SirRoxalot said:
2. There's more ethnic broadcasting in 2008, simply because there are more ethnic owners. More owners brought more diversity.
That's a laugh.
There is more ethnic broadcasting because the only America population growth is in the major ethnic groups, and not in non-Hispanic whites. So naturally, as one group grows, more stations will be attracted to serving it.
Let's take Hispanic targeted Spanish language stations:
While there may be more total stations, it's mostly because between 1985-90 and today, Hispanic population in the US doubled.
But he only places where there are lots of new owners is in very small Hispanic markets, like Birmingham, where failing AMs were taken over, often for debt assumption, and went to a Spanish language format... and in "dog" AMs in larger markets that went to Spanish evangelical formats. These are tiny players that succeed, if indeed they do, based on minimal investment, cheap operations and a niche market.
In Miami, the only US market where Hispanic household income exceeds that of non-Hispanic whites, there is no significant station, AM or FM, that is owned by local interests. We have SBS (founded in NY), Univision (founded in Harlingen) and Clear Channel (founded in San Antonio de Valero. And we have, via a proxy, Grupo Prisa from Spain, which owns twice as many stations as Clear Channel does.
In bigger markets, we have the same players in Spanish language as we had in 1995 before consolidation. SBS, Entravision (Entravision and Xcel), Univsion (which is a fusion of Heftel and Tichenor, so really one big player less), Border (and its incarnations), and the various post bankruptcy pieces of Amador Bustos' group, the in-Liquidation Luna group, etc. The Mega group sold out, and is gone.
In LA, in 1995 we had Villanueva, Liberman, SBS, Heftel, Entravision (via Luis Nogales who sold to them) and Lotus. Today the Villanueva station, after failing under two different Hispanic owners, is in English. The others remain; one new entry is a Mexican megacompany via the LMA of an Emmis station. No net change.
While Clear, CBS and others have entered the area of Spanish language formats, this is no different than the case of the gradual reduction of rock stations in many markets... a reaction to population changes and demographic shifts. And that does not change the number of broadcasters in major markets targeting this ethnic group. And that fact has created many new formats, not diversity of ownership.