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To: Norm Lenhart
Yes...and maybe some prog talk fans can hear those shows online or on their smart phones, or NPR.

Prog talk still isn't on a fulltime Boston station at this point but maybe our future secretary of state could change that--after all he got many millions of dollars via his second wife's first husband's trust fund (pass the ketchup).


Teresa Heinz Ketchup, er Kerry, with her first hubby

9 posted on 12/17/2012 7:23:49 AM PST by raccoonradio
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To: raccoonradio

JohnDavis wrote on a radio messageboard:
>>>>Political talk is going the way of the dinosaur, regardless of the left-right spectrum. How much money does Salem shovel into getting a 0.6 with its hosts? How long can they afford to do that?
Sports makes money. That’s why everyone is getting on that train. Once they’ve oversaturated the market with too many third rate network shows, they’ll find something else. But let’s face it, the future of AM is brokered ethnic or turning in the license and selling the tower site. The real estate is worth more than most AM stations. As for progressive talk, the more interesting shows aren’t on the radio, they’re podcasts. Some are even worth paying for.

My response:
Agreed. Selling the tower site—it’s like the old days when the drive in theatres went away and the land was sold to developers to put up shopping malls. (And I don’t know if
prog talk shows are really interested but some like them—via podcast. I was at work and saw a woman listening to something on her smartphone—the screen read “Alex Jones
Podcast”).

Still some conservative talk can work...but libtalk is fast shrinking...blame Bain and Romney!


11 posted on 12/17/2012 7:28:49 AM PST by raccoonradio
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