J
JimmyJames
Guest
Every kind of dance music? Funny, that XM/Sirius merger removed a lot of good dance music from the satellite waves. Especially deep/soulful/jazzy house.
Savage said:The second level where HD-2 and 3 simulcasts of sister AMs is funny: many of those AM stations are broadcasting in HD. Seems to me that if HD offered all the advantages claimed for digital broadcasting on AM stations, FM simulcasts wouldn't be necessary, now would they?
Isn't simulcasting AM stations on FM back during the 60's looked on now as a sign of how moribund the FM band was at that time?Savage said:Yeah, BRNout, it cracks me up how the "big trend" towards using HD subs to simulcast co-owned AMs is being heralded as some kind of indicator of HD's success. As you have noted: that doesn't represent "variety in programming" which has long been a mantra of HD promoters. It represents duplication.
And apparently it also indicates the level of desperation among HD-pushers to identify a successful application, ANYWHERE, for HD Radio generally and for its side channels in particular.
The second level where HD-2 and 3 simulcasts of sister AMs is funny: many of those AM stations are broadcasting in HD. Seems to me that if HD offered all the advantages claimed for digital broadcasting on AM stations, FM simulcasts wouldn't be necessary, now would they?
KB1OKL said:Isn't simulcasting AM stations on FM back during the 60's looked on now as a sign of how moribund the FM band was at that time?
Mike Walker said:Hey, you've got an FM with multicast channels to fill, and down the hall you have an AM that has trouble covering the market, particularly at night. Seems like a solid fit to me...and a way to keep the buzz off the AM band!
Mike Walker said:Hey, you've got an FM with multicast channels to fill, and down the hall you have an AM that has trouble covering the market, particularly at night. Seems like a solid fit to me...and a way to keep the buzz off the AM band!
BRNout said:Much of this is pure duplication.
BRNout said:A lot of the AMs being simulcasted do not have trouble covering the market though. WSCR, for example, covers tons more of the Chicago DMA on 670 than on 104.3 HD-2.
kc1ih said:I think where HD radio is thriving is on the public/NPR stations. They are using multicasting for such things as bringing in stations from other cities, BBC World Service, classical music, etc.. They also have been smarter in how they promote HD radio compared to the commercial stations, they don't insult their listener's intelligence.