K
K.M. Richards
Guest
I find it interesting that religious broadcasting appears to make enough money to keep the bills paid.
And not just on the radio ... I did a scan of all the television digital subchannels here in L.A. and found at least a dozen 24/7 religious channels there as well (and that's not counting all the TBN-owned ones that they run on their own KTBN/40).
However, back to EMF (and Calvary Chapel, and the rest): I know how they could be brought to a dead halt, but it would require an act of Congress and a determined FCC. First, eliminate the allowance of main studio waivers to any entity other than accredited educational institutions; second, disallow translators unless the station being rebroadcast is in the same or an adjacent market, with no daisy chains of translators relaying other translators; third, require that any new acquisitions by a non-commercial broadcaster already be non-commercial stations; and fourth, create a sunset date for any grandfathered operations that do not meet these new criteria.
However, I expect the following to happen long before any of that: First, pigs will fly. Second, hell will freeze over. Third, the sun will begin rising in the West. Fourth, the calendar will be revised to have two Fridays per week.
In other words, on the twelfth of never (and that's a long, long time if you believe the song by Johnny Mathis).
And not just on the radio ... I did a scan of all the television digital subchannels here in L.A. and found at least a dozen 24/7 religious channels there as well (and that's not counting all the TBN-owned ones that they run on their own KTBN/40).
However, back to EMF (and Calvary Chapel, and the rest): I know how they could be brought to a dead halt, but it would require an act of Congress and a determined FCC. First, eliminate the allowance of main studio waivers to any entity other than accredited educational institutions; second, disallow translators unless the station being rebroadcast is in the same or an adjacent market, with no daisy chains of translators relaying other translators; third, require that any new acquisitions by a non-commercial broadcaster already be non-commercial stations; and fourth, create a sunset date for any grandfathered operations that do not meet these new criteria.
However, I expect the following to happen long before any of that: First, pigs will fly. Second, hell will freeze over. Third, the sun will begin rising in the West. Fourth, the calendar will be revised to have two Fridays per week.
In other words, on the twelfth of never (and that's a long, long time if you believe the song by Johnny Mathis).