gr8oldies said:
In the case of EMF, you have listeners opening their own checkbooks to support this format. What could be more in the public interest than that? I have friends who travel and always go on the website to find the KLove affiliate where they are going, and LIKE the fact that they can hear the same programming as back home. No, no one's talking about potholes on Main St., but it definately serves an enthusiastic audience.
If that were the yardstick by which the "public interest" is served, then it would certainly include infomercials, scam artists and PBS. Of those 3 groups, only the latter realistically meets that definition. The first two simply bilk people out of money by dangling some perceived "value" in front of them. Whether EMF Broadcasting provides a perceived value is subject to discussion.
If someone wants to pay money to support it, that's one thing. But it's also a thing that need not result in the removal of hundreds of radio programming choices and local content in communities across this country. And that's exactly the issue with EMF. They carpet bomb hard-hit owners in poorer markets with big money offers. The end result is a radio dial in places like Utica, NY and Bangor, ME which have seen the loss of several mainstream formats in exchange for 100% satellite fed programming on multiple full-powered and translator signals all over the countryside. Areas that are neither particularly religious and less so protestant/evangelist. No care whatsoever is taken with regard to try to tailor Arkansas-type programming to listeners in Ellsworth, Maine or DuBois, PA or Farmington, NH. None, it's all the same feed. Does
THAT serve the 'public interest' for listeners in those communities? From my vantage point, an emphatic
NO. About the only interest I have seen served in these deals is that of the station owner who drives off into comfortable retirement. The market he leaves has at least one less choice on the radio (in some cases, 2 or 3 less choices).
And, as said before, EMF has money during a time when others don't because they use religion to prompt average people to open their checkbooks. Somehow, these types of formats manage to have an unlimited supply of donated money; quite unlike PBS. Interesting how that works. Could it be because PBS run pledge drives based on
your eternal judgment? Hmmmm....
Given all that, this is one of the few examples for which I think governmental intervention (in this case, the FCC) is warranted. Because it's out of control. Owners should not be allowed to simply program 500+ automated satellite stations (24/7) from a single point. And, no, it's not the same thing as syndicated programming - where a local component still remains. With the EMF stations, there's none at all. Zero local content, no local news, no local anything. And that is the problem here - beyond all else. Greed, cloaked as something else, pure and simple.