mcradiofree said:
Well you only mentioned one that actually does radio talk shows. Most public radio stations offer entertainment, and occasional talk.
Almost all NPR affiliates - even rural mostly-classical stations - have to carry Morning Edition and All Things Considered, and even Marketplace or Fresh Air. That's somewhere between six to eight hours of spoken word programming per day, and that's hardly 'occasional.' If you're a NPR talk station, there's hardly any local talk content (maybe somewhere between two to three hours), as all those aforementioned national shows must air, in addition to other stuff like Diana Rehm and "Talk of the Town." Some stations may even relay the BBC World Service for the entire overnight period.
mcradiofree said:
and ABC?
How'd that make the list?
Former parent company of WABC Radio, I guess.
mcradiofree said:
The rest are all fine institutions of media, who tend to tell the truth (or at least the story) instead of repeating the same old tired sound bytes.
Oy.
All of the aforementioned "fine institutions of media" ceased to practice actual journalism in 2008 - I won't even bother explaining why on here, it's not necessary. These networks or outlets now blatantly exact an agenda or ideological viewpoint, give or take the occasional token conservative or RINO in the editorial boards or as on-air commentators (i.e., Pat Buchanan with MSNBC, Larry Kudlow with CNBC, and alleged RINO David Brooks with the NYT). Yes, some reporters are still damn good: on the radio dial, ABC Radio's Ann Compton and Doug Limerick, CBS Radio's Mark Knoller, Fox Radio's Bill Vitka and AP Radio's Jon Belmont immediately come to mind.
But as a result of this wholesale failure for the media to do their jobs, Fox is the only one that has even tried to be honest with their audience. Yeah, they have a conservative viewpoint. And? What else is new? People watch Fox handily over all of their cable brethren and do adequately against the broadcast TV realm. So? The objective now is to insult the viewers and discredit the network? That's been going on for years. Yawn.
Most of the remaining audiences for CBS, NBC, ABC, CNN and MSNBC now are otherwise reflecting the ideological slant set forth by those news departments. Which is fine and dandy, but it ain't objective. And it certainly isn't "telling the truth."