TheBigA said:My experience in that is that the only way to do that is through non-commercial means. Because as long as the profit motive is involved, and advertising is being sought, the broadcasters will always seek greater and greater audiences, which means the station leaves the rural area.
Historically, radio was NOT meant as a rural device. Radio stations were based in large cities, with signals loud enough to be heard everywhere. The concern was not to serve small communities, but provide entertainment and information to the masses.
I must beg to differ with you on this point. Back in he day you had 4 main classes of AM stations, plus a couple of sub-categories. There mainly were the 50kw clear channel Class 1, wide area but shared channel class 2 running 10kw+, regional 5kw class 3 and LOCAL class 4 stations typically 1000day/250 night and of course some daytimers. And by LOCAL I am implying rural/small market because you are correct in one point, the Class 1 & 2 stations were in the Big Cities, Class 3s were in medium sized cities. Although I have no hard data to back up my hypothesis, the demise of the Class 3 & 4 stations can be tied to the consolidatiion and speculation that saddled these small stations with huge debt load, either directly or as contributors to the corporate big pot to shore up other stations the speculators purchased. Or worse, to fund certain lifestyles and/or simply purchase other stations without plowing money back into the stations they did buy. I am sure others will point out that it affects all stations and they would be right, except it affects the smaller markets harder because the have a smaller advertiser base to pull from, and those smaller advertisers are more likely to be affected by the economy than their larger brothers in the big cities. Anectodal stories about successful small stations in small markets do point to the fact that if stations were living within their means they could still survive on ad revenues.
Even now as these people try to unload these stations they are faced with the unpleasant reality of selling them at current realistic market prices and taking the loss, or trying to at least get what they paid for them when the market was hot, which is mostly the case today. There are some going at market rates, you have to watch very carefully for them and be ready to pounce. And be prepared to go to a small market and become the new generation of Mom and Pop operators. Indeed, by doing so you may become the future of AM radio.