John McNary said:The difference is that KFWB misled its listeners.
No, it did not. It is still running news and information between these single-sponsor stopsets. Is it as enjoyable as having just a fiew short commercials and more news? No. But is it deceptive? No again. It's just a different kind of commercial.
The difference is that a series of 8-minute fake-news programs ran, unidentified as commerical material, and surrounded on both sides by actual news coverage.
You yourself said they indentified the mortgage company in the content. That satisfies the legal aspects. There is no requirement to say that an ad is indeed an ad. Even if they did, what difference does it make? I really doubt anyone mistakes them for news after the first 15 seconds.
The difference is that Andy Ludlow, the program director, personally assured us this would not happen.
And it hasn't. If there is news and such between the sold commercials, however long they are, they are not selling infomercials per se. They are bundling all the hour's spots and selling them to one account. Good radio? Probably not. Good revenue? Very likely.
Let's all remember that we are in tough economic times. Revenues in radio are down, and for an older demo station like KFWB it is even harder as the big mortgage and refi category is nearly all gone and the automotive in SoCal is way off so they are looking at alternative revenue streams. Expect to hear more of this, too.
So that makes it OK?
Sorry, Mister Corporate radio. You're wrong.
This is not church. This is not about sinning and right and wrong. It is about an economic reality, and finding ways to replace lost revenue such as the mortage and automotive and housing dollares. If KFWB stops being profitable, the whole format goes away and something profitable replaces it. I would rather have them do this kind of thing on a dead daypart than to totally disappear (although I quit listening when they put baseball on and have never gone back).
If you do not like what they have done, write to the station. Tell them you are a listener and you feel let down by one of the stations you regularly tune to, and offer suggestions on how they should do this kind of programming. You might even convince them that they need to reevaluate such long segments all for one sponsor.
And I think it is wrong when anyone hogs the board with an "everything is all right - radio is perfect - we know what we are doing and you the mere listener must be an idiot for disagreeing with me" attitude.
It's your attitude that is at fault. KFWB is simply trying to make some money in a bad daypart. They are NOT doing anything illegal. Your analysis of the FCC rule pertaining to sponsor ID was simply incorrect as you are not in radio and should not be expected to understand the meaning of terms of the trade... yet you go on tirades against anyone who trys to set you straight. You did the same on the KBRT issue, too, and have been proven totally wrong.
"Adding infomercials is just another rung on their descent ladder going into the bottomless pit that AM radio is sadly becoming."
That is what people think of your industry knowledge, David. Perhaps your listeners are stupid enough to think an 8-minute stopset is good radio, I am not.
AM has been in trouble for years, and each year there is less listening to the band and the age of the listener gets older. Talk formats are moving to FM. So AMs will incresingly have to find new ways of getting revenue... and eventually disappear or become ultra-niche.
As I said, a 7 minute stopset is pretty average for music formats today, when you calculate the time between the end of one song to the start of another... because most music stations run just two stops an hour and they load them with more spots than an AM news station does, since the news station can rund a bit of news and a few spots, a bit of sports and a few spots, etc all through the hour. Music listeners tend to react to interruptions, not set length, so the spots are clustered.... been that way for a decade or two as well.