I find Alternative rock to be, in most cases, worthy of the same kind of negative descriptions as you use for one kind of Christian preaching. But I know that there is a significant audience segment that likes... even loves... it and I respect that.
I don't think it is necessary to be offensive while at the same time indicating a dislike. I don't find the VCY offering appealing, either. But it would not sustain itself on the air if it did not have some support.
I find VCY's programming offensive and its raison d'être - fusion of political and religious power to impose its strictures on everyone - beyond offensive. I'm married to someone of the same sex. I suppose, then, that you can't imagine why I would find VCY and its whole concept offensive until you face attempts to have your rights taken away from you (Proposition 8 - pushed by that unholy alliance between the Roman Catholic and LDS churches - affected me
directly). My husband and I are currently considering retirement destinations, seeking warmer weather, concerned about wildfire danger, and getting away from some of California's political dysfunction. We can't even
consider most states in the West, Midwest, or South, because they're run by Republicans who have fallen for the religious right wing's use of transgender-targeted legislation as a vehicle to regain political power and to gather financial firepower to start attacking more rights, including the right to same-sex marriage - which they have never liked. And, no, I don't have
any confidence in the U.S. Supreme Court, given that it's now dominated by right-wing political hacks, to protect my rights. Dobbs clearly showed that the Court is now as eager to take away rights as it is to secure them. So I make no apologies for how I describe VCY. VCY has
earned every single insult I can think to throw at them. I could even make fun of them for using old-fashioned low-frequency cue tones to trigger hourly legal IDs.
Christian programming that isn't blatantly political is another matter - EMF is kind of boring, actually, but at least it takes a positive approach and doesn't harangue. Northwestern University's "Life FM" programming can actually be engaging at times, and I have found no political bias there, either. Southern gospel likewise has its place. It's the programming, and the motivation behind it, that tells me I'm a piece of garbage that's going to hell that I object to. I can't imagine why anyone would be upset at
that. (sarcasm)