J
JimmyJames
Guest
After perusing this link:
http://savechristianradio.com/
I can't help but be shocked that Christian broadcasters would stoop to such alarmism. Well, admittedly, there's other examples in a broad range of sectors, but it never ceases to amaze me when they try this stuff.
It's almost identical to this:
http://helpradionow.com/
Come on. Be real. Where outside of select small market stations and public radio is all this "niche" and "specialty" programming and how much money are most stations spending on it? Most station's budget for that sort of thing is ZERO. Therefore, these requirements won't affect the programming budgets other than meaning perhaps another voicetracked daypart or a "most music workday" instead of a jock.
While the ideas may be debateable, and religious broadcasters have every right to be concerned about any possible intrusions on their freedom of speech, I've seen nothing to suggest that these advisory boards have to be followed or that they have to be of people who have a detrimental agenda.
For a religious station, it could very well be a group of area pastors and clergy. Which I think would be a great idea to start doing anyways. Have occasional meetings with your area religious leaders, talk about what's going on, build a relationship. If your station isn't doing this, you should be. Why wait for the FCC to mandate GOOD community service?
It seems to me the people most "afraid" of this are the people who want to protect their right to "do the least" and that's a shoddy way to minister. What I'm seeing behind all this rhetoric is a "please, don't make us put actual live bodies in our building or be accountable to the public, let us run what we want to do and just renew our license."
Sorry. It's public spectrum and it doesn't work that way. It's about time we looked at changing some things.
http://savechristianradio.com/
I can't help but be shocked that Christian broadcasters would stoop to such alarmism. Well, admittedly, there's other examples in a broad range of sectors, but it never ceases to amaze me when they try this stuff.
It's almost identical to this:
http://helpradionow.com/
Come on. Be real. Where outside of select small market stations and public radio is all this "niche" and "specialty" programming and how much money are most stations spending on it? Most station's budget for that sort of thing is ZERO. Therefore, these requirements won't affect the programming budgets other than meaning perhaps another voicetracked daypart or a "most music workday" instead of a jock.
While the ideas may be debateable, and religious broadcasters have every right to be concerned about any possible intrusions on their freedom of speech, I've seen nothing to suggest that these advisory boards have to be followed or that they have to be of people who have a detrimental agenda.
For a religious station, it could very well be a group of area pastors and clergy. Which I think would be a great idea to start doing anyways. Have occasional meetings with your area religious leaders, talk about what's going on, build a relationship. If your station isn't doing this, you should be. Why wait for the FCC to mandate GOOD community service?
It seems to me the people most "afraid" of this are the people who want to protect their right to "do the least" and that's a shoddy way to minister. What I'm seeing behind all this rhetoric is a "please, don't make us put actual live bodies in our building or be accountable to the public, let us run what we want to do and just renew our license."
Sorry. It's public spectrum and it doesn't work that way. It's about time we looked at changing some things.