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WABC / Geraldo

Actually the public stations also have older audiences, not younger. Which is why commercial stations aren't trying to copy what they do.

I don't have access to Nielsen's data, but anecdotally I'd propose that if you pull a young demographic, say Adults 18-34, you'll find numerous markets on the East Coast where the public talker out-rates the conservative talker. NPR talk stations tend to have a lot of very old listeners in their 60s to the grave, but also a healthy "next generation" of listeners in their 20s and 30s who tend to be college-educated professionals.

As opposed to conservative talk, which even conservative young people don't find entertaining.
 
NPR talk stations tend to have a lot of very old listeners in their 60s to the grave, but also a healthy "next generation" of listeners in their 20s and 30s who tend to be college-educated professionals.

It depends on the station. But NPR's own demographic data says that the audience for their news shows is older. Which is why a few years ago, they attempted to create news shows aimed at younger audiences. The experiment failed and the shows were canceled. On the other hand, a station like WXPN in Philadelphia, which mainly plays world music, has a younger audience.
 
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