Two posts have examined, to death perhaps, the impact of the sale of the old Vanderbilt student station WRVU to Nashville Public Radio, licensee of the WPLN stations, in order to have a full-time classical format on 91.1. Perhaps lost in the mix, though, is the fate of another pubcaster that has spent the past two or three years more or less conceding its audience to WPLN, Middle Tennessee State's WMOT, which for 27 years ran a straight jazz format on 89.5 for a small but highly loyal audience, particularly among area musicians.
In 2008, WMOT lost a Corporation for Public Broadcasting grant, and the Tennessee state budget crisis hit hard the following year, prompting MTSU to consider pulling the plug. Instead, the station cut its budget back and brought on some news/talk, mainly from Public Radio International, in an effort to steal some of the WPLN listeners to NPR's signature drive-time newscasts. For about a year, it looked like it would work. But pledges didn't go up, and when the longtime station manager there retired, a newbie came in and shook up the old culture there, cutting jazz back to nights and weekends and taking up the slack in daytime classical music WPLN left behind in 2009.
However, here's where the interesting part begins. When Nashville Public Radio launched WCFL back in June, it looked for all intents and purposes like a checkmate on WMOT's attempt to steal WPLN's old listeners. Another sign of surrender is WMOT's decision to duplicate carrying All Things Considered, the motivation being that management wants listeners to keep their knobs off WPLN, fearing they might stay and not come back. WMOT has spent the better part of two years fighting its larger, better-capitalized rival, and keeps coming out on the short end of the stick.
The question is, when is MTSU finally going to lose patience and go through with a shutdown and sale? It sure looks imminent.
In 2008, WMOT lost a Corporation for Public Broadcasting grant, and the Tennessee state budget crisis hit hard the following year, prompting MTSU to consider pulling the plug. Instead, the station cut its budget back and brought on some news/talk, mainly from Public Radio International, in an effort to steal some of the WPLN listeners to NPR's signature drive-time newscasts. For about a year, it looked like it would work. But pledges didn't go up, and when the longtime station manager there retired, a newbie came in and shook up the old culture there, cutting jazz back to nights and weekends and taking up the slack in daytime classical music WPLN left behind in 2009.
However, here's where the interesting part begins. When Nashville Public Radio launched WCFL back in June, it looked for all intents and purposes like a checkmate on WMOT's attempt to steal WPLN's old listeners. Another sign of surrender is WMOT's decision to duplicate carrying All Things Considered, the motivation being that management wants listeners to keep their knobs off WPLN, fearing they might stay and not come back. WMOT has spent the better part of two years fighting its larger, better-capitalized rival, and keeps coming out on the short end of the stick.
The question is, when is MTSU finally going to lose patience and go through with a shutdown and sale? It sure looks imminent.