While it may be too early to write AM radio's obituary, there are signs that the patient is in need of intensive care. I love AM radio. There's a certain sound. You know what i'm talkin; about... that Big 8 processing. There's the heritage... Armstrong, Neaverth, Reynolds, Benny, Kaye... And there's a certain desperation that leads to what it can be called "compelling" and "creative" when the right hands shape and nurture an AM station.
All this having been said, I wonder what the exit strategy is for those who own and operate AM stations? Just like that house in East Buffalo, Riverside, or even Lancaster: Who's gonna buy it next? Certainly, guys like Dick Greene, Dan Fischer, Lou Schriver and Bob Savage are believers who write checks backed by their sweat and smarts. They're to be applauded for their efforts and faith. Still, I wonder what the next five years will bring, let alone the next ten years. Who's gonna buy that stick when these guys retire or worse, the station becomes part of an estate?
I was on another (patented) road trip last week and listened extensively to AM radio. There's more "bad" than "good" on the AM band. Indeed, some might argue the FM band as well, but I don't want to sound like a "between jobs" malcontent ranting about radio. There's enough good radio out there to satisfy the people who seem satisfied with the product offered by their favorite stations.
Even with 10k band pass or AM stereo, AM radio isn't the place where lower demos go; well, perhaps for sports talk or Brad Riter's afternoon show on WECK. But even baby boomers, largely as a result of FM's impact in the late 60s and 70s, get what they need on FM (if not CDs, mp3s or ipods.) It's not out of arrogance that I ask, "Where does AM go from here?" If I won the lottery tomorrow (highly improbable), I wonder if I'd buy an AM station. Much as I love the medium, I wonder if I'd buy an FM station?
There is however, a stretch of lakefront in Skaneateles of which I'm particularly fond...