WLYNgm said:
Sorry JJ - you present no facts at all - you are either misinformed, or hopelessly naive.
While a legal, licensed station does not OWN a frequency, by virtue of being properly licensed,
they are granted exclusive use of it within a certain geographic area.
If you believe that a given station is not a fit licensee - then challenge their license.
Go to that station, and ask to see their public file. Challenge them on the facts,
not rhetoric or your personal beliefs. These are the rules of the game - if you don't want
to play by the rules (i.e. - pirates) THEN DON'T PLAY! This IS the "level playing field"
There are ways to get a program on the air. They have been mentioned before - I'm not going
back over old ground... They do, hoever, require putting your own money where your mouth is.
A small group of misfits, malcontents, and wannabes will not influence that for-profit businesses
make business decisions. Never gonna happen...
"Community radio" is a wonderful concept: a small signal, that covers a small area, and plays
to a niche audience, and does not need to turn a profit to survive. A service to a select few, yes.
A business? No.
I would suggest that you take a course in Broadcast History. Emerson College, for example, offers one.
You would then see that it was large corporations who began the entire broadcast industry. They alone
had the capital and distribution to make it happen in ther first place. Remember also that if the large corporation is a publicly traded company, their primary obligation is to their stockholders - those everyday people who share in the fortunes of that company, either good or bad. Remember also that those corporations are made up of people, who earn salaries to support their familes, and the overall economy,
and who pay taxes. Pirates do not...
Umm, excuse me, Frank Conrad was a guy in the "garage, basement or spare room" who was putting on radio broadcasts to almost nobody.
A local radio shop was involved in selling recevers, it got in the newspapers.
Westinghouse got interested like a lot of people.
In the early days every drugstore and bait shop could and did put up a community AM station.
It was not until the great upheaveal of 1927 that the airwaves were foisted away from anyone who knew how to make radio, to be
replaced by those who had passed the public service/license requirement.
Minimum power levels and antenna efficiencies precluded many of the early operators, who DID NOT expect to make money on the radio,
but usually enjoyed maximum commercial exposure of the parent company.
When I operated a pirate in Chicago in 1991 on shortwave, my logic was, people in Chicago and other large metros have colleges
with challenging radio stations. WHAT ABOUT THE PEOPLE IN LOGANSPORT?
So I was on 7.415 to serve them.
What gives some stations a right to burst forth illegally is that some of them invest their whole soul(s) into it, plus "day jobs",
keenly recognizing the lack of "some-thing" they know a "business" cannot provide, while recognizing they must present a product missing from
the choices. Some fail, while others like WHOT are amazing beyond beleif.
The best "radio" operates in total oblivious ignorance of "costs".
Art and business are the very extreme ends of a continuum along which radio tries to make a living.
Do not hate your neighbor, but turn them in if their engineering practices are atrocious, or they invade a frequency.