BenchMarks: Dial Tone
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There was a time when the pulse of a city wasn’t found on a social media feed, but at a specific frequency on the AM dial. It was the "water cooler" of the airwaves—a place where frantic callers, gravel-voiced hosts, and local legends debated the home team until the sun went down. But across America, those signals are fading into static.
In this investigative episode of BenchMarks, Nick Morgasen explores "Dial Tone," the slow collapse of local sports radio culture. We revisit the golden age of giants like San Diego's XTRA Sports 690, the "Mighty 690" that blasted its 77,000-watt signal across the West Coast, and New York’s WFAN 660, the blueprint for the 24/7 sports talk format.
Morgasen investigates the "Syndication Plague"—the corporate consolidation that has replaced local voices with generic national feeds originating from thousands of miles away. We examine the economic pressures of the podcasting boom and the rise of digital "echo chambers" that have stripped sports of their local flavor. Beyond the balance sheets, we look at the loss of community identity: what happens to a fan base when there is no longer a shared space to grieve a loss or celebrate a win together?
Dial Tone is a eulogy for the local host and an urgent question about the future of sports media: In an era of global connectivity, are we becoming more disconnected from our own backyards?
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