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No surprise here. One more indication that radio pretty much now sucks.

New FCC Report Finds Major Shortage Of Local Reporting
« on: June 09, 2011, 11:51:54 AM » Quote

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------


This new FCC report could be a good "talking point" for both LPFM advocates and LPTV advocates.


Sincerely,



Don Schellhardt


_______________________________________ _____________________________________


From: Don Schellhardt <[email protected]>
Date: Thu, Jun 9, 2011 at 7:32 PM
Subject: FYI -- FCC Report On Reporting
To: ACTIVE MEMBERS OF THE AMHERST ALLIANCE



Dear Active Amherst Members,


This recent FCC report is worth noting.

It also may be worth mentioning in any Written Comments that are filed on LPFMs vs. translators OR on the economic impact of LPFM on full power commercial stations (Docket 11-83).


Sincerely,



Don Schellhardt
[email protected]
(203) 982-5584



********************************************************************************


FCC report finds major shortage in local reporting

By JOELLE TESSLER, AP Technology Writer – 19 hours ago [June 8, 2011]

WASHINGTON (AP) — There is a shortage of in-depth local journalism needed to hold government agencies, schools and businesses accountable, the federal agency that regulates television broadcasters concludes in a new report.
The dearth of reporting comes despite an abundance of news outlets in today's multimedia landscape, the report says.
The report being released Thursday by the Federal Communications Commission is the product of an 18-month effort to explore the turmoil sweeping the traditional media business in the U.S. — particularly daily newspapers.
Newspapers have seen a sharp drop in revenue because of the weakening economy and a shift by advertisers to free or cheaper alternatives on the Internet. That has forced newspapers to cut staff and shrink their publications. The report says staffing levels at daily newspapers have fallen by more than 25 percent since 2001.
"A shortage of reporting manifests itself in invisible ways: stories not written, scandals not exposed, government waste not discovered, health dangers not identified in time, local elections involving candidates about whom we know little," the report says.
The report's recommendations include creating public affairs cable channels similar to C-SPAN at the state level, easing tax rules for non-profit news organizations and directing more federal advertising spending to local news media.
But the FCC report also makes clear that the First Amendment limits the government's role in shaping the future of the media industry.
"Government is not the main player in this drama," it says.
The report's lead author, Steve Waldman, said the study found media variety and abundance. Broadcast outlets, cable networks, non-profit websites and other media ventures are offering consumers more news choices than ever.
But they are still not filling the journalism gap left by the contraction of newspapers, said Waldman, co-founder of the religion website Beliefnet.com and a former national editor at US News & World Report.
As a result, the FCC report warns, "the independent watchdog function that the Founding Fathers envisioned for journalism — going so far as to call it crucial to a healthy democracy — is in some cases at risk."
Responding to the findings, Ken Paulson, president of the American Society of News Editors, said that "while there are probably fewer reporters sitting in city council and municipal board meetings ... America's newspapers have not abandoned investigative journalism."
He said newspapers can do unprecedented investigative work using sophisticated high-tech tools. He cited database analysis and sophisticated online mapping programs, which can provide readers with detailed information about their individual neighborhoods.
"The watchdog spirit is very much alive," Paulson said.
Copyright © 2011 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.
 
How else do you explain how they authorize, approve, design, and construct a building to house the Florida Supreme Court Justices in Tallahassee and nobody complains until it is built.

The reporting was it was built "under the cover of darkness".

That reeks of journalistic coverthyass.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
Mike_Hennessy said:
It costs money to run a good news operation...kapeesh?
...and a bad one.

Jeff in Sa-ra-so-ta!
 
It seems to me that while the government cannot and should not be a major player is this drama, they can be a supporting character.

1. Relax the rules regarding cross ownership between newspapers and broadcast media. The Tampa Tribune and Channel 8 have demonstrated that they can work together without taking over the news options in the area.

2. The FCC could insist that EVERY Broadcast station provide 15 minutes of local news or public affairs between 7 am - 6 pm everyday. If an owner says they can't do it / won't do it / can't afford it, they should sell the license for big bucks to someone who can / will / does care, and take their music-only or satellite-only programming to the internet. Fewer stations might make for a healthier industry anyway.

3. Reinstate some limits regarding how many stations an owner can operate in a market. More players in the industry will foster competition which will make for a healthier industry.

The FCC is not controlled by the NAB, correct? There'll be some bitchin' and moanin', but the broadcast spectrum is too small and has too much potential to be a play toy of passive out of state investors. Mistakes were made in the 1990's, and mistakes can be corrected.

Did WLCY provide any news back in the day?
 
WLCY had, in my opinion, better news then, as a top 40 rocker, then many news stations have today. Claire Lynn was one of the best news
voices ever..and WLCY 138 made Great Tampa Bay...great.
 
WLCY put a lot of emphasis on its news, sometimes dramatizing it a little. Clair Linn, Paul Robinson, there were many great newscasters. On RadioYears.com, there is a great audio clip from a 1967 Paul Robinson WLCY Christmas Day newscast, lots of drama.
 
Here in Central VA, of all the stations within reach of a normal antenna AM or FM, I can only think of maybe two that actually program some local news. That is usually buried in and amongst the AP news poo-poo and during the morning drive time. That is only on FM. One AM tries, but it usually ends up with 2 day old feeds from the wire.

One FM station still does a few taped local reports that they repeat at the top of every hour, but that is only if it is something serious like a major disaster.
 
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