Radio abandoned news a decade or more ago. It's no longer a reliable news source.
Pandora, Apple, and Google realize it would take a major expenditure of resources to try to compete with local content, so they simply compete with recording companies for music distribution. They offer national content because they don't have much choice.
Sirius/XM's profit margin is 13.34%. That's considerably lower than the average for radio stations.
Not everybody has - or uses - a smart phone. It's a danger on the highways for traffic and weather reports - and illegal to use it in the car for data while driving in many states. Radio still works, and is relied on by the majority of drivers who don't want to mess with a smart phone while driving.
You still haven't addressed how you're going to replace the revenue from local advertisers if radio relies on apps, Apple, Google, and Pandora. Local stations still bring in 85% of the revenue in the industry. Distribution methods may eventually change, but you'll have to disenfranchise a lot of people who can't afford a data plan if you abandon towers and transmitters. And you'll lose people who have to search for and program in stations that they'd normally get by hitting "Seek" on their car radio, and assign a button if they decid that they like it.
Radio is easy, effective, caters to local markets, and brings in local revenue when corporate hires the right people and doesn't interfere. It would be nice if some of that profit stayed in the market instead of lining the pockets of out-of-towners, but that ship sailed with the Communications Act of 1996.
David, you need to look at a rating book. Live and mostly local handily beats canned in mid-days in Buffalo/Niagara Falls.
But, I know, both you and TheBigA both know this market better than the people who live here. As I say, that's the typical corporate attitude. Thanks for your "help".