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![]() "D. Peter Maus" wrote in message ... A whole lot of stuff about sales and IBOC (by the way, HD does NOT stand for High Definition, as many here seem to believe. It stands for Hybrid Digital) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I'm not sure why there is even a discussion about either quality or selection, since the great masses of youth (the ones being marketed TO) are sheep. They listen to what they are TOLD to by the PM's at the radio stations, who, in turn, play what THEY are told to by the recording industry. The few that actually WANT alternative programming do not constitute (and never will) a sales pool that will be profitable. With all the stupid new laws going (or that have gone) into effect regarding pay for content, many stations' profit margin has dropped significantly. The recording industry has bitten the hand that feeds it by requiring stations (ESPECIALLY HD2 and HD3 streams as well as internet streams) to pay exhorbatant fees for content. |
#2
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On 1/14/12 13:59 , Brenda Ann wrote:
"D. Peter Maus" wrote in message ... A whole lot of stuff about sales and IBOC (by the way, HD does NOT stand for High Definition, as many here seem to believe. It stands for Hybrid Digital) -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------------- I'm not sure why there is even a discussion about either quality or selection, since the great masses of youth (the ones being marketed TO) are sheep. They listen to what they are TOLD to by the PM's at the radio stations, who, in turn, play what THEY are told to by the recording industry. LOL! Yeah, that's pretty much it. The few that actually WANT alternative programming do not constitute (and never will) a sales pool that will be profitable. Which is why it's called 'alternative.' With all the stupid new laws going (or that have gone) into effect regarding pay for content, many stations' profit margin has dropped significantly. The recording industry has bitten the hand that feeds it by requiring stations (ESPECIALLY HD2 and HD3 streams as well as internet streams) to pay exhorbatant fees for content. There will come a point, and it will be well too late, that the recording industry recognizes this. But the damage they do in the meantime will be significant. |
#3
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On 1/14/2012 11:59 AM, Brenda Ann wrote:
I'm not sure why there is even a discussion about either quality or selection, since the great masses of youth (the ones being marketed TO) are sheep. They listen to what they are TOLD to by the PM's at the radio stations, who, in turn, play what THEY are told to by the recording industry. The few that actually WANT alternative programming do not constitute (and never will) a sales pool that will be profitable. It's amusing to see proclamations that since the digital radio system in the U.S. is not of a quality that audiophiles would accept that somehow it needs to be scrapped in favor of something with a much higher bit rate so those listening to concerts in their car can do so from the radio rather than from a CD. The reason that every double blind test of audio quality has shown that listeners prefer digital radio over analog has much more to do with interference resulting from impaired conditions than from the raw bit rate. Every compression scheme is a compromise, and the key is to find a scheme that is of acceptable quality, not one that is lossless and that is as good as the original uncompressed content (though of course CDs are also compressed content). The question that digital radio answered was "what is a spectrally efficient method of using existing bandwidth to increase content choices and audio quality _and_ that has a clear path to an all digital system. If there had been any competition, it would have been another IBOC system. With all the stupid new laws going (or that have gone) into effect regarding pay for content, many stations' profit margin has dropped significantly. The recording industry has bitten the hand that feeds it by requirirng stations (ESPECIALLY HD2 and HD3 streams as well as internet streams) to pay exhorbatant fees for content. Broadcasters should be thrilled about the costs being incurred by streaming companies like Pandora, as well as the costs incurred by satellite radio, since terrestrial broadcasters are not paying content royalty fees like streamers and satellite radio are. Unless of course the station also streams, but they only pay the content royalties based on the number of on-line listeners. The Performance Rights Act (never passed) would have imposed content royalty fees on radio stations but they are much lower fees than are currently paid by satellite or streaming. There will probably be future attempts to pass this sort of legislation. One problem is that there is no way of knowing how many listeners are listening to a specific station in order to charge royalties per listener. With Arbitron ratings so inaccurate, broadcasters would not agree to paying royalties based on those ratings, so royalties per song would be based on some other metric, such as total station revenue (in order to avoid destroying small stations). It is true that HD Radio sub-channels are charged royalty fees to artists (through SESAC, ASCAP, and BMI) because they are essentially separate station. I don't know how the issue of HD1 versus analog is handled. Since it's the same content on both, do the stations have to pay only once? But HD sub-channels aren't charged content royalty fees (unless of course they are also streaming, and then it's just for the number of people streaming). If you care about the financial health of a radio station, and have a choice between streaming an OTA listening, choose OTA. |
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