But it quite obviously makes money. In many cases, stations like that program for revenue, not ratings.The most stale pie of all is the sports stations that talk Cleveland Browns 24/7/365. How anyone can listen to that is beyond me
But it quite obviously makes money. In many cases, stations like that program for revenue, not ratings.The most stale pie of all is the sports stations that talk Cleveland Browns 24/7/365. How anyone can listen to that is beyond me
It's kinda like: "How bad does the weather have to be for The Weather Channel nowadays to pre-empt the 133rd rerunning of 'Accidents On The 401 in CANADA' in the evening hours?", or whatever the hell that show is called.
Fox Weather mostly does a good job for an upstart, though I have caught them running reality shows during breaking severe weather on weekends.Fox Weather runs circles around The Weather Channel when it comes to live weather coverage into the evening. I think they are live until 1 a.m. most nights, at least during the week. I've watched them several times during severe weather events, not even necessarily in this part of the country, while TWC is airing its reality shows.
It's still the most well-knownTruth be told, TV does a better job with weather stories than radio. TV has the staff, the visuals and the expertise to cover these events while radio is now dependent on the automated EANS alerts, any weather service they might subscribe to, and, if there is a live operator, a computer or their personal device to get info to share on the air.
I stopped watching the Weather Channel when they began continously screaming about bad weather somewhere and airing disaster shows. I often travel the 401 in Canada and it is hardly the hell road they make it out to be! Spectrum offers another weather channel in addition to Fox and I have seen at least two others, all of which are calmer and more reasonable in presentation than The Weather Channel. But I'll bet the Weather Channel has more viewers. If it bleeds, it leads.
All the 90's deregulation did was reduce the amount of worthless community ascertainment required for license renewal.
With the elimination of ascertainment rules for both radio (FCC, 1981; 1986) and television (FCC, 1984), broadcasters now must only maintain a public file containing basic documents pertaining to the licensee's operation and file quarterly reports describing some community issues and the stations' programming giving "significant treatment" to such issues.