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On Sep 3, 12:59 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message ups.com... On Sep 3, 12:44 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: "Steve" wrote in message oups.com... Sounds like you've finally matured a bit and now see the merits of FM and the folly of HD-AM. Congratulations. Quite the contrary. It has been known by broadcasters for some time that there is no way to get any significant number of listeners under 55 to tune to AM, and the average age of AM listeners is increasing each year as a consequence. Some AMs have moved to FM. Others are simulcasting. Others have no FM to move to, and are slowly losing revenue. Those AMs have, perhaps, some chance to survive via HD. Otherwise, AM will be pretty much a thing of the past and only relevant or viable for very niche formats or in some rural areas where there are no local FMs. Of course, this is not an immediate do or die type thing; HD can develop over the next few years and AMs can attempt to restore some interest among under-55s via the improved quality. Lol. You are such a throw back. You will never lure young people away their iPods, their cellphones and their myspace pages. I suggest you quickly return your head to it's usual, sandy resting place. You're fighting a battle that was lost twenty years ago. In the case of AM news and talk programming, the potential audience is almost entirely 35 and over; AM is losing the 35-50 year olds due to the dreadful sound quality, ambient noise levels in big cities, directional AMs that "go away" at night in many parts of metros, etc. These listeners will use the news and talk formats if delivered in a better quality... FM or HD. As to youth, 96% of 12-24 year olds use radio. Less than before? Yes. But radio is still a very viable means to reach young adult demographics.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yeah, you keep dreaming. I hear that record albums are also going to make a comeback. lol |
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