Philip_Airtime said:I don't see Entercom donating one of its properties to WXXI. First, I don't think any broadcast company would simply give away a frequency, despite the tax advantages. It's too valuable! But even if Entercom did, I can't imagine them selling to WXXI. An FM public radio signal would create too much competition, don't you think? I mean, very few people listen to the religious stations, so such a donation would make sense. Religious broadcasters don't offer much competition. Public radio does. So, I'd assume Entercom wouldn't simply give away a frequency, but would make WXXI pay for the right to compete against them.
How many people who spend their time with Diane Rehm are heading on over to 98PXY for Dance Party USA? I think we're talking about two entirely different groups of listeners here.
The rest of this discussion proves my point about the ineptness of FCC policies that say it's perfectly fine to take a limited resource like an FM frequency, give it away, and then waste it on a station that will have listeners in the hundreds who will barely keep it on the air because of begathons, programmed simply to prevent any competition with another station in a cluster. I've never been a fan of auctions and big $$ transactions in broadcasting. As far as I'm concerned, a limited resource like an AM/FM frequency should be the property of the government, licensed to a company public or private for the good of the community, and should they need to divest themselves, the frequency is returned to the government and assigned to someone else. I am not interested in regulators deciding on formats or programming, but this kind of horse trading licenses is crazy.