firepoint525 said:
One or two consolidation-type changes would likely pass by the listener unnoticed, but the cumulative effect of ALL the changes IS noticeable. Even by people who are NOT "radiophiles" like all of us. I've even seen it discussed on non-radio message boards.
There are a lot of myths perpetuated on message boards. One has to do with the number of commercials. I've read all kinds of numbers about commercials on message boards, and the facts don't bear them out. But people believe what they want to believe, so they feel there are too many commercials. The fact is that, for the most part, commercial load hasn't increased, and in many places it's gone down. The truth is that for some people, any commercials are too many. But you have to pay the bills somehow.
The other issue has to do with change. You refer to “consolidation-type changes.” But there have been lots of changes that have nothing to do with consolidation. I say that because they’re also being made at non-consolidated and non-commercial stations. But people associate them with consolidation, which is a bad word these days, so it all gets a bad rap.
The most important issue, and you didn’t mention this, is competition. There are lots of other types of media competing with radio now. None of it existed ten years ago. Lots of it is done with fewer employees, and less attention to quality that traditional radio.
firepoint525 said:
Even listening to a competitor's station, even if just for entertainment, won't provide much relief from "sameness" and mediocrity, because nearly all stations all across the dial sound pretty much the same nowadays.
First of all, you can’t generalize about what radio executives listen to. I know that several top CEOs listen, because their employees have told me they’ve heard from the boss while doing their show, usually to complain. If you’re on the air, getting a call from the boss is not something to look forward to.
Second of all, obviously the CEOs live in NY, and can’t listen to every local station. That’s not a new problem. Companies have been owning stations away from their home office since the 1920s.
But the real issue is your comment about “sameness and mediocrity.” That’s a subjective comment. Some people like same old same old. They want their French fries to taste the same regardless of where they are. I’ve read where Home Depot customers complained when stores changed their layouts.
As fore mediocrity, once again, that’s subjective. I think a lot of the music is pretty mediocre, but that’s just the music being made today. When I see what people are attracted to, either on the web or on TV, quality doesn’t seem to be the determining factor.
Personally, with all the choices on the radio, there’s no reason to complain. If you don’t like the corporate stations, tune in the public stations. If you don’t like them, there’s bound to be a non-corporate station in the market. They may not play the exact music you want, but you have to decide what you want, and find it. The public wants everyone else to change to suit them, and that’s not how mass media works.