FCC Chairman Martin says he wants lift the current ban on newspapers owning radio and TV stations in the same market.
http://business.bostonherald.com/businessNews/view.bg?articleid=131801
From the 20's into the 70's, newspapers often started and operated radio stations in their communities. The radio station promoted the paper. The paper provided news resources to the radio station. A few newspaper station owners were "grandfathered" and continue to operate local radio stations (Chicago Tribune - WGN, Chicago for example).
Currently less than two dozen all news radio stations operate in the US (some stations list themselves as "news stations" but actually carry talk shows or sports during part of the broadcast day). Nearly all of the bona fide all news radio stations are owned by CBS Radio (former CBS and Group W stations) or are closely affiliated with CBS (i.e., WTOP, Washington owned by the Mormon Church).
Newspaper ownership and all news radio would seem like a natural fit. Newspapers are already operating on continuous deadlines for their websites. Both newspapers and radio stations have gone through waves of cost cutting and as a result do far less local reporting than they used to. My local all news station (a former Group W station) once had a legendary local reporting staff. Now what passes for local reporting is man on the street sound bites to get local reaction to some wire story, live shots from where nothing is happening and puff pieces. They take sound from three networks but when I drive to work in the morning, they are running exactly the same pieces as when I drove home the day before. The main local paper, which once won Pultizers for local and investigative reporting on a regular basis, is not much better.
Maybe joint ownership of local newspapers and all news radio could save both. Give newspaper reporters mp3 recorders and do on-air de-briefs. Send listeners to the paper for details and background.
http://business.bostonherald.com/businessNews/view.bg?articleid=131801
From the 20's into the 70's, newspapers often started and operated radio stations in their communities. The radio station promoted the paper. The paper provided news resources to the radio station. A few newspaper station owners were "grandfathered" and continue to operate local radio stations (Chicago Tribune - WGN, Chicago for example).
Currently less than two dozen all news radio stations operate in the US (some stations list themselves as "news stations" but actually carry talk shows or sports during part of the broadcast day). Nearly all of the bona fide all news radio stations are owned by CBS Radio (former CBS and Group W stations) or are closely affiliated with CBS (i.e., WTOP, Washington owned by the Mormon Church).
Newspaper ownership and all news radio would seem like a natural fit. Newspapers are already operating on continuous deadlines for their websites. Both newspapers and radio stations have gone through waves of cost cutting and as a result do far less local reporting than they used to. My local all news station (a former Group W station) once had a legendary local reporting staff. Now what passes for local reporting is man on the street sound bites to get local reaction to some wire story, live shots from where nothing is happening and puff pieces. They take sound from three networks but when I drive to work in the morning, they are running exactly the same pieces as when I drove home the day before. The main local paper, which once won Pultizers for local and investigative reporting on a regular basis, is not much better.
Maybe joint ownership of local newspapers and all news radio could save both. Give newspaper reporters mp3 recorders and do on-air de-briefs. Send listeners to the paper for details and background.