This, coming from a guy who got caught running to Cancun during a freak ice storm in his home state...
I think you're referring to the ice storm where people died while all the radio stations in Houston were running syndicated talk or playing music.
This, coming from a guy who got caught running to Cancun during a freak ice storm in his home state...
The drivers here are notoriously bad, and there's a station that's a got sounder leading into their traffic reports which is a bunch of blaring car horns. That has caught me off guard a few times and caused me to tap the brakes and look around, before realizing it's the radio.I don't think we have that rule, and it's a pet hate. Too many ads start with a siren only to go "don't get stopped by the police, get new tires from Mike's Tires" or whatever.
There's another one that really gets to me - the sound of a car breaking down and clunking, followed by a VO along the lines of "don't you hate that sound? When it happens to you, call XYZ Breakdown Service". It's a needless distraction while driving, because the driver is trying to figure out if the grinding and clunking is their vehicle or the damn radio.
I think you're referring to the ice storm where people died while all the radio stations in Houston were running syndicated talk or playing music.
One of the key advantages of radio as a medium is the low cost and long battery life of portable radios. If something as simple as a power outage renders the medium unusable to a significant proportion of the populace, we've got problems.Keep in mind the crisis lasted two weeks. The characterization that all radio stations didn't do anything about the storm for two weeks is an exaggeration. The main part of the crisis was the failure of the state's power grid, which meant home radio usage was out.
One of the key advantages of radio as a medium is the low cost and long battery life of portable radios. If something as simple as a power outage renders the medium unusable to a significant proportion of the populace, we've got problems.
Agreed.The availability of portable radios has been seriously diminished. I don't own a battery-operated radio, and I work in the radio business. I've seen surveys that say I am fairly typical of the general population. Which is why it's imperative to keep radios available in cars.
I feel so old, as we have several battery-powered radios in our house, including a 10-transistor GE radio I got for my 10th birthday.The availability of portable radios has been seriously diminished. I don't own a battery-operated radio, and I work in the radio business. I've seen surveys that say I am fairly typical of the general population. Which is why it's imperative to keep radios available in cars.
Agreed.
During the pandemic, my wife and I realized that we had no battery operated radio. Amazon came to the rescue with a variety of units, some of which I found that other members of the National Radio Club were actually using as DX radios.... so I bought a nice Tecsun PL 880 about 6 months ago, and keep it with several boxes of 24 long storage life batteries in a place in the home where we can easily find it even after a horrible earthquake.
How many people would do that (or have done it)? It borders on either geek behaviour or insanity, and ended up costing about $200 in total including a "crush-proof" waterproof box to store it in.
Only car radios would be available to a huge portion of the population, and even then not for very long unless used very sparingly.
As I've mentioned before, I only have 2 "radios" in my home and rarely use either. One happens to be built into my 3.1 "entertainment system", and the other is an Eton wind-up AM/FM/weather radio that also has an LED flashlight and cell phone charger built in. While it's been nearly useless in shorter-term major storms and weather events as none of the stations has broken programming or usual format to give news or information, during incidents where there was a lot of long-lasting damage or widespread power outages and other impacts, the wind-up radio has been helpful when our power was out, as a few stations did break programming and I didn't need to go to the bother or expense of keeping batteries in stock for it, or trying to drive around and find batteries once a storm hit and shelves were empty. As a bonus, it kept my cell phone charged during the day or two we were without power. I got my wind-up radio as a "gift" during an NPR station pledge drive, but I appreciated it so much that I bought a few to give family members as gifts.I feel so old, as we have several battery-powered radios in our house, including a 10-transistor GE radio I got for my 10th birthday.

Not if few people listen, or stations aren't staffed to broadcast such actual life-safety information...Perhaps AM radios in vehicles (intended to be sold in the US market) could be part of the baseline of safety equip. - seat belts, air bags, window glass that breaks "safely", AM (& FM) radios.
All of these things can be life saving in certain situations.
Seriously, this is becoming absurd. No one buying a car who’s under 50 is going to listen to AM radio. It’s not a safety feature. It isn’t going to save lives. Learn to live in the 21st century.Perhaps AM radios in vehicles (intended to be sold in the US market) could be part of the baseline of safety equip. - seat belts, air bags, window glass that breaks "safely", AM (& FM) radios.
All of these things can be life saving in certain situations.
Kirk Bayne
Welcome to Groundhog Day.Sigh... Please, PLEASE, don't let this become yet another discussion thread that winds up getting locked due to it becoming an extended, absurd debate around 1 person's insistence than an old, antiquated, substandard band be brought back to life or kept alive for a purpose it hasn't served in years and is not well suited for!![]()
It'll probably go about as far as the proposed lawsuits that would've forced cell manufacturers to include OTA radio receivers in their phones, or the suits against SiriusXM merging for fear it would hurt terrestrial broadcast stations, or the suits against those satellite companies giving local weather forecasts, for much the same argument. None were effective.There are some AM stations that are planning to sue the FCC over this, claiming that the FCC can "make" car manufacturers keep the AM band as part of the entertainment options in cars. I'm guessing that's going nowhere.
They're talking about it on KCJJ right now and hypothesizing that the FM band could be next.