The death of traditional AM/FM radio was predicted at
today’s Radio Show in Dallas, a conference hosted by the Radio Advertising
Bureau and the National Association of Broadcasters, according to a story by
Carol Marie Cropper at netnewscheck.com.
Michael Harrison |
Michael Harrison, publisher of the industry publications
Talkers and RadioInfo, told an audience of radio executives and industry
insiders that five problems need to be solved — and solved fast — in order to
save “terrestrial” radio (as opposed to streaming Internet radio).
But, he continued, “Do I personally think it’s going to
happen? … No.”
Harrison, who said he has worked in the industry for 45
years, warned that massive debt spawned by industry consolidations, combined
with a cavalier attitude toward old-style music radio programming is killing
the medium.
Stations now don’t even bother to announce the name of the
songs they play — or even, sometimes, to have a disc jockey to announce them.
But music radio is the lynchpin on which other forms, such
as talk radio, hang, he said. “By saving music radio, we’re going to save talk
radio.”
Also, he said, traditional radio is important to our
culture. Without it, he suggested, Internet radio is also in danger. “There’ll
be no model to make it special,” he said, likening a world with only Internet
radio to the appeal of listening to your neighbors put on a concert or your
friends show their videos in the movie theater.
Jeff Smulyan |
After the magazine publisher spoke, Jeffrey Smulyan,
chairman of Emmis Communications, which owns stations in Los Angeles and New
York, pointed out another problem — and possible solution.
Smartphones usually have built in radio, but it is not
activated on U.S. devices, Smulyan said. A Congressional mandate could change
that, he said, helping to keep free broadcast radio available, and continuing
its public service role.
But, Smulyan said, large phone companies such as AT&T
and Verizon have a lot of lobbyists to work against such a mandate.
According to Harrison, one of the first radio industry
“dragons” to slay is its “smothering debt. The business plan at some companies
now is simply to find new sources of debt to stay in business,” he said.
Family-owned stations that didn’t rack up debt to buy others
are doing better, he said, suggesting that stations hobbled by massive debt be
cleared to make room for new groups with fresh capital and a commitment to
quality broadcasting.
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