amfmxm said:
And what little chatter there was in the general press (Big A's reference to Gore on Letterman?) was about the telephone industry. It was a cell phone bill.
Put it in context with what was going on in broadcasting at the time. The FCC had already loosened up the ownership limits twice, and was going to do it again. This Act simplified that procedure for the FCC. There were lengthy hearings in both the Senate and the House on the radio ownership aspects of the bill. This absolutely was NOT done in the dark. I remember reading a lot about it in the trades. Big owners like Sillerman and Karmazin were talking about it a lot. I clearly remember the discussions about requiring owners to buy AMs along with the FMs. It’s possible if you’re in the boonies, you didn’t know. But if you were reading the trades every week (I was in a major market and had a subscription to Broadcasting at the time), it certainly wasn’t a secret.
amfmxm said:
Like many other aspects of political life, whether one favors consolidation or not depands largely on one's preference for oligopoly--rule by a few (or its first cousin, monopoly)--or a more participatory society.
In my experience, radio has always benefited from various synergies, whether it was with electronics manufacturers or newspapers owning radio stations. As I said yesterday, the decision that made the 96 Act inevitable was the cross-ownership ban, which eliminated newspaper ownership of broadcasting. Had that continued, ownership consolidation would not have happened. I recently read the fascinating book, “Air Castle of the South,” which told the story of WSM. The story there was an insurance company owned an AM station, which became the centerpiece of an AM-FM-TV-cable operation, that also owned a hotel, theme park, and the Grand Ole Opry. There is no radio-only company that has that kind of concentration today. And that’s what the 96 Act was about: radio-only companies, rather than radio as part of some other business.
amfmxm said:
I'll take the view that the greater number of participants in an industry like radio--a "content" driven biz--the better. But there are a significant number of Americans who sincerely believe that it is better to allow the richest and most powerful people to own as much as they can afford or wish to buy, including media.
The Constitution shows no prejudice against rich or powerful. Unless they use their power or money for crime, it’s OK. Bill Paley was a rich and powerful man before he bought CBS in 1928. Same with all of the original founders of broadcasting. What was OK then should be OK now. If you study the history of broadcasting, it was all about rich and powerful people. If they weren't rich and powerful when they started, they became rich quickly, especially if they owned the most powerful radio station in a small town. Someone has to PAY for that content. Mom & pop, in my experience, never had the money to create content. That’s why the small stations always carried networks and syndication.
amfmxm said:
Yeah, it was a "heist." And if it had not been conducted as a "stealth" job by NAB insiders (yeah, some palms were certainly greased), the radio industry of the time--the thousands of small companies constituting the industry--would never have allowed it to happen.
Are you kidding? Those small companies were the chief beneficiaries of the Act. Their owners cashed out and have lived the rest of their lives with riches and splendor. Even Jerry Del Colliano was able to leave with more money than he’d ever have made if he stayed in Cherry Hill. None of them are interested in getting back into the trenches now.