One thing that has always fascinated me with this market is the line-up of the non-commercial part of the FM band (88.1-91.9).
KTCU 88.7 and KEOM 88.5 provide some variety, but are each limited to one side of the market. In terms of a full market signal, KNTU 88.1 provides a format -- jazz -- that you can't get anywhere else in the market.
Beyond that, there isn't much variety when compared to most other markets. The bulk of the stations that reach more than half of the market are Christian religious variants -- KVRK 89.7, KCBI 90.9, KDKR 91.3, KVTT 91.7. Sadly, our public broadcaster -- KERA-FM/TV -- does not seem to be in the same league as other outfits in the similar sized markets (KQED-FM/TV San Francisco, WHYY-FM/TV Philly) in terms of producing local content (unless KERA-TV's pledge breaks that now seem to occur every 3 week now is considered local programming). KNON really seems to have become a non-factor; 15-20 years ago, you used to see people with KNON t-shirts and bumper stickers on their cars around town. Today, it seems to be invisible...some of its blocks of programming (black gospel, Americana/Texas country, jazz, etc.) have full-time homes on other stations in the market.
In other markets, there seems to be often more than one choice for news/public affairs. In other markets, there seems to be at least one alternative rocker (generally much more adventuresome than the local "Edge"/"Buzz" commercial station), etc.
In Houston, aside from the assorted religious outlets, you have Pacifica outlet KPFT 90.1 (part-time leftist news/talk; part-time KNON variety type), classic rock from Alvin Community College's KACC 89.7, jazz from Texas Southern's KTSU 90.9, alternative from Rice's KTRU 91.7.
Even Bryan/College Station supports two public radio stations -- KEOS 89.1 and A&M's KAMU-FM 90.9.
Some markets like Atlanta have a completely diverse non-com dial. A lot of that seems to be do to ownership by local colleges -- GSU's WRAS 88.5 "Album 88", GIT's WREK 91.1, Clark Atlanta Univ's WCLK 91.9 "Jazz 91.9" -- in addition to the other non-comm's (Radio Free Georgia WRFG 89.3 and classical/NPR WABE 90.1).
So, will this ever change locally?
KTCU 88.7 and KEOM 88.5 provide some variety, but are each limited to one side of the market. In terms of a full market signal, KNTU 88.1 provides a format -- jazz -- that you can't get anywhere else in the market.
Beyond that, there isn't much variety when compared to most other markets. The bulk of the stations that reach more than half of the market are Christian religious variants -- KVRK 89.7, KCBI 90.9, KDKR 91.3, KVTT 91.7. Sadly, our public broadcaster -- KERA-FM/TV -- does not seem to be in the same league as other outfits in the similar sized markets (KQED-FM/TV San Francisco, WHYY-FM/TV Philly) in terms of producing local content (unless KERA-TV's pledge breaks that now seem to occur every 3 week now is considered local programming). KNON really seems to have become a non-factor; 15-20 years ago, you used to see people with KNON t-shirts and bumper stickers on their cars around town. Today, it seems to be invisible...some of its blocks of programming (black gospel, Americana/Texas country, jazz, etc.) have full-time homes on other stations in the market.
In other markets, there seems to be often more than one choice for news/public affairs. In other markets, there seems to be at least one alternative rocker (generally much more adventuresome than the local "Edge"/"Buzz" commercial station), etc.
In Houston, aside from the assorted religious outlets, you have Pacifica outlet KPFT 90.1 (part-time leftist news/talk; part-time KNON variety type), classic rock from Alvin Community College's KACC 89.7, jazz from Texas Southern's KTSU 90.9, alternative from Rice's KTRU 91.7.
Even Bryan/College Station supports two public radio stations -- KEOS 89.1 and A&M's KAMU-FM 90.9.
Some markets like Atlanta have a completely diverse non-com dial. A lot of that seems to be do to ownership by local colleges -- GSU's WRAS 88.5 "Album 88", GIT's WREK 91.1, Clark Atlanta Univ's WCLK 91.9 "Jazz 91.9" -- in addition to the other non-comm's (Radio Free Georgia WRFG 89.3 and classical/NPR WABE 90.1).
So, will this ever change locally?