justareporter said:
I'm sure I am not the only one who gets this, but hasn't anyone realized the obvious. Limbaugh syndicated over 600 stations means there are 600 less mid-day (or whatever daypart) individuals to explore local and regional issues for the benefit of their listeners. Hannity on 500 stations means the same thing in a different daypart. Same too with ______(fill in name and number of stations here.)
Limbaugh, Hannity, & Rome will garner more listeners than Billy Bob Localguy droning on and on about the school board election next month. If that wasn't the case, Mr. Localguy would be #1 in the market. I'm sure there are a few local hosts that give Limbaugh, Hannity, & Rome a run for their money (especially on large-market sports stations or toaster-talkers like WGN), but they are relatively few and far between. The local hosts are OK for drive times, but beyond that (when there are fewer listeners to any kind of radio other than sports play-by-play), there's no reason for them.
Radio was always supposed to be a public medium serving the "public interest, convenience and necessity." How the devil can a station serve the "public interest" with virtually no on-air staff, no news department and (in many cases) no facilities in their city of license?
How does a radio station serve the public interest if the public isn't listening? If that station is running a local guy who only talks about (probably obscure) issues local only to the stations city of license, chances are he has few, if any listeners. This isn't 1945 or even 1985, and even back then, a commercial radio station's sole reason for existing is/was to make money for its owners. Period. Public interest, convenience & necessity is still being served by network/syndicated talk shows (How is it not? Please explain), and the station is making a profit at the same time. A win-win if you ask me.
People listened to the local news on radio until TV took over in the '60s. Now even TV news ratings are dropping as the audience dies off. In the future, if not already, most folks will get their news from the internet - a convergence of print and video. The site names may be the old ones , such as Washington Post, CNN, or WBBM-TV, but they will essentially be the same type of news website. In fact, they already are.
And who cares if a station's studio is in the city or a suburb 30 miles away if the entire market is being served? The concept of "City of License" was flawed from Day One and needs to go away.
You want real discussions? Bring back local radio. Require stations to have a local staff and a local news department and if they cry they can't make any money that way then have 'em give up the license.
You want real discussions? Watch the city-owned cable channel or listen to your local NPR station if they still have a local presence.
And every time somebody says "Require stations to have a local staff and a local news department," I think he's really saying "Hey, I'm an out of work DJ/news guy/dinosaur and I don't want to retire, sell real estate, or tend bar! I want things like they were in 1965." As much as I hate to see anyone out of work, the fact is that the stations can't afford full staffs (and it's just not in broadcasting either - it's happening everywhere), and the listeners apparently don't care.
Bottom line (and it is
always about the bottom line): Limbaugh = ratings. Rome = ratings. Hannity = ratings. Ratings = $$$$. Local midday hosts = no ratings = no $$$$ (with only a few exceptions).