Regarding the radio & batteries story where it is questioned having a battery operate radio . . . today a person would have their cell phone fully charged in the event knowing there is say a hurricane coming, they should also BUY A RADIO & HAVE FRESH BATTERIES FOR IT.
There's a big difference between your opinion that someone "should" have a battery powered radio with fresh batteries, and who actually does. Are you going to blame radio for consumer product buying evolution too? Most Gen Z don't know that portable radios even exist, nor do they care.
And don't say RADIOS are not being made & sold !!! Yes, RCA, GE, Zenith, Atwater-Kent !!! are not making radios . . . those companies are all gone (more or less).
Not in any volume. Sure, radio nerds will always seek out a portable radio, but they're in a teeny, tiny percentage of the total consumer population.
Remember as a broadcaster & JUST BEING A HUMAN BEING IN GENERAL you want to HELP people in peril . . . so CELL PHONES (if you insist) and RADIOS will do it . . . together in an emergency.
Name a recent man-made or natural disaster in the U.S. where AM radio was somehow the center of a life-safety situation? Go back, say ten years, and show us some examples.
You mention broadcasters going to the Internet to get away from government regulations . . . I thought of that too, see great minds think alike.
I didn't say that, but broadcasters and media organizations go where the listeners/viewers are. If you want to be in the pool party, you'll need to get wet.
I also think that broadcasters don't want to deal with a transmitter anymore, the upkeep of it . . . although today with solid state that upkeep is small.
Transmitters, sites, and utilities to run them are a significant expense. Especially if there are tower and ground leases involved. It's a valid argument that if broadcasters didn't have to deal with transmission facilities and just deal with content, everyone would be happier. That said; transmission facilities come with the business. Now that the Commission did away with local studio rules, some groups have been able to shed expensive building and land leases by consolidating studios and operations into a regional location. This especially has helped groups with mostly small or medium market stations. They can focus on just keeping transmission facilities, and not studios and transmission sites in every town/market.
My friends in TV today tell me what is like today maintaining the new solid state TV transmitters, it is a far cry from the old tube types.
For the most part, that's true for radio too. Sure, there are some low-budget operations who can't afford to replace their old tube rigs with solid state modern transmitters, but they eventually have to concede because of the declining availability of quality spare parts, including tubes. The cost of utilities to feed those older transmitters is also difficult to justify as advertiser support continues to decline.
Question . . . if broadcasters go to just the Internet (they'll be streamcasters than) will the feds regulate them to BROADCAST EMERGENCY INFO . . . on the good old Internet ???
I doubt that will happen in our lifetime anyway. Radio and TV still play a huge role in providing music, news, and entertainment. Will the number of viable broadcasts shrink due to change in consumer habits? No doubt. But the trend seems to be, with the exception of AM stations, be in OTA broadcasting, and streaming at the same time.
I also belive that if the feds did not want TV spectrum for wireless, OTA TV would have still gone digital, because it was "in the hearts" of TV broadcasters to do it.
I was part of that discussion back in the late 80's. early 90's. Sure, there would be some broadcast groups which were financially willing and able to embrace and invest in HDTV and DTV with diginets so one could have more channels to sell ads on, but not all. If the government hadn't forced TV to digital for auctioning-off spectrum to cell/PCS carriers, including financial incentives to do so, I'd bet you'd see a 50:50 split between analog and digital TV broadcasters today. That's especially true in smaller markets.
Plus as one person that was part of it, it was FUN and a great leaning experience to all involved in the TV business.
It is sad that radio people did not get that chance too, to go all DIGITAL . . . thus improving radio years ago but nope the radio business stumbled.
I was in the thick of the DTV conversion too, and I wouldn't have used the term fun. It was an expensive chore that took several years of a lot of work.
No frequencies some say . . . they would have had to fight for it, they did not fight hard enough. I still beleive they could have got at least VHF TV Channel 5 & 6.
As I mentioned prior, expanded FM band to former VHF TV channels would have been a disaster for anyone dumb enough to have moved there. By the mid to late 90's, consumer electronic habits had started to evolve away from buying radios. What came in their vehicle was good enough. Anyone who would have built, or migrated to an expanded FM band would have been stuck on an island for years, with few listeners. As I mentioned prior; it would have been a very bad investment.
Why did this happen . . . you know but I'll say it again . . . AM / FM broadcasters, the FCC, the NAB and selfish companies in the radio business.
Why did all what happen? Consumers moving to a different kind of technology because that handheld device can play whatever song, music genre, podcast, when you want anytime you want it? Or that handheld device can guide you somewhere? Or that handheld device could allow you to interact with friends and social media sites anywhere? Radio can't do any of that, and yet you continue blaming radio for the evolution of technology and human nature?
Good to know, but don't care.