Let's get serious for a second.If there was a deep pocketed philanthropist. Maybe he could take over the station and program it for local talk shows other times playing music from the 50s and 60s if someone wanted to they could do a 60s 70s music show. Politicians could buy time on the station. They could be a good successful station if someone would deep pockets bought it and could finance it now the person who owns the station is struggling with it radio had a real golden age in the 80s WPLJ/ WHTZ Z100 WNEW/WAPP. THOSE ARE GREAT YEARS, WCBS FM
BUT 2005 OR SO THINGS STARTED NOT TO GET THAT GREAT FOR RADIO. IT HELD ON FOR A LITTLE WHILE LONGER. IT’LL STILL HAVE A PLACE FM RADIO STILL PLENTY OF STATIONS DOING WELL ENOUGH BUT NOT LIKE IT WAS IN THE 80S OR CERTAINLY THE 60S AND 70S.
Radio has a number of problems.
The biggest problem is that radio is trying to evolve to the best of its abilities in a very challenging environment.
Listeners like you have not. This is not meant as an insult. You want radio to sound like Musicradio77 or top 40 from the 80s. That "nostalgic sound" is a turnoff to younger ears.
Radio stations don't want to program to you because you are not a listener that most advertisers want to reach. Again, not meant to be an insult. So, to you, radio sounds awful. You can sit here and blame conglomerates, bean counters, suits, or whatever you want to call them, but it's not their fault that other vehicles came along and took away radio's advertising dollars.
So, what can radio do? It can fight for whatever advertising dollars are available to them by trying to deliver the listeners advertisers want to reach in the most efficient (cheap) way possible. Not a pretty picture, but it is what it is. It's not bad programming that drove advertising away, it's the reduction in ad spending on radio that caused what you hear today (putting aside the death of the AM band).
