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On Sep 3, 6:44 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Steve" wrote in message oups.com... On Sep 3, 3:58 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: And the AM issue is one of quality, not of listeners per se. FM has solid listening, over 95% usage per week, from age 12 up to over 65. What we have here is a challenge to improve AM quality, and the only way is a system that is compatible with FM digital. And that is HD.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If you have the data, why won't you read it and take it to heart? You can't breathe new life into the horse-drawn carriage by putting shiny new wheels on it. I appreciate that you probably have an emotional investment in AM that makes it hard to acknowledge the challenges it faces, but it will be easier to confront the facts now than later. There are 430 AM stations billing over $1,000,000 a year, and ten billing over $33 million. 2523 AMs are in the top 10 in billing in the rated markets. 15 of the top 50 billing stations in America are AM. AM is not dead yet, but the number of viable stations is low; all of those high billing 15 stations are stations that fully cover their markets, although not all are 50 kw clear channel stations. You're damned straight it's low, and it will get lower if you refuse to face reality. AM must modernize, and I don't mean a quick, digital paint job...I mean a real overhaul. Otherwise you will soon be out of a job. The problem is that the programming on those stations works, but the appeal to the generations that grew up on FM is lessened by the quality of AM sound. Put the same format on FM, and it literally explodes in younger demos. The answer is to fixs the sound, not to give up on billions of dollars in assets and many tens of thousands of jobs. This is where you talk yourself into believing that the problems confronting AM are not real. This is really where you need to work. The problems facing you now are serious, and urgent. You must face them and deal with them. You must modernize. Seriously, I wish things were different. I wish I could convince young people not to buy ipods or iphones. I wish I could convince them to stay away from myspace and facebook, but I can't. No one can. The sooner you face this fact that better. Various studies show that iPod users are greater consumers of radio than non-users of iPods. The other things you mention are no different than the completion from 45 rpm records, 8 Tracks, cassettes, video games, etc. There are lots of entertainment choices, and always have been. In the 50's, TV was going to kill radio... it just made radio change for the better. HD is one of the changes that could improve AM radio; it certainly opens up many opportunities for FMs to provide more formats and services in better quality. Thus speaks David "Pollyanna" Eduardo. Fine. Just let AM go one just as it always has. Let the audience continue aging while not attracting any new blood, and see where it gets you. Soon you'll be running infomercials about cemetery plots. |
#2
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![]() Steve wrote: On Sep 3, 6:44 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: "Steve" wrote in message oups.com... On Sep 3, 3:58 pm, "David Eduardo" wrote: And the AM issue is one of quality, not of listeners per se. FM has solid listening, over 95% usage per week, from age 12 up to over 65. What we have here is a challenge to improve AM quality, and the only way is a system that is compatible with FM digital. And that is HD.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - If you have the data, why won't you read it and take it to heart? You can't breathe new life into the horse-drawn carriage by putting shiny new wheels on it. I appreciate that you probably have an emotional investment in AM that makes it hard to acknowledge the challenges it faces, but it will be easier to confront the facts now than later. There are 430 AM stations billing over $1,000,000 a year, and ten billing over $33 million. 2523 AMs are in the top 10 in billing in the rated markets. 15 of the top 50 billing stations in America are AM. AM is not dead yet, but the number of viable stations is low; all of those high billing 15 stations are stations that fully cover their markets, although not all are 50 kw clear channel stations. You're damned straight it's low, and it will get lower if you refuse to face reality. AM must modernize, and I don't mean a quick, digital paint job...I mean a real overhaul. Otherwise you will soon be out of a job. The problem is that the programming on those stations works, but the appeal to the generations that grew up on FM is lessened by the quality of AM sound. Put the same format on FM, and it literally explodes in younger demos. The answer is to fixs the sound, not to give up on billions of dollars in assets and many tens of thousands of jobs. This is where you talk yourself into believing that the problems confronting AM are not real. This is really where you need to work. The problems facing you now are serious, and urgent. You must face them and deal with them. You must modernize. Seriously, I wish things were different. I wish I could convince young people not to buy ipods or iphones. I wish I could convince them to stay away from myspace and facebook, but I can't. No one can. The sooner you face this fact that better. Various studies show that iPod users are greater consumers of radio than non-users of iPods. The other things you mention are no different than the completion from 45 rpm records, 8 Tracks, cassettes, video games, etc. There are lots of entertainment choices, and always have been. In the 50's, TV was going to kill radio... it just made radio change for the better. HD is one of the changes that could improve AM radio; it certainly opens up many opportunities for FMs to provide more formats and services in better quality. Thus speaks David "Pollyanna" Eduardo. Fine. Just let AM go one just as it always has. Let the audience continue aging while not attracting any new blood, and see where it gets you. Soon you'll be running infomercials about cemetery plots. Cemetary plots... used to be part of the Gleason family business! |
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