Question: Does being conservative mean hating local radio?
No, it means hating third-rate, semi-pro, minor league radio.
Then you must by that definition hate Mark Levin, Rusty Humphries, and anybody who's on a Salem station.
No being conservative doesn't mean hating local talk radio. Just like with television, not much local programming there, why are you not complaining about the lack of local yokel shows on TV?
For the second half of the 20th century, radio was a local medium. Market forces didn't change that. Consolidation created a false economy of scale. The average large market talk station in the mid-90's had Rush surrounded by a day full of local hosts.
Let's leave it to the pointy heads like the Dickey brothers and Ed Atsinger with their lack of localism and cookie-cutter syndicrap that survives economically despite low ratings and does nothing but undermine the longterm future of radio.
Low ratings? Rush has the #1 radio show of all time.
My comments are specifically directed to Cumulus, whose conservative talk launches in Houston, Indianapolis and Cincinnati have been fiascoes, and which underperforms in small markets where it's lucky enough to have Rush -- mainly because it cheats the "local" aspect of the mosaic. Atsinger of course is with Salem, and their poor performance with an all-conservative lineup is well documented.
No being conservative doesn't mean hating local talk radio. Just like with television, not much local programming there, why are you not complaining about the lack of local yokel shows on TV?
If it got back to the same level of localism as TV, it would be an improvement. Right now local radio doesn't have
as much localism as television -- many markets have no local news, no local talk outside of morning drive. Most network-affiliated TV stations have two to four hours of local news in the morning, an hour at midday, and a couple of hours in the late afternoon and evening.
Radio is a less expensive medium, therefore it can and should be more local, as local programming is easier and less costly to produce than a local TV show. That was the case from the takeover of television in the fifties to the dereg of the 80's and 90's. I still think that a locally-focused talker, conservative or liberal, that has local talent in prime dayparts and promotes itself heavily, as did the Jacor stations in the 80's, can make a splash. Most of the heritage talkers of today are living off the fumes of their previous local orientation. Rush wins in part because he is on most of those heritage stations.
Most listeners do not have a choice. They don't have a local show on their talk radio station. They never got the chance to choose to tune out Air America, because it was never on in many markets, including:
Houston, Tampa, Orlando, Milwaukee, Nashville, Charlotte, Louisville, Indianapolis, Las Vegas, Hartford, Syracuse, Omaha, and Oklahoma City, to name a few.