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NBC 5/Dallas Says HD Radio Unpopular In The Big D

A flood of devices onto a public that doesn't care about them. That's real compelling evidence that HD will succeed. Oh, wait... AM stereo had big name manufacturers and sellers, too! So did quad! And we all know how alive and vibrant those technologies are today!

Please. Spare us the undue hype. We're smarter than that.
 
"A Dismal failure"???? The FCC rules were just finalized THIS SUMMER! AM HD at night is only weeks old. Multicasting is still in an experimental phase, with no commercial announcements. Most stations have yet to mention their specific multicasts on their main channels. Until fairly recently, HD radios were available in only a few select, usually smaller specialty stores. And the brands weren't the "big ones". That has all changed, just in recent weeks. While you "Chicken Littles" are declaring that 'the sky is falling, HD IS DEAD", the technology is blossoming, growing, and being taken home in products LIKE THE CHEAP CAR STEREO WITH HD, the shelf system with dvd/mp3 AND HD, the home theater receivers from the biggest names in the business WITH HD, etc. And if you're not aware of these products, that serves only to illustrate the "expertise" with which you pontificate!

As we discuss this, HD radios are going home in MANY devices, from retailers as diverse as The Sharper Image, Costo, and JC Penney, and will soon be playing "stations between stations" for people who dont' even know they've bought HD. Tee Hee! Drip, drip, drip, the "trickle" of HD sales is quickly becoming a FLOOD!
 
Josh C. said:
A flood of devices onto a public that doesn't care about them. That's real compelling evidence that HD will succeed. Oh, wait... AM stereo had big name manufacturers and sellers, too! So did quad! And we all know how alive and vibrant those technologies are today!

Please. Spare us the undue hype. We're smarter than that.

Hey, Josh.

Greetings from beyond the grave. That's right. I'm one of those who works in the "Already Failed" analog radio business. Fortunately, when the station supposedly died, they apparently left my paycheck on autodraft, as I continue to get one twice a month.

I have a question for you to ponder next time your at your p.a. gig for girls volleyball and you have some down time.

Why are these devices being produced if there is not an anticipated market for them?

I can only assume your answer will be that the people making these decisions are wrong.

If that's the case then here is another question for you. I ask this with the utmost sincerity.

What makes you, at your age and with your experience level, believe you are so uniquely qualified to know what is right, as opposed to these massive manufacturers and broadcasters who earn 10's of millions of dollars every quarter?

Seriously. You stepped into the discussion. You're certainly entitled to you opinion as are we all. But as someone who openly professes they left college a couple of years ago due to poor grades, and seems to have ever had a tangental relationship to broadcasting and manufacturing, why do you feel YOU know more than them?

Me? I had my first radio job in '74 and have been at my current managerial position for the last 9 years. I would question my expertise in this area and frankly was wondering what you think qualifies your assessment as worthy of attention?

Do you suppose it's at least possible that you may not have a complete grasp of all the elements?

Clouseau
 
clouseau said:
KB1OKL said:
clouseau said:
BRNout said:
LOL! Amusing way to make a valid point. :D

I've tended to stay out of this particular fray, but Mike went too far with the hyperbole. A cheap car stereo has HD? Where?

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage...radio&lp=4&type=product&cp=1&id=1179531591062

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage...radio&lp=6&type=product&cp=1&id=1186004537907

http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage...radio&lp=5&type=product&cp=1&id=1179876484523

Nothing here over $129.99 for AM-FM-HD-CD car radios. Maybe I'm missing the cutoff point for Cheap?

Clouseau

The way things are going they're going to be paying people to haul them away anyway, at least this way they can sell a few maybe.
it's the old Oxymoronic (Emphasis on the moronic) arguement.

HD Radios Suck. They're too expensive - no one wil pay that.
HD Radios Suck. They're too cheap. They have no perceived value
HD Radios Suck. They need to pay people to haul them off.
HD Radios Suck. No one will buy a cheap radio.

Pick a story and go with it.

Clouseau

Well I think the first three words are operative, that's my story and I'm sticking to it ;D .
 
Mike Walker said:
"A Dismal failure"???? The FCC rules were just finalized THIS SUMMER! AM HD at night is only weeks old.

And making more and more friends every day
Multicasting is still in an experimental phase, with no commercial announcements. Most stations have yet to mention their specific multicasts on their main channels.

We are talking FM here correct?

Until fairly recently, HD radios were available in only a few select, usually smaller specialty stores. And the brands weren't the "big ones". That has all changed, just in recent weeks.

What stores were these, and what brands are you talking about?

While you "Chicken Littles" are declaring that 'the sky is falling, HD IS DEAD", the technology is blossoming, growing, and being taken home in products LIKE THE CHEAP CAR STEREO WITH HD, the shelf system with dvd/mp3 AND HD, the home theater receivers from the biggest names in the business WITH HD, etc. And if you're not aware of these products, that serves only to illustrate the "expertise" with which you pontificate!
As we discuss this, HD radios are going home in MANY devices, from retailers as diverse as The Sharper Image, Costo, and JC Penney, and will soon be playing "stations between stations" for people who dont' even know they've bought HD. Tee Hee! Drip, drip, drip, the "trickle" of HD sales is quickly becoming a FLOOD!

Your commitment to IBOC is fanatical, some would dare say borders on the delusional, and the only flood here is of B.S. ::)
 
I’m sure you were waiting for me to jump-in here [RIGHT :D] so I’ll accommodate. I have listened to The Radio Racket for eight months... Let’s just say it’s a small pleasure of “The New Media” and Net-Neutrality – I’M HAPPY IT’S THERE! To compare it with “an adolescent locker room” is sophomorically-BANAL – and yet another sterling example of corporate radio “couth”—or LACK thereof. I have never met Mr. Brusstar – nor have I called his program, BUT I can wholeheartedly and honorably-confess that I CAN’T FIND ONE IOTA OF DISAGREEMENT WITH HIS PROFESSIONAL COMMENTARY – that’s a rare breed in this biz! He is thoughtful, obviously-experienced, and rooted in COMMON SENSE. He afforded the “Good Inspector” a gracious forum—which Clouseau used VERY WELL and was an excellent spokesperson. I came on this board to report and applaud that – along with my admission that “HD” on FM caused NO interference per a personal test in metro-Cincinnati. That bought me NO goodwill with this “all-or-nothing/corporate radio and their failed dalliances-at-any-cost” cadre. Mr Brusstar is certainly more-patient with this club of apologists than I would be! It is patently-obvious this detractor does not like that program, and allegedly its cast, because they do not share or promote the narrow self-interest of corporate radio in general and “HD” Radio in particular!

As for the “HeadInP-Chute100” stuff... That evolved from a tussle ON THIS BOARD—NOT “The Radio Racket” program or its associated message site. BTW, I have NEVER used that “handle” to alliterate the topic on the Racket’s forum... I will, though, admit to the “color” of referring to this “poster-boy” of corporate radio apology with terms such as “CorporateRadioRocks100”, “ILoveTheMalaiseFamily100”, and so-on. Mr. Brusstar, in his typical creative bent, coined the FULLY-applicable acronym “T.R.I.P.” [“Terrestrial Radio Industry Patriot”] to describe Mr. 100 and his ilk... I work in the Marketing industry, and that’s a BEAUTIFUL appliqué!

As for “HD” radio... Again, Mr. Brusstar and crew have it right. Seriously, they have NO STAKE in witnessing and enjoying the failure of technology... NONE OF US DO! This very-simple concept is obviously over the heads of the pro-“HD” gang. To them, failure to be “assimilated” quickly-becomes a PERSONAL affront, and they nearly-always respond with the trite ‘n tired personal invective, resume comparison, and professional minimization. Did you notice the use of the term “wannabe” earlier in this thread to characterize Mr. Brusstar and his associates on The Radio Racket... I rest my case!
 
clouseau said:
Why are these devices being produced if there is not an anticipated market for them?

I can only assume your answer will be that the people making these decisions are wrong.
You're halfway there. But the other half is pretty simple to figure out: why they're wrong. They believe that higher audio quality is what people want from their radio, when the reality of it is that people don't care about analog radio's audio quality. You don't see a 5kHz AM cutoff hurting the AM stations that are #1 in their markets, and NO ONE complains that they can't hear highs above 15kHz on FM. This is an issue that simply doesn't exist. What people really want on their radio is better programming, plain and simple. It can't be said enough that even the highest ratings don't mean what they used to, because overall, radio is losing listeners due to poor programming. THAT'S why these people are wrong. They're focusing on the wrong problem; one that doesn't even exist.

clouseau said:
If that's the case then here is another question for you. I ask this with the utmost sincerity.

What makes you, at your age and with your experience level, believe you are so uniquely qualified to know what is right, as opposed to these massive manufacturers and broadcasters who earn 10's of millions of dollars every quarter?

Seriously. You stepped into the discussion. You're certainly entitled to you opinion as are we all. But as someone who openly professes they left college a couple of years ago due to poor grades, and seems to have ever had a tangental relationship to broadcasting and manufacturing, why do you feel YOU know more than them?
There's a very simple answer for that: I'm a listener. Despite my fourteen years of experience in radio, despite the fact that I'm 22, and despite the fact that I work in the industry, I am a listener, and my views do reflect those of the average listener. It is possible, as a radio professional, to separate your views as that professional and your views as a listener, and it's something I do all the time. If anything, it's improved my professional side, because I'm better able to determine what it is that people want from a station. Where this really tends to get on radio folks' nerves is here: if you tell them that they should spend more time listening to their listeners than they do listening to consultants and bean counters, they go ballistic and tell you that's unrealistic, that it would never work, that your station would fall apart and that you must be insane to suggest such a thing. The very attitude that causes them to say those things is the exact same attitude that has killed traditional radio. The very thing they reject is the one thing that could save them, mostly because of a crippling unwillingness to admit they were wrong. Sad, isn't it?

clouseau said:
Me? I had my first radio job in '74 and have been at my current managerial position for the last 9 years. I would question my expertise in this area and frankly was wondering what you think qualifies your assessment as worthy of attention?

Do you suppose it's at least possible that you may not have a complete grasp of all the elements?
Not in the least. I've said before that I don't have all of the answers to all of the questions, but I do have most of the answers to at least some of the questions. This is one of the topics on which I know I have all of the answers to all of the questions. You don't use a jackhammer to screw in a lightbulb, and that's essentially what this HD Radio fiasco is. It's the wrong answer to a simple problem.
 
Josh C. said:
clouseau said:
Why are these devices being produced if there is not an anticipated market for them?

I can only assume your answer will be that the people making these decisions are wrong.
You're halfway there. But the other half is pretty simple to figure out: why they're wrong. They believe that higher audio quality is what people want from their radio, when the reality of it is that people don't care about analog radio's audio quality. You don't see a 5kHz AM cutoff hurting the AM stations that are #1 in their markets, and NO ONE complains that they can't hear highs above 15kHz on FM. This is an issue that simply doesn't exist.

Josh.

You're 22. You were born in 1985. You're young. You're passionate. but if people have their first lasting recollections at age 6, you don't even remember the 80's. You just don't have the frame of reference. To say analog AM fidelity doesn't matter is truly a 90's phenomonon. THINK. Why isn't there music on WABC? WLS? CKLW or Keener 13? Surely you don't think PD's (Who actually had a say in programming at the time) changed from Top 40 to talk because theywere looking to skew older. It's because people would rather listen to music with FM quality. In virtually every city FM kicked the heritage AM Top 40 off the dial doing the same thing. Most times with less talented people on the air. Pick your city. Philly had WIFI. NY had 99X? Cleveland got G-98. I don't know WHAT killed Detroit. Tower 92? WNIC-FM? The point is, if "AM fidelity" music worked, we'd have it. Heck we DID have it. Not when you remember, but trust me and others. There was some darned decent radio on AM in the day.

What people really want on their radio is better programming, plain and simple. It can't be said enough that even the highest ratings don't mean what they used to, because overall, radio is losing listeners due to poor programming.

Actually, I think you'll find that radio is listened to a lot differently when those numbers were so huge. I grew up in Philly. There were 6 or 7 stations that had a respectable audience. 3 or four others that didn't really matter. And that thing called FM that didn't matter. There were 6 channels of TV and one PBS. The UHF's were a dicey proposition if you didn't live in the west part of the metro. There was no cable. There was no internet. There were no video games. Actually from the time I'm describing, there was PONG. When you wanted to do something, you had to go do it. Like go Bowling. Roller Skating. To the movies. To get there you had to go in the car. With a radio. You didn't listen to your IPod. Or yak on the cell phone. THAT'S a lot of how radio's ratings were so big. FAR fewer choices and far fewer distractions.

THAT'S why these people are wrong. They're focusing on the wrong problem; one that doesn't even exist.

IMHO there are vastly different reasons for HD on AM vs HD on FM. If you think AM works for music you're ignoring history. If you think FM is for higher quality, I suspect you're also off the mark. Think Multi-cast


clouseau said:
...What makes you, at your age and with your experience level, believe you are so uniquely qualified to know what is right.

There's a very simple answer for that: I'm a listener. Despite my fourteen years of experience in radio, despite the fact that I'm 22, and despite the fact that I work in the industry, I am a listener, and my views do reflect those of the average listener.

No, they don't. Now, I'm going to tell you something you don't want to hear and probably won't believe TODAY. If you stay with the business, some day, I believe you will. That is... the average listener doesn't care about radio 1/100th as much as you or I do. The average listener doesn't write about radio in Blogs. Doesn't post on message boards. Doesn't remember what station they like. Doesn't know what station they are listening to right now, and probably gives their diary to their kids to fill out (Along with the $5 bill or whatever it is now). The fact is, we care about radio far more than the listener. We can TRY to listen like a listener, but by the mere act of doing that, we can not be like a typical listener. If you ever have the chance, do a physical diary review. Very Illuminating. You really get perspective on how little you matter.

It is possible, as a radio professional, to separate your views as that professional and your views as a listener, and it's something I do all the time. If anything, it's improved my professional side, because I'm better able to determine what it is that people want from a station.

Thinking like a listener will help you in you job, but it's not the same. It's a radio geek thinkinglike a listener. NOT EVEN CLOSE to a typical listener, IMHO.

Where this really tends to get on radio folks' nerves is here: if you tell them that they should spend more time listening to their listeners than they do listening to consultants and bean counters, they go ballistic and tell you that's unrealistic, that it would never work, that your station would fall apart and that you must be insane to suggest such a thing.

So as a PD, you would allow your jocks to basically play requests? Actually, how about all request weekends. Sound like a good idea to you? Maybe just all request all the time? (Yep it's a setup question.)

The very attitude that causes them to say those things is the exact same attitude that has killed traditional radio. The very thing they reject is the one thing that could save them, mostly because of a crippling unwillingness to admit they were wrong. Sad, isn't it?

No, it isn't sad. It isn't sad, because the vast majority of these folks KNOW how to generate the largest audience and get the highest TSL. Again, I would remind you of your experience level. The things that tend to annoy us and some of the "vocalists" in the listening audience are the same things that get you better numbers. You PD isn't tightening up that playlist because he's an idiot. He's doing it because the book is here and he knows it's much easier to affect a book by NOT doing something wrong than it is to affect it by doing something right. (Gosh I feel so corporate...)
clouseau said:
Do you suppose it's at least possible that you may not have a complete grasp of all the elements?

Not in the least. I've said before that I don't have all of the answers to all of the questions, but I do have most of the answers to at least some of the questions. This is one of the topics on which I know I have all of the answers to all of the questions.

Well my friend, based on that, I will take my leave. If you have all of the answers to all of the questions then I can not be of any benefit to you. Frankly, I doubt I have enough life left to absorb the myriad of knowledge you claim to have amassed about radio in the 14 years since you were 8. I'm also relatively certain I will not have the answers to all of the radio questions in my time left, either.

I wish you well, though.

Clouseau
 
clouseau said:
You're 22. You were born in 1985. You're young. You're passionate. but if people have their first lasting recollections at age 6, you don't even remember the 80's. You just don't have the frame of reference.
Actually, that's not true. My first lasting memory is from when I was two, believe it or not. I don't put that out there to say that I'm above average, I'm just pointing it out so that you'll know I do recall at least mid 1988 onward. In addition, even if I didn't recall that time, there are plenty of airchecks floating around out there that I could get a good grasp of that time period from. A frame of reference wouldn't be that hard to build if I didn't have one.

clouseau said:
To say analog AM fidelity doesn't matter is truly a 90's phenomonon. THINK. Why isn't there music on WABC? WLS? CKLW or Keener 13? Surely you don't think PD's (Who actually had a say in programming at the time) changed from Top 40 to talk because they were looking to skew older. It's because people would rather listen to music with FM quality. In virtually every city FM kicked the heritage AM Top 40 off the dial doing the same thing. Most times with less talented people on the air. Pick your city. Philly had WIFI. NY had 99X? Cleveland got G-98. I don't know WHAT killed Detroit. Tower 92? WNIC-FM? The point is, if "AM fidelity" music worked, we'd have it. Heck we DID have it. Not when you remember, but trust me and others. There was some darned decent radio on AM in the day.
I know this, but I'm not talking about fidelity then, I'm talking about fidelity now. Talk programming is dominant on the AM band. Music is dominant on FM. No one is clamoring for better sound quality on either band because it's not an issue. Again, no one cares that they can't hear upwards of 15kHz on the FM dial.

Additionally, if you want to stay in the past for comparison, you're forgetting something: the AM rolloff frequencies have changed over the years. For a long time, the standard was 12kHz. Then it was lowered to 10. Then it slowly decreased to 5kHz. Now, with IB(A)C, it's 3. Music was actually quite listenable on the AM band when the rolloff was higher. Take a listen to Canadian AM's, where the CRTC has allowed the rolloff frequencies to remain at 10kHz. Music sounds MUCH better on those stations than it does on our own AM's. Sadly, that's how our AM's USED to sound. Yes, FM provided a leap in sound quality, but to equate the sound of AM radio today with the sound of AM radio when FM came on the scene is either A) ignorant, or B) unfair. You know better than that.

clouseau said:
Actually, I think you'll find that radio is listened to a lot differently when those numbers were so huge. I grew up in Philly. There were 6 or 7 stations that had a respectable audience. 3 or four others that didn't really matter. And that thing called FM that didn't matter. There were 6 channels of TV and one PBS. The UHF's were a dicey proposition if you didn't live in the west part of the metro. There was no cable. There was no internet. There were no video games. Actually from the time I'm describing, there was PONG. When you wanted to do something, you had to go do it. Like go Bowling. Roller Skating. To the movies. To get there you had to go in the car. With a radio. You didn't listen to your IPod. Or yak on the cell phone. THAT'S a lot of how radio's ratings were so big. FAR fewer choices and far fewer distractions.
Yes, but that's exactly where the programming argument comes in. If stations were actually paying attention to their programming, they'd be competing MUCH better with new technologies that have proven themselves to be consumer draws, and even embracing them, not inventing phony problems with their own product and trying to push a new technology that no one wants or cares about onto the public. Radio, for a long time, could have kept a very healthy portion of those lost listeners from slipping away, but they chose to pay more attention to the pennies saved by downsizing than the programming that could have saved them. Meanwhile, those listeners realized radio forgot about them, and they moved on. It's all about the programming. Always has been, always will be.

clouseau said:
IMHO there are vastly different reasons for HD on AM vs HD on FM. If you think AM works for music you're ignoring history. If you think FM is for higher quality, I suspect you're also off the mark. Think Multi-cast.
I never said AM would work for music with IB(A)C. Actually, iBiquity said that. They're completely wrong, but they were the ones who made that claim, not I. And I agree with you that FM HD's only major selling point is the additional sub-channels. But again, this is still a case of the wrong solution to a simple problem. Niche programming can be a wonderful thing, but when potential listeners don't think your primary signal is worth their time, why would they bother giving your sub-channels a chance? This, again, brings it all back to programming. People want well-programmed stations, not the drivel that mostly fills the airwaves now. Yet traditional radio CONTINUES to focus on something that nobody wants: additional poorly-programmed channels that, just like their primary carrier, don't provide them with the programming they want beyond some songs that they wouldn't hear on analog stations. It's not worth the trouble to them. Maybe it would have been if, for all these years, the primary stations had actually put some effort into their programming, but for reasons that make no sense at all, they refused to do so, and continue to refuse to do so to this day.


clouseau said:
clouseau said:
...What makes you, at your age and with your experience level, believe you are so uniquely qualified to know what is right.

There's a very simple answer for that: I'm a listener. Despite my fourteen years of experience in radio, despite the fact that I'm 22, and despite the fact that I work in the industry, I am a listener, and my views do reflect those of the average listener.

No, they don't. Now, I'm going to tell you something you don't want to hear and probably won't believe TODAY. If you stay with the business, some day, I believe you will. That is... the average listener doesn't care about radio 1/100th as much as you or I do.
What do you think I've been trying to say all this time?

clouseau said:
The average listener doesn't write about radio in Blogs. Doesn't post on message boards. Doesn't remember what station they like. Doesn't know what station they are listening to right now, and probably gives their diary to their kids to fill out (Along with the $5 bill or whatever it is now). The fact is, we care about radio far more than the listener. We can TRY to listen like a listener, but by the mere act of doing that, we can not be like a typical listener. If you ever have the chance, do a physical diary review. Very Illuminating. You really get perspective on how little you matter. Thinking like a listener will help you in you job, but it's not the same. It's a radio geek thinkinglike a listener. NOT EVEN CLOSE to a typical listener, IMHO.
I already understand what you're saying. But it's not that hard to put aside your radio profession and listen like a typical listener would, and it's not the same as a radio geek thinking like a listener. I'm talking about a radio professional putting everything aside and truly thinking like a listener. All you have to do is not care. You don't care about imaging, music transitions, jocks doing something right or wrong... all you care about is whether you like or dislike a station, and you don't even think about it to make the determination, you just let it come to you subconsciously. That's how the typical listener makes their listening decisions, if they're listening at all, and if they are, they're listening passively and don't put any thought into it whatsoever. It's really quite easy to do. I do it all the time.

clouseau said:
So as a PD, you would allow your jocks to basically play requests? Actually, how about all request weekends. Sound like a good idea to you? Maybe just all request all the time? (Yep it's a setup question.)
You're gonna have to try a lot harder than that! ;) You're completely missing the point of listening to the listener. I'm not talking about taking requests, though stations SHOULD be taking note of every request that's made, even if it doesn't get played immediately. But that's just a part of the bigger picture. You need to be in tune with your market, and by that I mean know it better than you know your own body. Know what styles they like, what they don't like and what styles teeter in between the two sides... right down to the point where you know exactly which new songs in that teetering category are going to fly and which ones aren't before you even load them into the automation system. You need to know what type of personalities your listeners want on the air (oh yes, they DO want personalities!). You need to know where the line is in humor in your market, so you can make sure you're exactly where you need to be depending on the format. You need to know your town inside and out, upside-down and backwards, and have your finger on the pulse of all things current locally so that you can stay two steps ahead, know what's coming and be ready when it arrives. THAT'S what I mean by "listen to your listeners".

clouseau said:
No, it isn't sad. It isn't sad, because the vast majority of these folks KNOW how to generate the largest audience and get the highest TSL.
If that were true, we wouldn't be having this conversation. Everyone would be listening to the radio, HD units would be flying off the shelves, and we'd all be one big, happy family of an industry.

clouseau said:
Again, I would remind you of your experience level. The things that tend to annoy us and some of the "vocalists" in the listening audience are the same things that get you better numbers. You PD isn't tightening up that playlist because he's an idiot. He's doing it because the book is here and he knows it's much easier to affect a book by NOT doing something wrong than it is to affect it by doing something right. (Gosh I feel so corporate...)
Actually, a tight playlist is something I've always pushed for. Problem is, most aren't tight enough, even when they're tightened.

clouseau said:
Well my friend, based on that, I will take my leave. If you have all of the answers to all of the questions then I can not be of any benefit to you. Frankly, I doubt I have enough life left to absorb the myriad of knowledge you claim to have amassed about radio in the 14 years since you were 8. I'm also relatively certain I will not have the answers to all of the radio questions in my time left, either.

I wish you well, though.

Clouseau
Read through my closing paragraph in the last post again. I said I don't have all the answers to all the questions, but when it comes to this topic, I know what I'm talking about. This technology is simply unnecessary.
 
I made the jump from AM to FM during the early 70's why? Because top 40 was terrible and the much freer programming (back then) was much better. Fidelity? I noticed it was better but The Beatles sounded fine to me during the 60's on AM and I never would have changed had the programming gotten hip along with the populace. It's still about programming. I still listen to AM, there is an independent station close to me WARE 1250 that plays oldies and does not have a tight format, it's a great station all local programming except for their use of Fox news which make me change the station during news time.
 
To finish my post, I also listen to a CHWO, Canadian station on 740 AM which plays all sorts of music which fortunately doesn't have an IBOC station near it on 730 or 750. The fidelity is not great on that station either. But I don't care ti plays what I like to hear, blues, swing, jump, old rock n roll. I listen to NPR talk stations sometime but I can only stand that for a certain length of time. I have receivers with variable front ends that can be opened all the way up to 16Khz. I occasionally pick up the BBC AM stations which sound absolutely fabulous compared to both our AM and FM's stations, they have much less compression and have a great frequency response, you can hear the difference immediately, very easy on the ears unlike the overly compressed noisy in your face FM stations we have here and muffled AMer's. I think fidelity would matter if you could find it on radio here but it is not to be found, fidelity means much more than a wide frequency response it also means dynamics which does not exist here on radio. But I still agree programming is the key. I believe radio has lost the kids, when is the last time you saw a kid with a radio up to his ear? How about a cell phone or ipod? Push, push, push, is what killed FM radio here for us older folks (that and Brush Lintball's yelling on AM) and it is getting worse, who wants to listen to 7 minutes worth of commercials in a row, who wants to listen to overly compressed audio with absolutely no dynamic range and hear the same songs over and over? As far as programming, FM right now is worse than AM ever was with it's tight play lists or worse, the disconnected play lists of the one word stations like the George, Jack, Mike or whatever they call them. The jocks today have no personality, is like listening to automatons. When I was a kid all were local, AM, and each were different, the jocks had names you actually remembered and looked forward to listening to, this changed to FM during the 70's then all was lost and their has been krap on the radio ever since. My local FM was WBCN 104.1 which was a great station until the late 70's early 80's when it too went homogenized. If you don't play what the listeners want to hear you lose them. IBOC is not the answer by a long shot and it's also ruining reception, if it is allowed to continue it will be the end of radio as we now know it. Hey, we can always use additional spectrum for ham radio.
 
KB1OKL said:
I think fidelity would matter if you could find it on radio here but it is not to be found, fidelity means much more than a wide frequency response it also means dynamics which does not exist here on radio. But I still agree programming is the key.

Listening to FM in western Europe is quite enjoyable, thanks to well-sited, powerful transmitters, fill-in translators, and the RDS "alternate frequency" feature included in most car radios.

In early November, I rented an Audi A300 in Frankfurt and drove the scenic route to Munich over the course of a week. The standard factory-installed receiver had the full complement of RDS features including AF, Traffic Message Channel, TA, EON, etc. It was only necessary to select a desired station once in each region (chosen from a menu of available services), then the receiver would automatically re-tune to the cleanest full-power simulcast or translator signal as I drove along, providing optimum fidelity.

With a strong, interference-free RF signal usually available to their listeners, most German broadcasters don't feel the need to overcompress -- in fact, the BS-412 standard discourages excessive processing. Use of 50 us pre- and de-emphasis in Europe also makes a difference; music sounds brighter because less high-frequency limiting is necessary ahead of the transmitter. Plus, the public networks are fanatical about technical quality and have the revenue stream to keep their equipment in excellent condition.

One of the public stations I enjoyed in Germany was SWR1 Baden-Wuerttemberg, which programs "greatest hits" with a very wide playlist. They happened to play "School" by Supertramp one morning, as I drove into the Black Forest; the uncompromised dynamic range was a real treat.

Digital Radio has been slow to take off in Europe, probably because most consumers are still perfectly satisfied with the quality of FM.
 
Looking back through my last post, I realized in the playlist paragraph that I got caught up in my Top 40 mentality again (it's just too easy to do, seeing as that format is my specialty). I'll clarify before someone tries to "catch" me in "doubletalk." When it comes to currents-based formats, the playlist should be very, very tight, however in formats that are less currents-oriented and those that play classic-anything, the playlists should be wider. Again, however, just how wide they should be needs to be dictated by your local audience's attitudes (read: "listen to your listeners").
 
Josh C. said:
Looking back through my last post, I realized in the playlist paragraph that I got caught up in my Top 40 mentality again (it's just too easy to do, seeing as that format is my specialty). I'll clarify before someone tries to "catch" me in "doubletalk." When it comes to currents-based formats, the playlist should be very, very tight, however in formats that are less currents-oriented and those that play classic-anything, the playlists should be wider. Again, however, just how wide they should be needs to be dictated by your local audience's attitudes (read: "listen to your listeners").

Yes, I have several FM "oldies" station here in Boston and they play the same songs over and over again and aren't really oldies at least for me. The big classic FM rock station here is a little better, it at least has very good jocks with personality and their play list is more open, however the AM I mentioned before has been playing oldies for at least 25 years that I know of and it plays all sorts of stuff that you would never expect radio to play. CHWO Canada is even better, for example on a recent rock n roll show it featured Freddy "Boom Boom" Cannon an old Boston rock n roller, now who would expect that? These are the stations I seek out and I feel that the satellite and computer stations copy them.
 
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