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For fans of the old-time radio program "A Prairie Home Companion," recent news about Garrison Keillor marks the end of a historic run. This coming Saturday's broadcast from the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles will be his last. He talks with Jane Pauley.
"Car Talk" guys, hosts Ray and Tom Magliozzi, broadcast ~1,200 episodes (NPR)
Ira Glass: Each episode of "This American Life" averages 2.5 million downloads--more than the radio show’s 2.2 million weekly listeners. Launched: 1999(Larry Busacca/Getty Images).
"2 Dope Queens," comedienne hosts Phoebe Robinson and Jessica Williams, hit #1 on the iTunes podcast chart shortly after their debut. Launched: 2016(Mindy Tucker)
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With both its stars and audience aging, NPR is struggling to adapt to the digital age: "The most innovative people are doing podcasts"
"Prairie Home Companion" tops 3 million
Elsewhere on the dial, “Car Talk” ranks near the top of National Public Radio’s ratings even though co-host Tom Magliozzi died at age 77 nearly two years ago—his jovial cackle still echoing in “best of” versions of the show on more than 600 stations nationwide.
Diane Rehm, 2.4 million listeners (S. Voss)
Later this year, Washington talk-show doyenne Diane Rehm, 79, who boasts one of NPR’s 10 largest weekly audiences, will end more than three decades on the air.
Garrison Keillor [says his show went] from 12 people at the host’s first "A Prairie Home Companion" broadcast, the weekly audience now tops 3 million. Launched: 1974 (David Joles/Minneapolis Star Tribune/Zuma Press).
(Stephen Webster)
“We’ve known that the so-called old guard would eventually have to retire,” said Mike Savage, general manager of public-radio station WBAA in West Lafayette, Indiana, which has aired all three shows for decades. “There’s concern because these programs are well-known and well-loved.”
Public radio is facing an existential crisis. Some of the biggest radio stars of a generation are exiting the scene while public-radio executives attempt to stem the loss of younger listeners on traditional radio.
At the same time, the business model of NPR—the institution at the center of the public-radio universe—is under threat: It relies primarily on funding from hundreds of local radio stations, but it faces rising competition... More
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