Actually I think public radio might have a little pressure. They need to program and report on issues that keep their contributors listening and writing checks to their local NPR station.
TheBigA said:But if a station wants to cut costs, the easiest way is to get rid of the aging talk hosts, and hire a bunch of college grads. Radio, for the most part, has resisted that temptation. Instead they hire and rehire even more veterans, and continue to drive the average age upward.
As a person who has some experience with news-talk radio in Buffalo, I'm grateful that Buffalo has two NPR affiliates. No slight to WBEN and its staff, but very few "media sources" equal or surpass what's produced by NPR, WNED-AM and WBFO. Very likely, there are those in Rochester who feel the same about WXXI-AM.TheBigA said:JimPastrick said:NPR reports this morning that Michael Jackson's death received more coverage by "the media" than the war and elections in Afghanistan. In so many ways, I'm not surprised. Not at all. "We have found the enemy, and they is us." -Pogo
"The Media" today is far more than traditional journalism. Certainly with 3 24/7 cable news channels, they have a lot of time to fill. And truthfully, the Afghan elections would be a bad example for comparison. The health care story is getting as much coverage as Jackson's death.
Like "radio," this thing called "the media" has become far more than a handful of newspapers. I'm sure the folks at TMZ see themselves as part of the media. Same with Perez Hilton. Even Twitter and various blogs have become part of the media. It's all of that which has depressed the value of traditional media, and thus the price of advertising, and why we are in the place we're in.
Back to Jackson's death, the criteria on how stories are chosen for coverage aren't totally within the realm of serious journalists. Not everyone works under the same pressures as NPR. That's the purpose of non-commercial broadcasting...to operate without commercial pressures.Same with Bob Smith at WXXI. He doesn't have to cover stories like this reality star murder. So good for them. All those who disliked the Jackson story had a place to go for coverage of more pressing news like what's happening in the Punjab.
Steven21 said:Did I miss something? Are you advocating the hiring of a bunch of college grads to staff a talk station?
If yes, you've got to be kidding.
If no, then nevermind.
Mike Sheridan said:Might not be a bad idea to turn the college kids loose on a radio station.