Once again, it doesn't matter. There is no radio format that appeals to everyone. They are not required to appeal to everyone. The federal money isn't contingent on that. How else can I explain this?
But, again, NPR is a program provide. It has no "format". But my point is that a federal government administered service of its kind should have something for everyone... within limits, of course. In fact, it would be appropriate to have more offerings than hours in the day and week, so that each local station could select its own best fits and combine them with material from other sources.
Same thing. They have a style. That's their style, but other non-com program providers such as PRX and APM have basically copied their style and presentation. Right down to the interlude music between stories. So when all of their shows are played on a station, it flows like one continuous program. But if you don't like the style, you change the station. I don't see why I have to explain this to you. This is radio 101.
No, this is not Radio 101. I've been involved with block programmed stations that, for example, have large news blocks in breakfast and afternoon time periods, panels in other hours, telephone talk in others and sports in evenings. But even with the variety, there is consistency in filling the biggest listener needs. When I have done such stations, I knew that each show might drive away some listeners and attract others, so we had an ongoing need to bring listeners back for the things they liked.
Correct. They don't have to like it. Just as I don't have to like them or their politics. We all live and let live. That's what the founding fathers intended. Because they came from a place where that wasn't the way it was. They then use their personal bias to prevent other people from listening.
But the "founding fathers" were mostly the descendants of people seeking religious freedom, as in the Pilgrims. Today, and for the last roughly 200 years, most immigrants have come for economic reasons. They fled the potato famine in Ireland in the earlier eighteen hundreds, the instability of nation states in Germany and Italy after our own Civil War, and from the newly socialist counties of Europe 75 years ago. And now, from the poverty, famine and unrest in Latin America as well as the lesser developed places in the rest of the world.
So what we have is a nation that began based on religious freedom but which has been for two centuries one built by the desire for upward mobility and security. That means that there is a fundamental difference between the foundation and the walls of the nation. That creates divisions based on wealth, race and culture. My point is that a national radio service... or, if you will, audio service, has to have as many facets as a well cut gemstone. I don't expect anyone to listen all day long, but I would want everyone to find something that is appealing enough to be appointment listening.
Unfortunately, we associate appointment listening with streams and podcasts. I don't know if "real time" over the air radio can deal with that today.
They do lots of research and I have in the past posted links to it. They not only do their own research, but they commission research for their stations.
The things you have posted that I have noted or noticed seem to be with research companies not known for doing radio research. Please correct me if I have a wrong impression. But if that is the case, that is a major failing as there are companies like Larry Rosen's that understand both the medium and the ways of recruiting and interviewing listeners that are necessary to guide radio program creation.