Never said all of the programming was bad - just said the taxpayers shouldn't be paying for its production or to purchase it indirectly. Why is the government involved in any way in funding "Rick Steve's Travel Show"?
It probably isn't getting government money. According to Steves' website, they get money from fundraisers and selling merchandise through the website. But the stations running that show got some CPB money.
The whole idea or view that these stations are somehow owed this money is crazy. College towns are full of radio coverage of all types, and the colleges themselves are generally flush with cash. You said there was a two hour daily news show - what was the source? Was it produced in house - or purchased from NPR?
The source for the weekday, two hour news shows was Pacifica, and one 2 hour show on weekends was CBC Sunday Morning. The station received some CPB money, but most of the funding was through pledge drives, and some was also from the college, although the station was not part of the college curriculum anymore.
You are comparing expanding electrical service into the western part of the US in the 1930s to funding radio services in 2025 - wow. The expansion of a basic utility that is still the primary source of power 100 years later was in the best interest of the whole country, not just a few people. It allowed industry to expand westward, it provided service to everyone as it expanded, and it made vast areas more inhabitable. TVA dams are the same thing - still standing and still the main source of power in those areas. Interstate highway system is the same thing as it expanded everything for everybody. You can say none of those things about AM/FM radio in 2025. The only similarity is that it is 100 year old technology - the difference is that it has been replaced by technology that is readily available and FAR superior. Has that happened to any of those other things? Nope.
Millions of people use and even depend on radio every day.
The Great Plains didn't have power until the REA provided the infrastructure. Back then, the power companies didn't want to extend their infrastructure out to the rural farmers and poor people. It wasn't cost effective for them. Huge swaths of the rural South didn't have power, either, until the REA provided the infrastructure. Republicans in Congress were against the TVA, and R's in Congress were also against Grand Coulee Dam being built as a high dam to provide power (some of which goes to California today). They used the same lame arguments that are now being used against CPB, i.e., government money for such things is "socialism".
They didn't care about the lives of the rural people.
Radio is one of many choices in 2025, and unfortunately, it is no longer the top choice for many people, especially younger people some of whom never use a radio. You say radio is not TV, cable, or the internet and you are right - radio technology predates all of those mediums and is only audio. It has limited choices due to bandwidth, it is audio only, and isn't two way or interactive. It still has a place in the world, but we can all agree that clock is ticking.
The clock on radio is ticking. That is about the only thing where you and I agree.
But audio entertainment and information is viable and valuable. That's why so many vehicles today still have radios.
So news on rural radio is necessary government funded infrastructure in 2025. Not sure about that. Burns, OR is a town of almost 3000 people in Harney County, served by 10 radio signals that are all actually in Burns. Burns even has a weekly newspaper. Harney County is 10,000 square miles and only has 7,600 residents - 4400 of which live within ten miles of Burns. None of the radio stations there cover more than a small portion of the county, and much of the county has no AM/FM radio service at all. However, the entire county has Sirius coverage and 150 kbs satellite internet service.
I've been to Burns. Have you? I've also been to Harney County, as well as nearby Lake County and Malheur County, parts of which are miles and miles of nothing but sagebrush, and the odd, grated entrance to a distant cattle ranch. Harney county is mostly empty desert. The people live in Burns, Hines, a small Indian reservation, and a couple other small hamlets, and the rest live out on a few ranches out in the scrub.
Did you actually look at the listing of stations receivable in Burns? Did you see that the ONLY radio station receivable in the Burns area that has
news is the OPB outlet? Or did you just gloss that item over?
And radio is different from a newspaper. Try reading the newspaper while your working on a site, or at an office. Or working on a ranch. Some of the residents out in the isolated areas of the high desert might have Sirius. But Sirius costs money. Public radio is free to the consumer.
Crazy comparison but okay. The oil industry is critical to our well being, our security and military, industry, and US oil production is a key to our day to day lives. Our government spends too much money on things it has no business being involved in, but I am not sure the oil industry is a good example. The steel industry is another similar example.
The oil industry does not need even one dollar of Federal subsidies. Yet it gets Federal subsidies. It's curious at best that conservatives never complain about that incredible waste of money. But they're complaining about CPB.