Radio: April 24, 2020
Can radio survive the downturn in ad revenues brought on by
COVID-19? Of course it can. Radio itself will survive no matter
what. It is free, easily received on an instrument in more homes
and cars than any other, and when it successfully serves the local
community, cannot be duplicated.
The better question is, can radio in its current form survive
the downturn in revenues brought on by COVID-19? I’d say no. And
InsideMusicRadio’s Jerry Del Colliano agrees.
The problem is that the promised efficiencies of large companies
owning many radio stations never offset the massive debt that these
companies took on in the name of becoming large. Note the goal was
not to become better, just large. They wanted to dominate. To
control the market. It was a “sure thing” gamble … that they lost.
Instead, they undermined their own successful business model that
relied on serving the local audience with top-notch
programming.
Indeed, when the “stuff” hit the fan, they responded by cutting
talent. Many formerly top-rated DJs and successful programmers are
now successfully working for the advertisers they used to promote:
selling real estate, selling cars, or retired.
The companies then undercut their own advertising rates in an
attempt to attract more advertisers, cheapening their own worth.
This required more ads to make up the shortfall, cheapening that
worth even more.
Del Colliano says in his April 20 column that “the coronavirus
and ensuing economic recession has ripped into the fundamentals of
the radio industry,” that radio advertising may be down as much as
65% for the second quarter of this year, and that the drop “is
expected to continue through 2020.” Maybe 2021. “There will be some
casualties,” he says bluntly.
Which ones? He says that Entercom (which owns KRTH 101.1 FM,
KROQ 106.7 FM, The Wave 94.7 and KNX 1070 AM, among others) and
Cumulus (KABC 790 AM) are especially vulnerable. He expects iHeart
to make it, though in a vastly different form as he predicts that
SiriusXM owner Liberty Media is waiting for the right time to
pounce and will take it over. If that is done, though, I expect
massive changes to the iHeart, including the sale of stations.
Is that bad? Temporarily yes, but as stations are sold off to
independent owners and small groups, I predict once more that true
local radio will return, and that will bring the medium back to the
glory it once had.
Hey, I can dream, right?
Good Day
Longtime listeners to KABC may remember listening to Paul
Harvey’s newscasts and commentaries that aired daily. His segments
that gave “the rest … of the story” often included fascinating
historical stories that ended with a twist … and were required
listening for many.
He retired from radio in 2008 and passed away in 2009, but many
recordings of Harvey still exist. WGN/Chicago will begin daily
airing of “The Rest of the Story” on April 27th for a limited time
to gauge interest; if the trial works, the station will continue
and explore the possibility of syndicating the segments around the
country.
I hope it works - I would love to hear them again. I am not sure
which station would carry it, but I could see them back on KABC,
KFI (640 AM) or KNX.
Speaking of KNX
Reader Jimmy Noonan of Anaheim has the idea of the week.
“I relish your radio-related ramblings and suspect you may like
my proposal.
“Wouldn’t this be the perfect time for a resurrection of the
CBS/KNX Drama Hour? It ran for decades at 9:00 p.m. with an amazing
array of classic radio shows: Night Beat, Sgt. Preston of the
Yukon, the Lone Ranger, the Third Man, Jack Benny, Bob Hope
etc.
“Not only is it great entertainment for the entire family to enjoy
together, but it also allows you to create your own visuals to
accompany the spoken word – theater of the mind! “Please use your
immense influence to make it happen. And, no, not on the internet.
We need it on AM or FM radio so it can be a community-wide event
experienced by all simultaneously.”
I think it is an amazing idea. Perfect for our time — who
wouldn’t be better off taking a break from COVID-19 news with a
show from the great Jack Benny? To help convince KNX owner Entercom
to run these, it would be cheap … and bring new listeners back to
radio. In addition to Noonan’s idea, I’d like a return of the CBS
Radio Mystery Theater, the amazing radios drama series that caused
a young me to love radio drama.
Let’s do it.
Otr on Am when you can download a cleaner copy. Now if KNX had pristine copies ...
ReplyDeleteAM radio in LA does't try for a clear signal. Maybe a future artcle. Best sounding stations.