fang39 said:
Prior to the Communications Act of 1996, Broadcast Companies were limited to the number of stations they controlled in a market. That means, Clear Channel would have owned one AM and one FM in the New York City market, instead of the 9 they currently hold.
Actually, ownership caps had been raised prior to 1996... just not to the wide-open extent they were expanded to in '96.
And nobody owns 9 stations in NY or any other market. Clear has no AMs in NY, and has the maximum of 5 FMs.
That means there could be as many as 7 additional fully staffed stations, employing their own sales, air and production teams. Use the same formula across the country and you can see how many jobs have been eliminated soley due to cross ownership by the mega-companies. Thousands.
It's just not that simple. By the 90's the effects of Docket 80-90, the slow growth of radio revenues and other factors had made fully half of all US stations unprofitable... a condition that had been close to the norm going back to the 50's per FCC financial reports... but getting worse in the 90's. Blaming job loss on consolidation alone is disingenuous.
Anecdotally, I owned a duopoly cluster in the late 60's in a market of about a million. I started with one station, and built out to 9 stations (4 AM and 5 FM) over several years. Some stations were sign ons, meaning new hires, and the others incrementally added staff... each had been bought as a distress sale, so generally the staff was lean and I shortened air shifts, went 24/7 and improved promotion and programming... so consolidation there meant better pay, higher revenue, better programming. My point: not all consolidation is bad and sometimes it benefits listeners.
And more than jobs, the biggest loss is the quality of broadcast radio. It has gotten away from its stated purpose, which was to serve the public good.
No, (expanding on another post) the purpose of radio was to attract listeners so that they could be sold things. When Westinghouse built its first stations, they wanted to promote the sale of radios. The same thing happened with stores, newspapers and even insurance companies.
Example: WHAM, the Stromberg Carlson Station.
In the process of regulating... roughly 7 and 12 years after KDKA began, the government introduced the idea of "serving" but the sustaining force behind broadcasting, after the hobbyists and 50 watt stations went away in the mid to late 20's, has always been revenue from advertising.
This was evidenced by the recent pre-Halloween snowstorm in Connecticut, where only one local station was able to break format in order to provide much needed news and information relating to the storm. The rest were either knocked off the air or running pre-recorded programming, since the storm took place on a Saturday afternoon/evening, when no one is in the building anymore.
In most cases, even when there was someone in the building, there is often nothing they can do. My first few years in the business included the entire Sunday shift (7 AM to 11 PM) on an FM in a major market... no wire service, no news person, and the guy on duty (me) could not have done a newscast to save his own life... and that was the early 60's, the height of the "service requirement" years.
Today, listeners tend to know which stations provide the kind of service you talk about. They go there when needed. And there is no need for all stations to be giving storm reports... they can do what they do best while the news specialist handles the emergency as only they are qualified to do. I don't expect to see a review of chain saws in Vogue and don't expect haute coture features in Popular Mechanics. Why should all radio stations be expected to do the same thing, resulting in not just duplication but, often, incompetent or incomplete coverage of important things?