Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#25
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Brenda Ann" wrote in message ... .. In any case, the reality of your argument is simple; "I don't care if AM radio dies as long as I can listen a while more to stations that were not even licensed to serve me." Again, stations are licensed to serve the PUBLIC. I am part of the PUBLIC, as are all those millions of others that you so easily dismiss. Even back when stations had a more defined service "obligation" as part of the terms of their license, the FCC was very specific about equating "service" with "community of license" and required service only to the city of license, and, at the licensee´s option, surrounding communities within the primary coontours. In fact, the rules are rather specific for both AM and FM as to what signal contours are protected from interference on the same and adjacent channels. Fringe area reception is guaranteed neither to the station nor to the listener. The public, for example, for an FM is that within the 54 dbu coverage area. There is no granted right for the station or the listener to be able to hear the station outside that area. And there is no requirement of the licensee to serve any audience even that far out, signal wise. Never has been, and you are trying to make a case based on rare and unusual circumstances. Or does the term 'freedom of choice' not mean anything to you? (not that we have much of that anymore, what with Clear Channel, Entercom, etc. running cloned formats coast to coast). Actually, if you do some deeper inspection, you will find that neither of these companies run cloned formats. While they may use the same name for similar formats because of the amazingly difficult challenge of finding new names (due to the Internet's effect on service mark rights), the fact that there are many named "Kiss" or "Star" or "Majic" or "Power" does not mean evey station with the same name has the same format, music or DJs. As to formats being repeated nationally, you reallly don't think that there wouldm't be a country, and AC, a rock, a CHR station in nearly every market? And that they would play fairly similar music form city to city? In fact, 45 or 50 years ago, there were two or three Top 40 stations in every larger market! What you're saying is that people outside your precious contours have no choice what they can and cannot listen to. They have no expectation of hearing, consistently, any station beyond its protected contour. And they never have. The fact that your lot is a bit lower than your neighbor's lot and you have saved water by using their run-off for years does not give you the right to expect that he can not put a drain on his property at some point and capture that water. Same with distant signals. There is no right or expectation under the law and FCC rules that grants a right to DX specific stations without interference. If they have only one station in their town (there are a LOT of such places, believe me), or, worse yet, none at all, they are just **** out of luck. Sorry, I ain't ever going to buy into that malarky. When I was growing up, I had to listen to stations perhaps 150 miles or more away if I didn't want to listen to the farm report or the swap meet of the air or other equally lame (to me, as a teen) programming. In another forum, I mentioned this story... which shows that the "when I was growing up" thing is a fable and not relevant today. In the 60's, the town of Omena, MI, in Leelanau county, population 60, could get two Traverse City AMs in the daytime, and that with difficulty if there were atmospherics. At night, there was no local reception, and one had to depend on WJR, WLS, WBBM and WMAQ... the only consistently receivable signals in the region. Unfortunately, for much of the year, Omena is in an auroral region and reception could be blocked for days on end at night. So, daytime, when most radio listening is done, there were two choices. At night, there were four, none of which had any service to the local area. Today, there are 3 AMs with a 5 mv/m day signal and one at night. Not a big change there. But there are 7 FMs with a 70 dbu signal, 8 with a 60 to 69 dbu, and a half-dozen mure between 65 and 69 dbu. In other words, 15 easily receivable, by day and night, FMs and a couple more with signals most radios could get with a bit of effort. So the idea that rural areas are unserved is bunk. I can repeat this story for Dewey-Humboldt, AZ or Indio, CA or a thousand other rural communities where AM reception in the 50's and 60's was bad, limited and subject to interference by day, and limited to distant, irrelevant non-local stations at night. Now, as in my example, here is a tiny, remote community that has good signals from over a dozen FMs. I know I'm just banging my head against the wall here, because you will never see the other side of this issue (and yes, I do see the business side of the issue), but dammit, PEOPLE have to be more important than the almighty dollar, or the entire business ideal is doomed to eventual failure. You serve the PEOPLE. No, we do NOT. We serve the people, by the terms of our license, in the communities around our city of licence. We have never had an obligation to serve anyone outside our protected contours, and there has never, even in the toughest regulatory days, a requirement to serve listeners in the weaker protected contours... just in the immediate community. That's the way it's supposed to work. The PUBLIC first.. the advertisers second. If you don't serve the public, the advertisers will eventually go elsewhere because they'll be advertising to nobody. And how many advertisers today care if there are people listening beyond the protected contours of a station? NONE is the answer. Without revenue, the audience can not be served. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
IBOC at night (WABC) | Shortwave | |||
IBOC at night and the local/regiona AMs | Shortwave | |||
IBOC at Night and the Local/Regional AMs | Shortwave | |||
IBOC at night and the local/regiona AMs | Shortwave | |||
IBOC -- a way to jam skywave signals from Mexico and Canada at night, just like the USSR did with VOA, RFE/RL, ... | Broadcasting |