John C said:Wow! When was the last time you read that on this board?
He's talking about the one on the top of my head.
John C said:Wow! When was the last time you read that on this board?
John C said:cee said:Big A has a point.
Trying to steer this thread back, how about country music on KB? I would think of any music would work on AM that country would be it. Just my two cents.![]()
Bob1370 said:That's what you get from the Telecommunications Act of 1996; less competition, less incentive to excel. Isn't it wonderful?
SirRoxalot said:I don't see any reference that said it had to be a stand-alone AM. It's probably too late now, but other groups in town would have taken a crack at WBEN if they had KB's signal and cachet at a reasonable price.
TheBigA said:SirRoxalot said:I don't see any reference that said it had to be a stand-alone AM. It's probably too late now, but other groups in town would have taken a crack at WBEN if they had KB's signal and cachet at a reasonable price.
You think Citadel would run it as a locally programmed AM? Really? They aren't running WABC that way.
I'm asking if there's a locally owned company, other than the national chains, that has the interest and the resources to run a locally programmed AM radio station.
SRP said:There's a couple, actually. And if you had done your research instead of just coming on to every R-I forum with your KIA attitude (not the car company BTW) you'd know that.
Bob1370 said:That's what you get from the Telecommunications Act of 1996; less competition, less incentive to excel. Isn't it wonderful?
...Great host!Jim Santella said:An active Blues Society consisting of 700 plus members doesn't hurt. They even sponsor enough blues and charity events to afford underwrites. Great fans! Great Audience!
Ed Trefzger said:Bob1370 said:That's what you get from the Telecommunications Act of 1996; less competition, less incentive to excel. Isn't it wonderful?
With all due respect, as I do appreciate your program and your station, public radio should also be an outlet for local programming ... and even more so. But what has NPR brought us over the past decade? More network programming and less locally-produced music, news and public affairs. Witness WBFO, KXJZ, WBEZ, WCPN, WDET, WGBH, WUSF, etc., etc.
Other than news and drop-ins during Morning Edition and ATC, WXXI-AM has two hours of live local programming weekdays.
Yet somehow Clear Channel station WHAM -- a conglomerate that owes its gargantuan existence to of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 -- manages ten hours of live, locally-produced programming on weekdays and five or more on Saturday and Sunday. Debate about its quality, if you wish, but even excluding Lonsberry, the WHAM morning news, 5 o'clock news hour and Bob Matthews on Sports are long-lived local programs that are well-produced.
Public radio can do better. It's a shame that in so many markets it has opted for network programming instead.
Say what you will about his politics, Tom Bauerle does a heckuva job as a talk show host.
I liked Tom's show better when he was on GR and not going the Rush Limbaugh route. And he then had one part timer as his producer? Tom Darro did an interesting show on WJJL with no producer - just taking calls live. If these shows around the country sound cheap, it's probably because of the talent level. Radio is actually the perfect cheap medium - you just need one talented broadcaster to get behind a mic and perform. That's it. And you can find talented people everywhere who will literally work for free, just like local theater, music and the arts.We had a visitor from Vermont Public Radio today. She does a noon hour show with a call-in component. She says the show has THREE producers, plus a call screener and board operator. It sounds good and resonates with the audience. In my travels across the country, I've heard my share of public radio talk shows that are being done on the cheap and it sounds like it. For now, Buffalo's public radio stations don't have the resources to produce a daily talk show.