Re the original subject title:
Some folks here in the Northeast US will remember stations such as WNAR 1110 Norristown PA .... WNLK 1350 Norwalk CT ..... WRIV Riverhead Long Island ..... WHTG 1410 Eatontown (NJ shore) .... WBRE 1340 Wilkes-Barre .....
..... and even some of the 'newer' ones -- the shoehorn AMers like WKER Pompton Lakes NJ, WGCH 1490 Greenwich CT, WPRJ 1310 Parsippany NJ, WNRK 1260 in Delaware.
They each had, and served, their local COL niche -- their mom & pop clientele, their adults. There was even some token national ad prestige and imagery from spots on respected network newscasts.
Point is, LPFM stations originally were instituted to be, essentially, the same service, for the same older audiences of the time.
The suspicion here is that Big Radio all of a sudden didn't enjoy one bit the possibility of potential nickels and dimes headed elsewhere from the pockets of a demo they basically didn't want, anyway. Imagine you acquired some used second-hand flea market, decided it was ballast on your overall portfolio, and had it up for sale -- but wait! -- some think it possibly houses some legitimate antiques that were worth more than you thought.
That can't be the best analogy, of course. But with all the resistance to those original LPFM filings, most glaringly from the NAB (the aging, gingivitis pit bull of big radio) and from NPR ('Hey! Listener support is OUR monopoly territory!') the horror of competition, however minor the $ portended to be, was obvious. Right off the vat, newer regulations, restrictions and purely craven obstacles got mandated for such new stations to exist.
In one fashion or another, the mom & pop-type of community service radio that once existed for decades in its own local, workmanlike way was forbidden from returning or even getting a foothold. The original LPFM vision -- largely suggesting and even anticipating the response, involvement and appeal from an older audience -- got buried by interests who didn't want such demos in the first place.
How long would a normally licensed, commercialized, sensibly regulated, audio version of a corner deli have existed in communities outside the shadows of the skyscraper boardrooms? We'll never know. The two-tiered system of standards for club membership credentials that got unmasked and revealed were at the least a sign ; even perhaps a self-prophecising proof that the 'undesirable' older demos don't count because, well, they don't exist.
Some folks here in the Northeast US will remember stations such as WNAR 1110 Norristown PA .... WNLK 1350 Norwalk CT ..... WRIV Riverhead Long Island ..... WHTG 1410 Eatontown (NJ shore) .... WBRE 1340 Wilkes-Barre .....
..... and even some of the 'newer' ones -- the shoehorn AMers like WKER Pompton Lakes NJ, WGCH 1490 Greenwich CT, WPRJ 1310 Parsippany NJ, WNRK 1260 in Delaware.
They each had, and served, their local COL niche -- their mom & pop clientele, their adults. There was even some token national ad prestige and imagery from spots on respected network newscasts.
Point is, LPFM stations originally were instituted to be, essentially, the same service, for the same older audiences of the time.
The suspicion here is that Big Radio all of a sudden didn't enjoy one bit the possibility of potential nickels and dimes headed elsewhere from the pockets of a demo they basically didn't want, anyway. Imagine you acquired some used second-hand flea market, decided it was ballast on your overall portfolio, and had it up for sale -- but wait! -- some think it possibly houses some legitimate antiques that were worth more than you thought.
That can't be the best analogy, of course. But with all the resistance to those original LPFM filings, most glaringly from the NAB (the aging, gingivitis pit bull of big radio) and from NPR ('Hey! Listener support is OUR monopoly territory!') the horror of competition, however minor the $ portended to be, was obvious. Right off the vat, newer regulations, restrictions and purely craven obstacles got mandated for such new stations to exist.
In one fashion or another, the mom & pop-type of community service radio that once existed for decades in its own local, workmanlike way was forbidden from returning or even getting a foothold. The original LPFM vision -- largely suggesting and even anticipating the response, involvement and appeal from an older audience -- got buried by interests who didn't want such demos in the first place.
How long would a normally licensed, commercialized, sensibly regulated, audio version of a corner deli have existed in communities outside the shadows of the skyscraper boardrooms? We'll never know. The two-tiered system of standards for club membership credentials that got unmasked and revealed were at the least a sign ; even perhaps a self-prophecising proof that the 'undesirable' older demos don't count because, well, they don't exist.