The stations all put out a good signal in most of the area.In Nielsen, 95% of the at home and at work listening is in the 65 dbu coverage area. EMF knows that, and when they can't get a great signal, they cover a market with bad ones, knowing each one will only "work" in its primary coverage area.
David is a broadcaster so when he usually says comes from business site of broadcasting.Hatred is a strong word. I resent what EMF is doing, and the fact that they, like all religious broadcasters, exploit rules that give them an unfair advantage. In my view policy failures allow an organization like that to remove mass-appeal entertainment channels from a very limited broadcast spectrum and replace them with a type of evangelism most people don't want to be subjected to, where something fun existed before. In fact, if there's anyone pushing one-sided, "my way is the only way" beliefs here, it's EMF.
As for the EMF vultures, many dislike what they are doing. One of my long time favourite stations fell to them. They were profitable and when the owners decided to sell, there was 2 parties interested, one that would keep the station as is and the EMF. Since the owners wanted out and EMF offered a tad more, the station went to them.