I find the economics of noncommercial religious radio puzzling at times. Take for example Birmingham, AL.
88.1 - 88.3 - 88.9 - 89.5 - 91.9 NCE
93.3 (2 LPFMs)
92.5 - 93.7 - 95.3 (AM translator) - 96.1 (HD translator) - 96.9 (AM translator) - 97.7 - 97.9 (AM translator) - 101.1 - 101.5 (simulcasts 91.9)
I've heard other markets like this. Every click of the NCE dial apart from NPR seemed to be a different Christian outlet. Now, there's a relatively limited number of Christian formats that actually are sustainable - CCM, which is generally AC, Urban Gospel, Southern Gospel, or talk/teaching. And EMF, Salem, and a fair number of local groups, both religious based and secular who understand the radio business have succeeded with them.
And of course, you can't regulate formats. But it seems to me the non-commercial aspect skews a lot of the economics. So you have NCE spectrum being used by organizations that don't primarily sustain themselves as broadcasters (EMF being the exception) or even necessarily involve having a significant audience.
Take for example BBN's purchase of 93.7 FM in New Iberia, LA. BBN paid close to $2 million for that signal. I have no idea how many people listen - and I'm not unfamiliar with the religious culture of that region, either. But BBN's programming is regarded as somewhat old in style even to most conservative religious folk. Still, they had the money to make the purchase.
I get how EMF works - their product is polished, contemporary, and well done. I completely understand why someone in the target demo would listen or contribute to it. But some of these networks seem to exist primarily to fill spectrum and promote their base church. And in many markets it completely dominates and, I think, distorts the purpose and economics of the NCE spectrum. If this had been better managed, would there ever have been demand for an LPFM service to begin with? Of course, in the first LPFM window, you again saw large parent church groups attempting to fill the spectrum with a license for every local church, which again felt like a spectrum grab.
So while I don't fault ethical religious broadcasters or deny they have their place, I think there's been marketplace distortion by some that isn't healthy for radio.
88.1 - 88.3 - 88.9 - 89.5 - 91.9 NCE
93.3 (2 LPFMs)
92.5 - 93.7 - 95.3 (AM translator) - 96.1 (HD translator) - 96.9 (AM translator) - 97.7 - 97.9 (AM translator) - 101.1 - 101.5 (simulcasts 91.9)
I've heard other markets like this. Every click of the NCE dial apart from NPR seemed to be a different Christian outlet. Now, there's a relatively limited number of Christian formats that actually are sustainable - CCM, which is generally AC, Urban Gospel, Southern Gospel, or talk/teaching. And EMF, Salem, and a fair number of local groups, both religious based and secular who understand the radio business have succeeded with them.
And of course, you can't regulate formats. But it seems to me the non-commercial aspect skews a lot of the economics. So you have NCE spectrum being used by organizations that don't primarily sustain themselves as broadcasters (EMF being the exception) or even necessarily involve having a significant audience.
Take for example BBN's purchase of 93.7 FM in New Iberia, LA. BBN paid close to $2 million for that signal. I have no idea how many people listen - and I'm not unfamiliar with the religious culture of that region, either. But BBN's programming is regarded as somewhat old in style even to most conservative religious folk. Still, they had the money to make the purchase.
I get how EMF works - their product is polished, contemporary, and well done. I completely understand why someone in the target demo would listen or contribute to it. But some of these networks seem to exist primarily to fill spectrum and promote their base church. And in many markets it completely dominates and, I think, distorts the purpose and economics of the NCE spectrum. If this had been better managed, would there ever have been demand for an LPFM service to begin with? Of course, in the first LPFM window, you again saw large parent church groups attempting to fill the spectrum with a license for every local church, which again felt like a spectrum grab.
So while I don't fault ethical religious broadcasters or deny they have their place, I think there's been marketplace distortion by some that isn't healthy for radio.