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My current listening habbits while driving my vehicle around my little
corner of Montana include listening to my MP3 compact discs. My disc collection consists of whatever flavor of music fits my current mood. At times, I will switch from music MP3 discs to some sort of recorded audio, perhaps an old radio drama show, or perhaps a speech that someone gave about a topic of interest to me. However, there are times in the day when I will listen to either AM radio or FM radio. My listening habbits on AM radio include late evening DXing. I love checking out what sort of propagation might be occuring during different times between pre-dusk through about midnight, or early morning during power changes. And with that DX, I hope to hear something of the local events so that I might better grasp what the world around me is experiencing, or at least reporting. Or, I'll listen to the AM local stations, as I am interested in local news and weather. When I switch to FM, and here's the point of my post, I hope to catch new music, so I can know what new material might be coming out in some genre. And, I also get a taste of what the local music scene is doing, in whatever genre. I agree with the others who hold the opinion that commercial FM will survive best if the playlists would move away from mindless rotations of mainstream offerings, and move more toward exposure of less-known and newer excursions into developing musical talent and new offshoots of a genre. I think AM radio will struggle if it continues to offer the same few syndicated shows on (what appears to be) 70 percent of the nation's stations. For me, it is a tedious endeavor to tune through the band from edge to edge only to hear the same show from frequency to frequency. So little choice in programming. That's like having 60 channels on TV, with a high percentage of those channels offering the exact same show. (Click... click... click... click. Man, can there be anything else on except for this late-night "black helicopters have been hovering around our town, lately" show?) Why must we be subjected to hearing such a small selection, no matter where we tune on the AM dial, during the peak DX hours? I'd love to hear more locally produced shows. Local shows about local events, interests, people--that would be more community-service oriented. In my thinking, that would also be more locally supported financially. Could it be that major national companies that can offer bigger advertisement budgets shape the programming choices? The landscape has really changed over the course of radio's history. Is that why low-power FM appears so attractive to many communities? I know of one community in Washington state that is working hard to get one such station on the air. They've been jumping through a lot of hoops. They are still not on the air... but the hope is that they can offer real local talent, local production, and local interest. While driving, I tend to bring my own musical entertainment or spoken word by way of MP3 discs, radio still plays a central role in my current listening habbits. Radio would play a more significant role, however, if the trend on radio moved ever more toward to local interests, and to newer talent and offerings. Radio can still be "red hot." - NW7US contributing editor, PopComm, CQ, CQ VHF |
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