election results, high school sports play-by-play... non-injury auto accidents... lost dogs & cats... birthdays & anniversaries--all that stuff. We do about $1.1 million in net sales (excluding trade) and cash flow around $500,000 yearly. Our jocks average around $30,000 a year and our sales staff averages between $40K & $50K. The GM makes about $100K. Cost of living is relatively low, so nobody's missing any meals.
Our little company owns a bunch of these. We're not alone. There are thousands of healthy local radio stations just like ours, all across the country. We don't make the headlines ("Local Station Helps Find Cat") because there's nothing very peculiar about what we do. It's the norm--not the extreme. I know it's more fun to talk about how the sky is falling, but small-town radio isn't anywhere close to being as dead as y'all seem to believe...