Why do almost all women today hate home audio?



Why do almost all (99%) of women never seriously, sit, and listen to home audio through even one album?

I knew many, many women that listened, and had there own stereos, in the late 60's and 70's.

They even had big record collections, and some even had real-to-real tape recorders.

Why did they disappear?

What changed?

don_c55
I can only speak to the women I'm around, but social media killed their interest.

They are way too busy checking Facebook, Pinterest, Snapchat and all the other ilk out there.

They couldn't/wouldn't sit still for a whole album if you paid them.
In the day that my girlfriend now wife listened to music, she liked music with lyrics. Songs she knew. Now that I listen mostly to jazz and classical I play her songs when we are listening together. 
To me music is about the sound and the feeling. When I alone listen, I play the music that speaks to me. When we listen together, I play the music that speaks to us both. How wonderful it is that we can each find music that speaks to us, and hopefully music we can share. 
It ain't just the females kids, it's just about EVERYBODY nowadays. Anti-Social media access shares some of the responsibility as mentioned, but that doesn't explain the resurgence of vinyl sales - a good sign. 
The walkman and the iPod combined to remove the tangible sense of ownership we received during the vinyl heyday. Buying music used to involve a scheduled and often desperate trip to "the record shop" to get the latest thing. Then you had to make the time to listen to it, to actually sit down when you got home to listen.  
It took aforethought, planning, desire. 
Now you can download a new release while you're on the train or the toilet bowl, and it disappears into that little portable piece of plastic without so much as a hello. 

I now have to write down the music I purchase via download because after I do I often forget what I downloaded.