That may be true, but the job of radio is still to serve the public.
Maybe the stations don't need 24/7 coverage, but I think there should be news breaks throughout the day on every station.
There are many people in shelters that may or may not have TV.
It wouldn't be very difficult for the station that actually have live jocks to read updates over the air on a regular basis.
Any of the clusters in town could record a news update every 15 minutes and send it to all stations to play in between songs.
That being said, I do applaud what is happening on the Buzz.
I think these request-a-thons are a great idea, but in a cluster that has 5 music stations, why is it only happening on one of them?
Maybe I was wrong in saying that most radio stations don't care about serving the public, but I do think that there is more that could be done than what is actually happening.
> > Because most radio stations don't care about serving the
> > public.
> >
> > > Just wondering, since so many in the path of huricane
> > > Katrina have now fled to the Houston area, why some
> > Houston
> > > radio station does not try and do a simulcast of the
> > > coverage on WWL radio. I know the the owners of WWL do
> > not
> > > have a station in Houston as far as I can tell, it would
>
> > be
> > > a good thing to do as a public service.
> > >
> > > Old Chicago
> > >
> >
>
> Or maybe the evacuees have hotel rooms in Houston, and
> therefore, have TV's, and chances are, have access to CNN
> (at least). There's no reason for 24/7 radio coverage of
> this in Houston.
>
> G
>
<P ID="signature">______________
Because you dance to disco but you still like rock.</P>