I might occasionally briefly tune in WWV & WWVH for a couple minutes, if that. Otherwise, not much. I'm not totally against the religious broadcasters, btw, except when what they preach is in error according to the Bible (which I believe is the majority). I won't give examples, as A - this isn't a religious-themed board & this isn't the place for me to offend with what I'd say, and B - I almost never listen, so don't really know what they preach.
So I thought my Tecsuns were stone deaf on SW, but apparently it must be everyone shutting down their transmitters. I had expected every single allocated broadcast & ham frequency to be occupied whenever the ionosphere is active for that band with a signal of a quality that ordinary people in a metro like L.A. would listen, with quite a few even having triple or quad co-channel interference, under normal operating conditions. As for hams, I would probably expect that during a pileup or contest, each frequency would be so congested as to make a mediumwave graveyard in the eastern US today seem, in comparison, like an east-coast clear channel was on the west coast & in AK & HI in the 1930s.
And right now, one of the aforementioned Tecsuns, my PL-398mp, really IS deaf on SW (and supposed to be on FM), courtesy of my careless snapping off of the antenna at the base, so I've unscrewed & removed the remains for now.
Explain this one, though. Although my PL-398mp currently has no FM antenna, I still get a "55 dBu" signal from 89.5 KPBS, whose 2.7kW ERP, 550m HAAT, 794m AMSL is 7.02km, 171.63° from me. (My altitude is approx. 178..6 meters.) I would expect with no antenna I couldn't detect anything unless I was, for example, touching WMC's transmitter? With the antenna fully extended, though, I hardly ever remember seeing much over 68 to 70 dBu, if ever. I do have a couple local AMs that hit 80, though - 1170 KCBQ (50kW, 9.3mi, 7°) is ~80-81 daytime, and 760 KFMB (50kW, 7.3mi, 321°) is ~81-82 nighttime. Also before the whip broke, I was in rural nw VA last month, checking the SW bands around midnight, and briefly saw a signal flash 97 dBu, acompanied with audible clipping distortion. (I would have expected, before so many broadcasters shut down, that under normal conditions, every allocated frequency would almost constantly be over 90 dBu as indicated on the Tecsun when it had a working antenna, with even the deepest fades never dipping below 80 dBu.)