FM, to me, is not an improvement over AM. I work in a building where 100 kw fm's DON'T penetrate at all, yet I can get all local AM stations very well with clean signals at my work station, including a couple of stations 2 hours away. I go outside, the overload is so bad, that on any radio but my G8, I get 3 stations that bleed over the entire band. I walk to and from work and the dropouts I get, plus the scratchy sound makes me not touch the FM dial. Ever heard a less than perfect FM signal? It's not that clean sounding. I can't listen to the one FM station that plays classical here, despite it's 100,000 watt signal, because of the scratchiness when the station fades just enough. I can listen to it just fine on a 1000 watt AM because the signal is steady. I live in a building with an extremely high noise floor, but it doesn't wipe out local reception.
I can't stand treble. I'm very sensitive to it. When I lived in the U.S., if there was an AM/FM simulcast. I chose the AM so I wouldn't have to turn the treble all the way down. This is because of my asbergers, people who have my disability are very sensitive to high pitched sounds..FM sounds tinny and horrible to us.
And Canada has not moved AM to FM. The crtc has no mandate to move existing AM's to FM...that was all a CORPORATE decision, that the CRTC allowed because FM was underused, or in most places, not used at all.
Not all of us can afford cell phones, let alone the data plans. A smartphone costs more than the rent I struggle to pay some months. And I don't want to be connected to one device like most people I see...checking the damn thing every 10 seconds for messages, walking around and not looking where I'm going.
Dismiss what I say all you wish but if I could show each and everyone of you my own experiences with AM vs FM, we'd all be seeing a renaisance of AM listeners.
For all the problems posted here about AM, those are the same things that bother me about FM. Newer electronics cause just as much FM interference and in some cases more than they do on AM.