Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Art Harris" wrote in message ... wrote: A group made up primarily of broadcast consulting engineers proposes a new use for TV Channels 5 and 6 in the United States once their occupants migrate to digital. It recommends the reallocation of part of that spectrum for the use of the country’s AM stations. Many rural areas of the country are dependent on 50kw clear channel AM stations for basic news and entertainment. 75MHz AM stations aren't going to cut it. The clear channels don't generally cover much that is not covered by dozens of FMs in and around each market the 25 original 1 A clears today. At night, the AM channels have so much interference that they don't cover much that is not covered by FMs, too. And in any case, night radio listening is very low... about 10% of all radio listening. So saying people are dependent on the clear channel stations when, in fact, there is scant listening to stations outside their metro areas, is exaggeration. There is some, but it is almost statistically insignificant today. |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Art Harris" wrote in message ... wrote: A group made up primarily of broadcast consulting engineers proposes a new use for TV Channels 5 and 6 in the United States once their occupants migrate to digital. It recommends the reallocation of part of that spectrum for the use of the country’s AM stations. Many rural areas of the country are dependent on 50kw clear channel AM stations for basic news and entertainment. 75MHz AM stations aren't going to cut it. The clear channels don't generally cover much that is not covered by dozens of FMs in and around each market the 25 original 1 A clears today. At night, the AM channels have so much interference that they don't cover much that is not covered by FMs, too. And in any case, night radio listening is very low... about 10% of all radio listening. So saying people are dependent on the clear channel stations when, in fact, there is scant listening to stations outside their metro areas, is exaggeration. There is some, but it is almost statistically insignificant today. You are so full of it Eduardo. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Art Harris" wrote in message ... wrote: A group made up primarily of broadcast consulting engineers proposes a new use for TV Channels 5 and 6 in the United States once their occupants migrate to digital. It recommends the reallocation of part of that spectrum for the use of the country's AM stations. Many rural areas of the country are dependent on 50kw clear channel AM stations for basic news and entertainment. 75MHz AM stations aren't going to cut it. The clear channels don't generally cover much that is not covered by dozens of FMs in and around each market the 25 original 1 A clears today. At night, the AM channels have so much interference that they don't cover much that is not covered by FMs, too. And in any case, night radio listening is very low... about 10% of all radio listening. So saying people are dependent on the clear channel stations when, in fact, there is scant listening to stations outside their metro areas, is exaggeration. There is some, but it is almost statistically insignificant today. You are so full of it Eduardo. I invite you to talk to any group manager in radio. I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, because we all live by the same metrics and information and sales realities. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Art Harris" wrote in message ... wrote: A group made up primarily of broadcast consulting engineers proposes a new use for TV Channels 5 and 6 in the United States once their occupants migrate to digital. It recommends the reallocation of part of that spectrum for the use of the country's AM stations. Many rural areas of the country are dependent on 50kw clear channel AM stations for basic news and entertainment. 75MHz AM stations aren't going to cut it. The clear channels don't generally cover much that is not covered by dozens of FMs in and around each market the 25 original 1 A clears today. At night, the AM channels have so much interference that they don't cover much that is not covered by FMs, too. And in any case, night radio listening is very low... about 10% of all radio listening. So saying people are dependent on the clear channel stations when, in fact, there is scant listening to stations outside their metro areas, is exaggeration. There is some, but it is almost statistically insignificant today. You are so full of it Eduardo. I invite you to talk to any group manager in radio. I invite you to buy a radio and listen to it. I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, because we all live by the same metrics and information and sales realities. You live in a reality of your own making. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, because we all live by the same metrics and information and sales realities. You live in a reality of your own making. It's the reality of our entire industry. |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
"David Eduardo" wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, because we all live by the same metrics and information and sales realities. You live in a reality of your own making. It's the reality of our entire industry. No, it the reality of your imagined industry. -- Telamon Ventura, California |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
David Eduardo wrote:
"Telamon" wrote in message ... I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, because we all live by the same metrics and information and sales realities. You live in a reality of your own making. It's the reality of our entire industry. The "reality" of your "industry" is that when you try to run it like a factory you ruin the product. You make crap because you have no idea what you're doing. You forget the intangibles and let the number crunchers pick the songs. You have no one to blame but yourselves. |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Dave" wrote in message ... David Eduardo wrote: "Telamon" wrote in message ... I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, because we all live by the same metrics and information and sales realities. You live in a reality of your own making. It's the reality of our entire industry. The "reality" of your "industry" is that when you try to run it like a factory you ruin the product. You make crap because you have no idea what you're doing. You forget the intangibles and let the number crunchers pick the songs. You have no one to blame but yourselves. Huh? In markets like LA, the one you are in, all the significant stations let the listeners pick the music. And there is an incredible amount of talent on the air, doing spontaneous, live and entertaining radio. |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 9, 4:44*pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Telamon" wrote in message ... In article , "David Eduardo" wrote: "Art Harris" wrote in message .... wrote: *A group made up primarily of broadcast consulting engineers proposes a new use for TV Channels 5 and 6 in the United States once their occupants migrate to digital. It recommends the reallocation of part of that spectrum for the use of the country's AM stations. Many rural areas of the country are dependent on 50kw clear channel AM stations for basic news and entertainment. 75MHz AM stations aren't going to cut it. The clear channels don't generally cover much that is not covered by dozens of FMs in and around each market the 25 original 1 A clears today. At night, the AM channels have so much interference that they don't cover much that is not covered by FMs, too. And in any case, night radio listening is very low... about 10% of all radio listening. So saying people are dependent on the clear channel stations when, in fact, there is scant listening to stations outside their metro areas, is exaggeration. There is some, but it is almost statistically insignificant today. You are so full of it Eduardo. I invite you to talk to any group manager in radio. I can't imagine any of them saying anything different, - because we all live by the same metrics - and information and sales realities. Sales Reaities are NOT Listener Realities. the only 'metric' i need is my ears ~ RHF |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 9, 7:25*pm, "David Eduardo" wrote:
"Art Harris" wrote in message ... wrote: *A group made up primarily of broadcast consulting engineers proposes a new use for TV Channels 5 and 6 in the United States once their occupants migrate to digital. It recommends the reallocation of part of that spectrum for the use of the country’s AM stations. Many rural areas of the country are dependent on 50kw clear channel AM stations for basic news and entertainment. 75MHz AM stations aren't going to cut it. The clear channels don't generally cover much that is not covered by dozens of FMs in and around each market the 25 original 1 A clears today. At night, the AM channels have so much interference that they don't cover much that is not covered by FMs, too. And in any case, night radio listening is very low... about 10% of all radio listening. So saying people are dependent on the clear channel stations when, in fact, there is scant listening to stations outside their metro areas, is exaggeration. There is some, but it is almost statistically insignificant today. Almost 50% of radio listening is done in cars - almost zero at home. |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Bust a move! | Policy | |||
How do you move boatanchors around? | Boatanchors | |||
Help - must move | Digital | |||
Help - must move | Digital | |||
FCC Provides Spectrum to allow AMT move from 1.7 GHz. | Broadcasting |