Does anybody on this forum know if it's permissable to broadcast interviews with political candidates that include talking about their experience/qualifications, their campaign, and allowing them to ask listeners to vote for them?
Desert Ear said:I'm trying to find out details about the equal time rule. All I could find out is that it was abolished in 1987.
Is this correct, or has it been reinstated?
MattParker said:I have to say, whatever the letter of the law, it sounds somewhat questionable.
Desert Ear said:It's really not that complicated. Either there's an FCC rule, or there isn't. I was hoping someone on this forum would know.
Desert Ear said:It's really not that complicated. Either there's an FCC rule, or there isn't. I was hoping someone on this forum would know.
If I find one on the FCC web site, I'll post it. Of course, that site is so large, it'll take me some time to search through it!
It's really not that complicated. Either there's an FCC rule, or there isn't. I was hoping someone on this forum would know.
aaronread said:BTW, I don't quite get the theme that LPFM's are an experimental form of broadcasting. They aren't at all; the rules surrounding them are generally no different than any other non-commercial radio station. Yes, some of the specifics...like how the allocations are decided or what level of EAS participation is required...are different. But LPFM's are governed by Part 73 just like any "full power" AM or FM, and their non-commercial status is virtually identical to the rest of the reserved-band stations.
MattParker said:@GRC: "Community radio" has a long-standing problem. Lack of listeners. The FCC for a long time held onto the myth of city of license and started licensing stations to cities in the suburbs. Usually these were stations located within the suburban counties of a metro area, with good signals from the big city stations. These suburban "community stations" either ignored their token city of license and tried to pass themselves off as another city station or adopted some niche format (often brokered religion) which also ignored the COL. Yes, a few stations did establish a strong local identity for a time but they were the exception. These stations that made it as community radio did it with a solid local personality and a local presence (they showed up for everything and they talked about everything - if your name was not mentioned on the radio this morning, probably you knew some of the people who were mentioned). Even if they lacked listeners, they maintained a connection to local advertisers, who often had limited advertising options.
But these so-called LPFM stations often do not target a "community," even though they claim to speak for one. They generally have some ax to grind. They see a radio license as a pulpit. They want to preach to, rather than reflect a community. In a post I recall from another context, they operate for people who want to talk on the radio and not for people who listen to the radio. Their preaching doesn't even get most of the choir to listen, although those people will say it's important that the "message" be preached. If a tree falls in an empty forest....