And you are certain that every one of those stations have no provision for emergencies., and a high school kid manually spinning CDs is what it takes for emergency coverage?
RADIO TRUTH said:A high school kid who is locally in the station can be taught.
The bigger issue is: Who is responsible in an emergency. Since 9-11, the DHS has identified local emergency officials as the responsible party, not local radio. So a high school kid has to know that he must receive direction from a responsible authority before making any announcements on the air.
Bill Wolfenbarger said:Turns out there still is:
Sec. 73.1208 Broadcast of taped, filmed, or recorded material.
(a) Any taped, filmed or recorded program material in which time is of special significance, or by which an affirmative attempt is made to
create the impression that it is occurring simultaneously with the broadcast, shall be announced at the beginning as taped, filmed or recorded. The language of the announcement shall be clear and in terms commonly understood by the public. For television stations, the
announcement may be made visually or aurally.
(b) Taped, filmed, or recorded announcements which are of a commercial, promotional or public service nature need not be identified as taped, filmed or recorded.
[37 FR 23726, Nov. 8, 1972]
And I thought every Sunday morning, Casey Kasem would go out to that little building at the edge of town with the tower beside it, and do American Top 40 just for my little town. I figured he stopped at the donut shop before he got there.
In the early days of consolodation, jocks would say that that the above section prohibited out of market voicetracking, but the FCC nor Confgress ever mandated the announcement. It could be argued that "we never said this is live". I'm not convinced that non-radio fgeeks care, and the announcements would be more annoying than anythinfg. The idea is folks would react "I thought he was right here. I'm never listening again!". They might be more likely to say "I wish he'd shut up and I don't care where he is".
Far as that goes, isn't almost all DJ patter "promotional"?
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RADIO TRUTH said:The bigger issue is that a broadcast facility is a public trust and that means serving the community of license.
RADIO TRUTH said:One other thing.....go back some decades and radio stations were able to serve their community and also do entertaining programming to get ratings and billings.
grandoleopry said:The talent is far better than most of the KIDS
working on our local competitors.
TheBigA said:That is a myth. It was a bi-partisan bill, supported by leaders of both parties. Vice President Gore went on the David Letterman Show to promote the bill.
In the Senate, 81 votes yes, 18 voted no. Among the yes votes: Kennedy, Bradley, Dole, Dodd, Feinstein, Kerry, Sarbanes, Simpson, and Thompson.
In the House, it was an even greater margin: 414 to 16.
To say it was pushed by Republicans ignores the facts. It was pushed by both parties, each of whom had reasons to want to see it passed.
Frank Provasek said:The Republicans controlled Congress in 1996,
Frank Provasek said:one company could own every TV and radio station in the country if the "free market" dictated that as the most profitable arrangement