As one might gather from this diary of my listening habits, I don't listen to much music any more. The reality is that I have phases or fads, when my primary media intake is music versus sports talk. Since the NFL season is drawing to a close, and I'm not the biggest basketball fan (until March Madness begins), I'll start reverting back to actual music sources. Of course since my children are now at the age of developing their own musical tastes (although I'm not convinced bubblegum pop is an actual musical genre), and my wife isn't the biggest fan of sports talk, often times car rides have musical accompaniment.
This discussion about listening habits led me to question what do people listen to. Not so much musical styling, but what devices are preferred to deliver audio content. So after a handful of Google searches, I gathered the following numbers.
- 97% of US Consumers own and listen to traditional AM/FM radios in their vehicles
- 25% of US Consumers own MP3 player equipment for their automobiles
- 1 in 5 Americans over the age of 12 now own a portable MP3 player
- It's estimated that in 2006 13.6 million MP3 units were purchased by Americans
- The average person who downloads music to their MP3 player listens to 12 hours a week
- Forbes Magazine projected that 9 million people would listen to a podcast in 2006
- In March 2006, satellite radio services had an estimated 15 million subscribers
- In January 2007, Steve Jobs said that iTunes sells 5 million songs a day
- In 2002, a third of Americans indicated they'd listen to radio over the Internet, but only 5% said they'd listen within the last week
- Of music stored on the average person's MP3 player, 44% is ripped from the owner's personal CD collection and 25% is from a fee-based music source like iTunes
I'm curious if or when will podcasts become the preferred source for information distribution in a audio format? When will music CDs stop being manufactured because most folks will download the music rather than purchase a CD? Will personal music devices ever replace the traditional AM/FM radio in vehicles?
2 comments:
Great topic! I use to listen to music until I turned 30. My drive to work took about 40 minutes and I figured I could use that time to listen to a sermon or something educational. So I bought a lot of tapes. That got expensive, so I started searching the radio and found a christian talk radio that was pretty good, and that opened up a whole new world for me. Now I listen to political talk, christian talk, Dr. Laura, Dave Ramsey, etc... I am kinda like you in that it changes every few months. Right now when I get up in the morning I listen to Dave Ramsey on my Mp3 player, on the ride to work it is Jeff Bolton or Mike Gallager. At work I can't pick up a.m. on my radio so it is usually country music. As I walk around the lab guys will have on classical music to classic rock. coming home for lunch it is Bill O'Rielly or Dennis Preager. Coming home after work usually Michael Medved. On occassion if I am working in the garage at night it is Michael Savage. Saturday mornings if we are in the car its Ed Wallace, he talks about cars mostly but has some interesting news bits about the world. Sunday afternoon is some guy that talks about retirement and what you should do with your money.
Do you remember John Layfield the ACU footballer turned WWF Champ?
He has a Sports, Business and political talk show on Sundays.
brad
Megs likes to purchase CD's but cant seem to keep them from getting scratched... so I've started ripping the CD's and putting them on my laptop... or just purchasing online... then I put it on her IPOD. Too many steps... but I hate to spend $$$ on a CD and then have it get lost or scratched!
Robert listens to hardly any music... talk radio is his thing. I constantly have music playing... and the genre depends on my mood... It has been difficult now that the girls have their music... especially in the car... when I get to hear "I wanna listen to..."
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