ORIGINAL REPLY FROM INTERNET RADIO FORUM:
If tuna wants to complain about an NPR story, he could have started his own thread in the Public Radio forum, instead of derailing a thread about a completely unrelated topic in this one.
In addition, HE LIES. "The reader" never "admitted" any such thing. And the segment was four minutes long - not 15. Well, maybe he's not lying. Maybe the story was over his head. Judge for yourselves.
http://www.npr.org/2014/11/28/367154357/whos-buying-art
Maybe Tuna should ask "Wifey" why anyone listens to Morning Edition, that is if she's speaking to him. Maybe she'll exile him to the guest room so he won't be a "captive" any more.
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Tuna, the story referenced the small percentage of the population that invests in art. That's different than saying a miniscule percentage will be interested. Almost all news deals with the activities of outliers, a miniscule part of the population.
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Radio news - any radio news - almost never contains "useful information."
What radio seems to consider useful is don't be stupid information. Like a thunder storm is coming: Don't stand outside. A tornado is coming: Seek shelter. There was a big rain storm: Don't drive into big puddles. It's cold: Bundle up.
No, traffic reports are not useful since by the time you hear about it, it's already too late.