Very true...there's a lot of stations out there that are totally irrelevant in their communities.
Huh?!?! What does that have to do with what I said? I pointed out that nowadays, the people who live in small towns tend to not support the businesses in their small towns, preferring to deal with big national discount chains, even if they have to drive some distance away. I said nothing about whether or not those businesses were relevant to their communities or not.
If a local grocery store owner tries his best, does all he can do to appeal to the people in his community, and they still would rather hop in the car and head down the interstate to Wal-Mart, what's the local grocer to do? If the guy who owns the local hardware store finds that the local people prefer to drive down the interstate to the big Home Depot or Lowes, what's the local hardware store guy to do? If the guy who runs the local restaurant finds that the local people would rather take a ride a few exits down the interstate to where there's an Applebee's, a Lone Star Steak House, and three of four other big chain restaurants when they eat out, what's he to do?
My point was that if people won't support other local businesses just because they are local, why would they support a local radio station that wasn't playing what they wanted to hear? And based on what people tune in to, what they want to hear seems to be their favorite music format.
I submit that as long as people in the 21st century don't seem to care about their "local community", it doesn't matter how hard a small-town radio station operator tries to be "relevant" to them. If the listeners don't care, then they don't care. No broadcaster is going to force the people in a small town to change from identifying themselves with the nearby large town instead of the little hamlet where they live.
Allegheny and Birmingham used to be separate small towns, now they are neighborhoods in Pittsburgh called "Noorthside" and "Southside". Canonsburg used to be a small town, now it's a neighborhood in Pittsburgh. Every year, the distance at which the residents of small towns change from seeing themselves as living in independent small towns to people living in a neighborhood of the closest big town increases.
Wheeling is at the point where the spreading ripples are starting to reach it. Steubenville has already surrendered. The Chamber of Commerce of Steubenville is already marketing the town as "the 'Burb of the 'Burgh", and positioning it as just another neighborhood in the Greater Pittsburgh Area. Listen to their radio commercials or visit their website.
You want to be "relevant" to the people who live in a small town? Then the first thing you have to do is to determine how the people who live in a small town think of themselves, and what they expect from their small town. If the people who live in a small town identify with the big city nearby, and see their small town as just another neighborhood in that big city, you're not going to change their perceptions.