I admit, I've skipped a couple pages of this back and forth, but would like to answer this with a quote on the first page from the esteemed Michael Hagerty:Good Lord. What does any of this history or old-timer preferences have to do with Gen-Z not listening to the radio?
Attempting to forestall the inevitable misunderstandings: Gen Z are currently 13 to 27 years old. That means the youngest third of the generation isn't in a salable demo.
The problem is, in five years, the entire generation will be 18-32 and make up the overhwelming majority of the 18-34 demo.
There it is. Back when I was doing CHR, it was understood that you weren't just playing what the 18-34 demo wanted, but also serving those who would become a part of that demo. No, you couldn't sell your massive teen numbers that the night jock garnered by name-checking high schools every night or hosting teen night at some venue, but in five years, those kids would be in the demo and be "salable." I'm sure we've all had meetings where the LSM complains that the station is catering to teens too much at night because "they're not going to buy a car from one of my clients," but we understood that unless we turned them into listeners then, we'd have a much harder time winning them over 5 or 10 years down the road.
And that was back before Spotify and You Tube.
I've said it before and I'll say it again...the Gen Z people I work with at my tech job have no use for radio. When I mention what I used to do, I get something like "cool, my mom/dad used to listen to the radio."
As Mr. Hagerty said, that entire generation will make up the overwhelming majority of the 18-34 demo, and not only are they already gone, the generation that follows them also is less likely to have any use for radio.