As someone who's debated this here before, I've come to similar conclusions. There's the entertainment factor and there's the politics.Centrists are very spread out, some are liberal socially and conservative economically, while others are the opposite. And there is more division among liberals than ultra-conservatives as the efforts at building left leaning talk stations and even a network have shown.
(Those who would disagree with my analysis of liberals and the failure of the liberal talk web will say that the hosts sounded like campaigners instead of entertainers; too much passion for the cause and not enough fun in each show).
I recently spent some time listening to Civic Media, a Wisconsin network that programs a full slate of what some would call centrist and others would call liberal shows. It wasn't "bad" - it was technically proficient, wasn't nasty or adversarial per se. But it was just sort of "there." It was polite people talking. It didn't elicit much emotion in me either way. I could nod and agree with some of it, but there wasn't something where I had to tune back in.
Now, I think a lot of the right wing shows have elevated to a level of nastiness and bad faith arguing I don't appreciate either. But regardless of how "liberal" NPR may be, it's so dry to me I don't spend much time with it. I grew up hearing talk show hosts who had bigger personalities. That's what Rush did understand because he'd been a Top 40 DJ. He got that it was a show, and had entertainment elements. The Daily Show and Colbert Report understood that too on television.
Let's just say generically I'm a "liberal" - regardless of nuance, or subjectivity of political labels. At this point I've probably got reasons, intellectually and personally, why I believe what I believe and vote the way I vote. I'm not looking for an academic experience, the lecture. If I'm tuning in, spending my time with a commercial station, I want to be entertained. I want passion, humor, personality. It's why I have loved radio. You don't have to be nasty or angry, but entertain me. Make me feel something beyond intellectual exhaustion at the news cycle. Find the absurdity, present a personal story, talk to a caller or about a text that tells a story about how DOGE impacted their life or their family, do a montage of Trump's speech flubs and we'll have a laugh about it, talk about the long-shot progressive New York City mayoral candidate that's using social media and direct conversations with inner city Trump voters and bold policy proposals to attempt to change politics, and then talk about why those proposals could or wouldn't work in language working people can understand. Have some energy. You know what you believe, make it entertaining. Right-wing hosts don't have this crisis of confidence or sound insecure in their beliefs or water them down and they say some things at times, that are absolutely awful. Don't be a "shock jock" but don't worry about being "PC." Your opponents sure don't.
That would be my message to a hypothetical "liberal" talk show host.
