Goldie Wilson said:
mavsfan4ever said:
I subscribe to that website that lets you listen to all shows at any time. It basically records all shows. And I never listen to the radio any more. The digital rights of the show would just give that option to a much larger audience.
I could see D&J having a big issue with this. There's already a third-party paid site that monetizes their full show podcasts. Why couldn't the Ticket or D&J provide this directly and cut out the middle man.
Agreed but the website I'm referring to has a very small user base. Even most of the huge P1s on this thread don't know about it. I didn't know about it until a couple years ago.
I'm just pointing out that if the Ticket/Cumulus decided to provide a service like that, then the Ticket/Cumulus would reap the benefits, not D&J. There is no way that Cumulus is going to allow D&J to provide that service and retain all profit from that service when it would take away listeners from the radio station which is currently where Cumulus makes its profit. So even if the Ticket/Cumulus agreed to provide that service, there would be no extra money in D&J's pocket. I don't think they are arguing that they want Cumulus to promote their digital content. They want the money that comes from the digital content. And that's never going to happen imo (perhaps a middle ground would be that they get a very small cut).
Even though the user base of the service I'm referring to is extremely small, that's because they do no marketing and aren't really trying to make a profit. The user base could be fairly large if The Ticket or D&J promoted it. But again, that would take away listeners and profits from the radio station. Plus, Cumulus may think that they will pivot to that service in the future, when radio viewership has dwindled even lower, and if that's the case then that's another reason why they won't give those rights to D&J.