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Old January 5th 09, 01:29 AM posted to rec.radio.shortwave
David Eduardo[_4_] David Eduardo[_4_] is offline
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First recorded activity by RadioBanter: Jun 2007
Posts: 1,817
Default WBZ Boston has shut off their HD tonight!


"Dave" wrote in message
m...
David Eduardo wrote:


Evening listening, by the end of the 1955, was down to about 1/4 of the
daytime radio listening levels. While there are no national figures,
looking at a variety of local market reports supports this conclusion.

Add in the explosion of new stations in the decade after W.W. II, there
was less reason to listen to non-local stations at any time, and little
reason to listen to them at night.


That's nuts. Everybody routinely listened to whatever came in on their
radios at night, regardless of origin.


No, they did not. When Top 40 began in 1952, it helped move most radio
listening to local radio stations. TV simply killed night listening to radio
over a period of only a few years.

Light dimmers, band-splitting, coarse digital tuners, and 4 kHz ceramic
filters destroyed AM.


No, FM did, once the FCC mandated the end to simulcasting in most cities in
1967.

Don't you think it odd that you and your ilk whined for more stations back
in the '70s, and now that you have them, you whine 'cause nobody can make
any money?


Nobody whined for more stations in the 70's. In fact, the number of viable
stations in each market virtually tripled in the 70's as all the full signal
FMs became competitive. That was disruptive enough to AM and the industry.
Docket 80-90 came at the very end of the 80's, and was a result of the FCC
not people wanting more stations... it was the direct outcome of the Bonita
Springs decision redefining major changes.