John: Your question is a little bit like asking: If my older brother had never been born, how would my life have been different?
If Walmart didn't exist, could I start a retail store that ONLY sells mops and brooms. (You know... a specialty store like DAN'S FANS or BATTERIES PLUS, etc) I can hear someone crying the blues: I could have made a good living selling brooms and mops if Walmart had not happened.
I regular hear people say: The conservatives have commercial radio. The liberals have NPR. Anyone who says that has a warped, myopic understanding of who the liberals are. I take the position that conservatives assume anyone who disagrees with them is by definition a liberal. Real, ugly-to-the-bone liberals feel the same way. If you don't agree with them, you are a conservative.
Most people have never met a "Real, ugly-to-the-bone liberal", have never sat down to try to have a logical conversation with them, never tried to engage them in some informal debate.
In answer to your question I offer TWO versions:
- 1. True hard-core liberalism will NEVER be a commercial success on radio, and will never DOMINATE NPR.
- 2. Even the more modest... call them "main stream liberals" if you like... may never make up a truly winning audience in the same way conservatives do. (yes, I am aware there are some SUCCESSFUL stations carrying programming that leans to the left. In today's implementation of those terms, conservatives require regimentation and unanimous support and voting on issues. Liberals are more like cats. (Ever heard the term: Like trying to herd cats? ) Conservatives appear to make a viable radio audience because they like to have their loyal obedience to the party line affirmed. Liberals appear to fail the viability test because they are not as interested in affirmation of their adherence to doctrinal purity.
(This same dynamic plays itself out in the affairs of religious organizations, denominations and churches who get into struggles over conservative versus liberal. You can make money publishing books for the conservatives of a religious group, but go broke trying to sell books to liberals of the same religious group.)
For the sake of discussion, let me take the position that the NPR audience is primarily a liberal group. I will still argue that the primary audience for a COMMERCIAL liberal station would be a whole different clan and there would not be a head-on competition between NPR and Commercial for audience.