AM is in danger of dying for no good reason
- My students can barely name an FM station, frequency or type of programming on the air and have no idea what AM radio is – and I’m talking about my USC students years ago as well as NYU music business students today indicating a death watch for AM among young people.
- AM operators have been failed by the FCC and most importantly their lobby group the NAB which has talked a good game but left thousands of AM stations vulnerable and on life support.
- If they can’t attract audiences younger than 60, AM will be all but gone in a few more years but there is an answer – provide incentives for consolidators who already have too many stations to run to do long-term leases to AM operators.
Read the full article here
Yesterday: NPR and EMF Putting on a Clinic for Consolidators
Samples here
Email tips to Jerry confidentially
Recent Posts
- What iHeart Isn’t Saying
- “Pausing” Radio Stations
- Radio’s Smoking Gun
- Leadership Vacuum Backfiring at Saga
- Inside the Beasley 111% Stock Surge
- Spotify’s Siphoning Local Radio Dollars
- The Distracted Listening Epidemic
- Audacy’s U-Turn
- Warshaw Isn’t Negotiating with Cumulus BUT…
- Is iHeartMedia Cutting the Workforce?


