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On 21 Aug 2003 14:32:45 GMT, "DAB sounds worse than FM"
wrote: "People are flocking from radio in droves," says Michael Bracy, director of government relations at the lobby group the Future of Music Coalition. Will someone post some research that supports this? What makes Mr. Bracy an expert on the status of radio? It would seem to me that, if they're "flocking from radio in droves," it should be in his best interest. Now they'll have to buy the product either on CD or MP3. The rest will either not listen or steal it. I think it would be more appropriate to say new generations aren't being attracted to radio because of the vast number of alternatives. "So many people have become disenfranchised that they simply don't listen anymore. Smaller local artists are being freezed out by centralised programming. Smaller groups have been squeezed out of the business in all of the 43 years I've been in it. That's long before Clear Channel owned much more than a station in San Antonio. Some college stations had local talent programming but very few commercial stations ever did it. They played the hits. And ... did you know that all the hit artists were local at one time? It didn't seem to hurt them. It's very damaging to the culture. You mean I'm culture-starved because I can't hear the latest manufactured boy band? There is a climate of fear surrounding Clear Channel. People will say in private, 'They did this or they did that,' but they won't speak out because they have to do business with them. As long as they say it in private, no improvement will come. Of course, they'd better have proof that will stand up in court. Do it the good ol' American way. Sue them. I've heard local promoters complain that Clear Channel pays more. I can't fault the artist for going where the money is. Let's see Mr. Bracy get all the big artists together to boycott Clear Channel. If no one will perform for them, the problem is solved. Then the only problem left is how to harvest the green cheese on the moon. The bad publicity has made Clear Channel a political pariah. While other parts of the media industry are enjoying the relaxation of ownership laws, in radio, they were tightened up last week, despite the company hiring well-connected Washington lobbyists and appointing a former US congressman to the board." Radio ownership rules were tightened? I was under the impression that TV was returned to 35%. There have been many instances where Clear Channel was prevented from buying because of the rules. This isn't new. "According to the US ratings service Arbitron, Americans are spending 10% less time listening to radio per annum. Radio listenership in the US is at a 27-year low." I seriously doubt the increase in population over 27 years and the explosion of alternative sources of music were included. 27 years ago I didn't have a minidisc player, a CD player, an MP3 player, a DVD portable, or even low quality Internet streaming competing for attention. "It's creative death, it's standardisation - McDonaldisation. Creativity requires diversity. Mr. Bracy needs to look at the dirt in his own house. Where does all this sameness come from? Instead of blaming radio he should look at the quality of the stuff oozing from the record companies, big and small. If you introduce free markets without regulation, you are prescribing monopoly. The only upside to all of this is that it gets so bad that things start to develop underground on the internet or satellite radio. That's what happened with the Floyd." Satellite radio isn't going to lead the way in local artists. They aren't local. Satellite radio should be Mr. Bracy's vision of Hell. "Mr Dyke [Director General of the BBC] directed much of his ammunition against the global media giant Clear Channel, which owns 1,225 radio stations in the US, many of which took a staunchly pro-war line. "We are genuinely shocked when we discover that the largest radio group in the United States was using its airwaves to organise pro-war rallies," said Mr Dyke, who is also the BBC's editor-in-chief. "We are even more shocked to discover that the same group wants to become a big radio player in the UK." Mr. Dyke is in the dark. Individual stations made those decisions, not the company. I realize it's not in his best interest to accept that, but it's true. If it were a company directive there would have been 1225 rallies - one for each station even in markets with multiple stations. They still compete. Of course, the BBC has no interest in American audiences. I would be "genuinely shocked" to discover that the BBC wanted to exploit Americans when they don't even speak our language. Who ever heard of a bonnet on a car? My home has a john, not a loo. and there's been a load more stories about Clear Channel in the UK press. I realise that being American that you don't take any interest in non-American issues, but, shock-horror, we do actually look at issues beyond our shores, and especially when Mr Mays might buy a UK radio group in the not too distant future. I think the UK said something similar when Rupert Murdoch launched Sky TV and the sky fell again when he bought British newspapers. If we don't look beyond our shores we should be able to stop all those humanitarian aid programs that cost us so much. I'm sorry we have such little interest in the goings on with the Royal Family. I guess Mr. Dyke doesn't read the New York Times. It appears to me that the first section of the paper is heavily International. The evening news and PBS' newscasts seem to cover a lot of "foreign" news. Mr. Dyke also doesn't seem to realize that covering 50 states is probably more difficult than covering 50 countries. After all, those of us in the 50 states have more in common than his 50 countries. We all speak a similar language. After a while, even war isn't news when it's been going on for decades, or centuries. Maybe he's feeling bad because the UK used to own most of those countries. Let's get the Middle East fixed before he complains about how uncaring we Americans are. Maybe we're just too damned tired of watching those "across the pond" fight each other endlessly.They've been taking over each other's countries for centuries and dressing their men in ridiculous looking costumes. Isn't there something more productive they could be doing? Rich |
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