badjef said:
The reason is clear.
A radio station is finding it harder and harder to "sell" the station to prospective
advertisers when the ears are not listening. With MP3's, iheartradio, Pandora (aptly
named), satellite, and who else knows what's next, Rock is the format that is the lastest
victim. In New York, Philly, and Orlando, what market is next?
I have my thoughts, your guess is as good as mine, but it will happen.
AM's will become infomercials and Religious for awhile while Sports and News/Talk
migrate to the FM. There is currently no new "Rush" on the horizon that will take either
band to the next level. On-line will be getting easier and more dependable with smaller
things that resemble "radios".
That is until the government goes too far and orders a shutdown-type of an event.
There are bills now in Congress being discussed dealing with a "switch" for the internet.
It only takes one event and people will someday wish they had their radio back.
Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
So the way to get people intrested in radio is for the technology to have an online
transmitter that can get online stations to all the places radio can. Then the government
regulates it and shuts it down so that mainstream radio will be the only alternative. They
should push that fact on one of those "I heart radio" ads.
Also the good stuff I said before about JRR. Screw that, last Friday I had a 20 minute
drive to work, and only heard one half of a Metallica song, the rest was just generic DJ
yammering about wacky news stories. Crappy DJ's are more bearable when you at least
have an alternative to swtch to until it ends.
But I guess that's what we have now. 96.5 is just a bunch of talking heads intent on
telling everyone about how much they hate Obama so much.