S
scottwmro
Guest
I got a chance to go out last night, and my wife and I stop in at Rafferty's at Rivergate to eat. As we were seated, I noticed the music sounded good, but as I listen more, I noticed all the titles of the songs were original 70's hits, and then I heard a jock do a short break. He mentioned something about the best of the 70's, all night long. At first, I thought a station here in the market had changed format, then it dong on me it was an XM Format.
I asked the waitress about it, and she was very educated about XM vs. old terrestrial radio. She told me that during the day, the XM receiver was tune to their 60's Oldies Channel, then about 4 PM, it switched to the 70's channel, and as the night went on, the receiver was changed to more Adult AC Hits of Today.
Our waitress went on to tell me the reason that they and other restaurants are playing XM, instead of terrestrial radio is because of no spots, better variety, and she said in her own opinion, all the FM stations in Nashville stink and who listens to them anymore. She went on to say that she has XM in her car. She went on to tell me nobody listens to FM radio anymore.
I told her I owned a local AM station in Gallatin. She quickly pointed out to me she couldn’t figure out why they still put AM on car radios, she said in her words, and I quote “Nobody knows what it is and could careless.
This morning, I went into a Great Clips store to get my hair cut. The music playing in the shop was from an XM receiver tuned to the 80's oldies channel. I’m now even going down the road on Highway 386 from Gallatin to Rivergate and seeing small indoor, mounted antennas in cars attached to an XM receiver that has an FM Modulator on it so the listener can hear the XM Channels on their care radio.
I know most of you on these boards are working inside the industry or trying to get in the industry. Tell me I’m wrong, but I have this gut feeling that XM is going to wipe out terrestrial radio in our lifetime. I also read somewhere the other day that there is a satellite receiver that will receive internet stations.
I feel the NAB and Congress has screwed around with IBOC so much that the other forms of media have an outlet to reach terrestrial listeners. To me, FM IBOC is not that great, I can’t tell much difference in quality, as far as music goes, until you get to the outer boundaries of the FM signal.
Do some of you feel terrestrial radio (and I mean FM) is sitting on the sunset, ready to die like AM did in the mid to late 70’s. If programming doesn’t get any better on Nashville’s FM airwaves, stop changing formats like a freaky woman changes clothes, they might as well hang it up. XM will have them beat, along with mp3, ipods, portable internet radios, etc.
I asked the waitress about it, and she was very educated about XM vs. old terrestrial radio. She told me that during the day, the XM receiver was tune to their 60's Oldies Channel, then about 4 PM, it switched to the 70's channel, and as the night went on, the receiver was changed to more Adult AC Hits of Today.
Our waitress went on to tell me the reason that they and other restaurants are playing XM, instead of terrestrial radio is because of no spots, better variety, and she said in her own opinion, all the FM stations in Nashville stink and who listens to them anymore. She went on to say that she has XM in her car. She went on to tell me nobody listens to FM radio anymore.
I told her I owned a local AM station in Gallatin. She quickly pointed out to me she couldn’t figure out why they still put AM on car radios, she said in her words, and I quote “Nobody knows what it is and could careless.
This morning, I went into a Great Clips store to get my hair cut. The music playing in the shop was from an XM receiver tuned to the 80's oldies channel. I’m now even going down the road on Highway 386 from Gallatin to Rivergate and seeing small indoor, mounted antennas in cars attached to an XM receiver that has an FM Modulator on it so the listener can hear the XM Channels on their care radio.
I know most of you on these boards are working inside the industry or trying to get in the industry. Tell me I’m wrong, but I have this gut feeling that XM is going to wipe out terrestrial radio in our lifetime. I also read somewhere the other day that there is a satellite receiver that will receive internet stations.
I feel the NAB and Congress has screwed around with IBOC so much that the other forms of media have an outlet to reach terrestrial listeners. To me, FM IBOC is not that great, I can’t tell much difference in quality, as far as music goes, until you get to the outer boundaries of the FM signal.
Do some of you feel terrestrial radio (and I mean FM) is sitting on the sunset, ready to die like AM did in the mid to late 70’s. If programming doesn’t get any better on Nashville’s FM airwaves, stop changing formats like a freaky woman changes clothes, they might as well hang it up. XM will have them beat, along with mp3, ipods, portable internet radios, etc.