Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 4, 8:17 am, wrote:
To diverge for a moment, that's another example of the government taking a hands-off approach when formerly they had been active in regulation. It used to be that there were all kinds of limits on how many broadcast stations the same corporate entity could own in a given market. The idea was that no market should be dominated, let alone monopolized, by a single network or company. This idea and the regulations to enforce it were in place for decades, but a few years ago were quietly tossed aside, resulting in what you have in your area. The only one I bother to listen to other than the Public station is the local ESPN sports station. They regularly go off the air for long periods of time, play the satellite feed message, or my favorite, play two feeds at once. AM or FM? It's an AM station. The funny thing is that the most listened to station in the area is guess who, the public station. Not unusual - market forces at work... Here in Philly we have at least two: WHYY and WXPN They still have engineers, they still monitor their output, and they actually take input from their listeners. That deregulation, that getting rid of skilled employees, did it work when we have 8 or 9 stations that are horribly undependable, and most everyone, even people who hate to admit it, listen to the public radio station? Depends on how you define "did it work". From a pure profit standpoint, all that matters is the return on investment. To the station's owners, the additional cost of improving the availability of the signal and the content of the programming may not result in enough of an increased return (of cash). From what I can gather, the post-regulation version of radio stations is that you apply the notion of mass production to the issue. In this method, you buy up as many stations as possible, and minimally staff them. Then instead of locally produced content, you have satellite feeds. Advertisement then is mostly national type stuff - I think that's picked up from satellite also. I've heard Canadian public service announcements on our local stations. On our local sports station, there is maybe 15 percent local advertisements, and 1 semi locally produced show. It's been an unexpected boon for the public station. These local places still need to advertise, so they are throwing money at the public station. Then they get a mention, a thanks, and it turns out that the public radio listeners will support these businesses and let them know why. The great irony is that when the NPR was largely removed from the public dole, it was done with the intention that it would kill public radio. Now after all these years, commercial radio is in the pits, and people are supporting public radio directly. Back on topic, I'm firmly convinced that Amateur radio will serve as a sort of an island for technically inclined people, while we sort our way through this time of celebrity as role model, and the reality tv mode that so many people seem to be in thrall to. We now celebrate the mundane. I'm more interested in the exceptional, and I try to show as many people as I know that to be technical is not a bad thing. That's why I let everyone know that the hockey playing, loud motorcycle driving guy is also full of that geeky goodness. There is an alternative. - 73 de Mike N3LI - |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Dumbed down licensing. That's what you want. | General | |||
US Licensing Restructuring ??? When ??? | Policy | |||
US Licensing Restructuring ??? When ??? | Policy | |||
US Licensing Restructuring ??? When ??? | Policy | |||
Instant licensing? | Policy |