MattParker said:
In radio at it's peak, personalities were the product.
The listeners were and are the product sold to advertisers. The product is what you sell to the person paying the cash.
MattParker said:
Should radio and radio personalities sound the same as thirty years ago? Not necessarily. But the basic principles of personality-driven radio still apply.
Not if a larger piece of the audience doesn’t prefer that style.
MattParker said:
Radio was at its most successful when personalities were king.
Or was it when “shows” (be it dramas, comedy, etc.) was king?
That issue aside, you’re talking about a time when the kind of technology that exists today wasn’t so much a glimmer in a nerd’s eye. When you’re pretty much the only choice, um, yeah, you’re going to be king.
MattParker said:
Fewer people listen now and they don't listen as long. However you want to define "quality," clearly the audience is not satisfied.
Yet again conveniently ignoring the whole big world out there. Lifestyle changes, technology changes, changes in the rest of the media. It doesn’t happen in a vacuum.
MattParker said:
Listeners don't leave because they are drawn away; they leave because they are driven away.
No, they leave for a multitude of reasons. In a world where it’s possible to get essentially anything you want at the touch of a button with effectively no delay, those options become better. A broadcast stream can’t match that, and it’s inevitable that people will wander away because they’re attracted to what’s new, not exclusively because they suddenly develop an aversion to what existed before.
Satisfied listeners don't seek other options. Did people stop listening to soap operas on the radio because TV was available (and better) or because radio stopped offering soap operas? In Britain, BBC Radio 4 still offers dramas, sitcoms, game shows and soaps and they have a substantial following. More of their population listens to radio, they listen longer and radio still has buzz.
MattParker said:
Nor did people did not stop using the horse and buggy . They substituted internal combustion engines for horses. The same companies which made horseless carriages had made the buggies.
So if Clear Channel made the iPod—exactly as we know it now—it wouldn’t be a case of people abandoning radio?
How about this—maybe they didn’t abandon “radio” at all. Maybe it was never ABOUT radio. Maybe radio just happened to have a nice long period where it was the most effective form of music distribution to the general public. People flocked to it for the music (or other programming, take your pick). It was a means to an end. Now a better means to said end exists; they simply followed the technology to a new device/method for obtaining music et al, just as you suggest they “didn’t abandon the horse and buggy.”