| Home |
| Search |
| Today's Posts |
|
#20
|
|||
|
|||
|
"Frank Dresser" wrote in message ... "David Eduardo" wrote in message These priviledged stations wanted no competiton and even greater power. Specifically, 750 kw. Well they sure didn't get anything like that! Also, they lost the pure clear channels. So, I guess that supports your point that the networks and the clear channels were closely joined. And as the radio networks declined, so did the clear channel's Washington clout. Keep in mind that in the 70's, WOAI in San Antonio was near receivership with a 1-A clear channel. The new owners, Messrs. Mays and Combs, bought it for next to nothing and capitalized the "clear channel" designation as the name of thier new company. There were quite a few others like it that were very unimpressive performers in that era. FM started in the late 30's. It was not profitable on any scale until thelate 60's. In fact, form 1950 to 1960, there was a net decline in licensed FMs. And UHF made it only due to the dual band tuner requirement pushed by the FCC when they saw UHHFs shutting down all over the place in the mid to late 50's. Yes, that's my point. There's no shortage of big dreams. The early FM and UHF-TV broadcasters ended up being no real threat to the established broadcasters, but that couldn't be known with certainty in the early days. Plenty of otherwise capable investors threw money down the rat hole. But nobody knew it was a rat hole in advance. So while I can't prove it, it still seems likely that the FCC's domestic SW ban was to protect the Networks/Clear Channel stations from competition. Sounds right. Interestingly, in the 30's the nets tried to do commerical SW for Latin America and lost lots of money. WRNO was an international staiton, aimed outside the US. In fact, Joe Costello bought a condo in Puerto Rico so he could sit and listen to his station in the Caribbean. The idea did not work, just as the commercial SW efforts of the big networks aimed at LAtin Ameirca did not work in the late 30's. Was he more serious about being an international broadcater than the current domestics? Yes. I spoke with him severa times, and he was a true believer that a rock station... an album rock station, could be very successful in the Hemisphere. He didn't do much broadcasting in Spanish. He felt that US rock was so popular in Latin America (a fact) that a real US station in English with American formatics could be a huge winner. If it had been satellite delivered to local FMs, he would have been right. His programming was almost 100% US oriented. Actually, it was a US style station for foreign audiences who loved US music. Mostly simulcasts from WRNO-FM. Seemed like every other ad was for the car dealer in Kenner. When it started, they had plans to be 100% separate. When WRNO started to do badly, there was not much left for the SW. The border blasters were irrelevant. They hawked products (the equivalent of HSN and infomericals), and had very little audience as they really had no interesting programs. They operatied erratically, and could only be heard at night (they did not even operate in the daytime, in fact). There were only a couple of them and thier history is spotty. What about Wolfman Jack? Until he moved to XERB in Rosarito, which is not a border blaster, but put a half decent signal over LA, he was a novelty but not a real audience factor. Is it a coincidence that the rise of domestic SW came after the decline of the radio networks? I don't think so. I think the rise of stations that would run the Hal Turner show has more to do withthe repeal of the Fairness Doctrine which allowed the kind of one-sided shows we hear today. Remember, an early SW broadcaster, Rev. Norris of Red Lion, made history by his refusal to follow the doctrine. He also lost his licenses. The repeal of Fairness also ushered in today's talk radio, from Rush to Savage to Stern. None would work without the repeal of the Fairness Doctrine. |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Forum | |||
| World record for Digital AM Broadcasting announced | Broadcasting | |||
| The Dread Broadcasting Corporation | Broadcasting | |||
| Will the US CBS Network loose its broadcasting license over the Dan Rather row? | Broadcasting | |||
| USA Domestic Shortwave Broadcasters (CONUS) | Shortwave | |||
| SHOW 4 of On the Domestic Front is READY! | General | |||