I get the public affairs angle but it seems lazy and cheap but I guess I should expect that from big radio companiesis your question why do they run the same show on 2 different stations?
The answer is to make it appear the station is "operating in the public interest" and to be able to put something in the space on the renewal application that they are running shows that serve the public.
I get the public affairs angle but it seems lazy and cheap but I guess I should expect that from big radio companies
Ask the taxpayers.BTW KPCC and KCRW each run Morning Edition and All Things Considered at the same time.
Waste of spectrum? Their listeners say no.
Let me know when they don't take ANY taxpayer money and my point will no longer be relevant. Until then, it is.Noncommercial stations receive far more revenue from underwriting sponsors and people like you than any government funding.
Thank you.
That’s a network news program, hardly the same thingBTW KPCC and KCRW each run Morning Edition and All Things Considered at the same time.
Waste of spectrum? Their listeners say no.
Yet, even the reddest of the red states still allocate the funding. I'm sure we could get rid of all the public stations. TBN would be happy to have the channelsLet me know when they don't take ANY taxpayer money and my point will no longer be relevant. Until then, it is.
What does the color of the state have anything to do with it?Yet, even the reddest of the red states still allocate the funding. I'm sure we could get rid of all the public stations. TBN would be happy to have the channels
That’s a network news program, hardly the same thing
It is a basic question. Why is the government in the business of subsidizing some stations?
Bottom line: Rural kids would not be seeing Sesame Street because there isn't enough of a donor base to keep the stations going, and those frequencies would be taken over by right-wing religious broadcasters.Because profit-making radio companies only care about their profit and reaching the lowest common denominator to attract advertising. Somebody has to care about public service rather than corporate profit. To do that, you remove the profit motive. You would never have a station like KCSN if it had to make a profit.
For over 55 years, Democrats and Republicans have agreed that the government appropriation for public radio is good for their states. It's not only a subsidy for radio but it's also a subsidy for the states, many of which own the stations that receive the money.
Bottom line: Rural kids would not be seeing Sesame Street because there isn't enough of a donor base to keep the stations going,
It's not the same show. In markets that are big enough to sustain multiple NPR members, there's so much room for local content in the ME clock that it's not unusual for half or more of the hour to be unique to each station. In Boston, WGBH has turned its ME into a personality-driven show with two co-hosts and lots of local talk, while WBUR sticks to a more traditional news-driven approach. Each has found a solid unique audience.It's the same show on two different signals.