
[USA HERALD] – As streaming platforms continue to dominate how Americans discover and consume music, radio stations are quietly re-examining a question many believed was already settled: what still makes radio matter?
The answer, according to station executives and listeners alike, is not technology or automation—but the DJ.
That shift is evident in morning programming across the country, including JoJo Lopez in the Morning on 101.7 The Beach, where personality-driven broadcasting continues to anchor listener engagement in an increasingly fragmented media landscape.
JoJo Lopez and I happen to share the same last name – driving my attention to his show at a moment when radio’s future is being openly debated. What emerged was a clear example of why many in the industry are rediscovering the value of human-centered radio.
Radio’s Quiet Course Correction
Over the past decade, radio has chased data—leaning heavily on automated playlists, shortened talk breaks, and nationalized formats designed to compete with streaming efficiency. But as digital fatigue sets in, stations are reversing course.
Listeners, industry surveys show, are not abandoning radio because of music selection. They are leaving when stations stop sounding human.
Morning shows remain radio’s most valuable real estate, and hosts like JoJo Lopez illustrate why.
Who Is JoJo Lopez?
JoJo Lopez is not the product of a branding firm or a viral marketing strategy. His on-air name originated from a blunt directive early in his career: use “JoJo” on the air or lose the job. The name stuck—and so did the voice behind it.
When asked who he admires most, he names Dua Lipa, delivering the answer with humor and self-awareness that mirrors his on-air presence.
“Dua Lipa. I spend at least a few minutes each day “admiring her” <3.” JoJo Lopez, Morning Show Host|101.7 The Beach
