TVradioguru said:
dismuke said:
I don't think that LPFM is an applicable comparison. First off, they are only supposed to go to non profits. Second, their coverage area is only a very few miles. That makes them pretty much worthless except for very small towns - towns which are probably not able to support a non profit. Go to an urban area and there are all sorts of "communities" which are not necessarily geographically compact.
Have you ever had to write checks paying the freight on an AM station? Recently? If an LPFM can't survive doing community radio with targeted donations, how do you propose one could sell advertising to the locals for something that would cost 50X of a LPFM? With all due respect, your analogy doesn't hold water in reality. Tell you what..go out and buy a 5,000 watt AM station with a directional antenna setup and try to operate it one year with unique, locally derived programming and get back to us with the results. In fact, I'd like to review your books before you go through chapter seven.
Gee whiz. Why the hostile tone? What have I ever done to you?
No, I have not written checks to pay the freight on an AM station.
Number two - where on earth did I say that the programing had to be unique and locally derived? Perhaps it is a good idea to
read more carefully before going off on someone. There is no reason what I suggested
has to be local programing. The example I gave of potentially broadcasting to a Vietnamese immigrant audience does not, in any way, preclude the possibility of most or all of the programing coming from a satellite feed to a network of similar stations in cities with very large Vietnamese populations.
Number three - exactly how is it, then, that 5,000 watt AM stations have managed to survive over the years in small towns?
Salina Kansas has a population of 45,000 - just a tad bit larger than the 40,000 Fort Worth/Dallas area Vietnamese population I gave in my example. Salina Kansas manages to support
three AM stations, KFRM, KSAL and KINA. KFRM and KSAL are both 5,000 watt stations. KINA is a 500 watt station - and if you look at that station's coverage map, similar coverage, even at only 500 watts, would be more than ample to cover the geographical area I mentioned in my example.
How is it that a 45,000 population can support
three AM stations - all three of which are talkers, by the way? What percentage of that 45,000 population is even interested in talk radio? Whatever that percentage is, it is split three ways. And yet, somehow, three stations serving that audience is viable - while a station with a monopoly on Vietnamese language programing in a market with 40,000 Vietnamese speaking people is not viable? That simply does not follow or make sense. But, of course, if your objective is to pick a fight, making sense is not necessarily the determining factor, is it?
Furthermore, Great Bend, Kansas, with a population of 15,000, manages to support 5,000 watt AM talker, KVGB, which even produces a certain amount of local programing. So a small town of 15,000 can support a 5,000 watt station - but an ethnic community of 40,000 cannot?
Beloit, Kansas, with a population of 4,000 manages to support the 2,300 watt KVSV AM - and with a daytime coverage area more than adequate to serve the Fort Worth/Dallas Vietnamese example I gave.
Pratt, Kansas, population 6,500, supports 5,000 watt oldies station KMMM-AM. How is it that a 5,000 watt station can serve a small town of 6,500 but not an urban community of 40,000?
I could go on with many more examples - but I have more than made my point. Perhaps I ought to contact the individuals at the above mentioned stations who "write checks paying the freight" and invite them to join us here to educate you. Obviously they know something that you don't.
dismuke said:
As for poor technical quality - that is relevant ONLY if a choice exists between an AM signal or an FM signal. Presumably FM will continue to be more healthy than AM with FM signals being more expensive and difficult to acquire. A piece of furniture for sale at Wal-mart is of much lower quality than a similar item for sale at a high end furniture store. But the two don't really compete much with each other simply because the higher quality stuff is probably out of the financial reach of most of the Wal-mart buyers.
One doesn't have to be an audiophile. Anyone with a set of ears can tell the difference between FM and AM to know immediately that AM sounds inferior. I've seen hundreds of focus groups over the years who right out of the gate, site the main dislike was poor audio quality and noise of AM. Inferior products whether furniture or media choices are obvious to anyone. Sure there are some who tolerate the inferior product to get instant gratification, but given the choice at no additional cost, one will always choose the higher quality product, whether that's an IPod, CD or FM radio.
A total straw man argument. I
never suggested that people could not tell the difference between FM and AM quality. And if one bothers to take the time to actually
read the portion of my posting that you quoted, it is very clear I was
not talking about a context where there is an equal choice between an AM and FM frequency.
Obviously, if given a choice, people would prefer an FM signal to an AM signal, especially for any sort of musical programing. But as long as the FM dial remains comparatively healthy, that choice will not exist for the more marginal programing formats which will be relegated to either AM or the Internet. Fans of Air America style programing, Desi Top 40 Hits, Spanish Language Sports Talk, All Allah All Day, Quack Nutritional Products Radio, The Gay Pride Super Station, Celebrity Gossip Talk Radio, etc. type formats would no doubt prefer to hear such programing on the FM dial. But if more popular formats are still doing well on FM, then those audiences will probably be grateful that it exists on AM despite the lower quality verses it not being available at all or having to access an Internet connection.
If you are a fan of niche programing, you pretty much take it for granted that you are not going to find it on the best frequencies or in highly desirable time slots. I would prefer to hear the music I enjoy on FM - using the data plan on my smart phone to access Internet stations when I drive is a hassle and cell signals tend to drop out. But what I
prefer is irrelevant - nobody on FM, or even AM for that matter, is going to provide such programing. So my choice is to use the Internet or don't listen to such programing.
There are
all sorts of niches out there that are simply NOT being served by terrestrial radio because it is obviously more profitable to serve a wider audience. And even if an affluent person wished to run a niche station as a labor or love or a hobby and just break even it is rarely viable because the cost of acquiring the signal is going to be based on the revenue it will potentially generate if properly programed to serve the widest possible audience. What is happening with AM radio is its existing audiences are either dying off or seeing their stations transition to FM. As that trend continues, the value of AM properties is going to decline accordingly - which means the cost of acquiring a signal is going to decline. And that will open doors to formats and programming ideas that previously were not viable.
The biggest threat to AM is
not the success of FM. To the degree FM does well, it will be comparatively expensive and difficult to find or acquire a frequency in a healthy urban market - and that will force the more marginal programing to the AM dial or the Internet. The Internet, is, of course, ideal for niche programing. For example, it is viable to program 1920s and 1930s music on the Internet - it makes no sense to try it on AM and certainly not FM. But, on the other hand, at present, it would be extremely expensive to stream Vietnamese language programing to several thousand Fort Worth/Dallas area listeners - not to mention being inconvenient to many listeners. So long as there exists potentially viable local audiences that are too large for Internet streaming but not large enough to justify a slot on the FM dial, there will be a demand for AM signals.
On the other hand, to the degree that demand for the available FM signals in a given market is weak, the more marginal types of programing will have a better shot at acquiring an FM signal and, in that particular market, AM might very well die out. But so long as terrestrial radio has certain advantages over Internet radio, my guess is that in healthy, growing and vibrant population centers such as Fort Worth/Dallas, there will be be no shortage of demand for FM signals - which means that more marginal programing will continue to spill over on AM.
At any rate, nothing I wrote is so controversial or offensive that it justifies your going off on me like that. I don't know what the source of your hostility is or if you were having a bad day or merely have inadvertently poor manners - but whatever it is, please get over it.