>>Liberals already have their talk radio, and the NPR product is well done. AA is not.
Add to that the fact that most talk radio listeners are older, and older folks may have drifted to the right.
Yes, some "college age activists" and old hippies might tune in, but the younger audience that leans left
might be too busy listening to their I-pods or WFNX, WBCN, WAAF, etc. (And..are college students included
in ratings? If not, that could explain AAR's weak numbers.) Or WBUR if they're interested in news/talk.
With Clear Channel cost-cutting it could be bad news for their prog-talkers--even the ones who go strictly
syndie. They may go to something more profitable like sports...the prog-talker in Binghamton NY
(actually a Citadel station) just did, though, granted it was a weak signal (Fybush: "As of Monday, WYOS joins ESPN Radio")