If there is anyone left on the planet who doesn't harbor serious doubts about the future of HD Radio, Radio World neatly recruited even those few stragglers with a jaw-dropper of an editorial in the April 23 edition.
RW "mulls options to encourage further adoption of HD Radio," which is kind of like proposing to Americans that they weigh in with "new and creative ways to increase taxes and government intrusion into your lives." C'mon, everybody - let's hear your ideas!
RW suggests various scenarios to help broadcasters assist the FCC and ibiquit-monopoly jam an expensive, unwanted technology down their own throats and at their own peril. Among these bright ideas are a Federal tax deduction for HD equipment purchases (yet another taxpayer subsidy for iBiquity); a coupon redemption idea for listeners a la HDTV (who would pay for this?); "regulatory relief" from the FCC although no specifics were given as to which regulations RW thinks radio needs relief from - although there was the perfunctory parallel to regulatory relief extended to XM and Sirius; a suggestion iBiquity provide zero-cost financing and suspension of licensing fees (not gonna happen) and - most outrageous - a confiscatory plan imposed on all broadcasters whereby a "portion of everyone's revenues goes into a digital conversion fund that is shared with stations that need grants to convert to digital." Great! So a portion of my hard-earned radio revenues would be shared with the Clear Channel or CBS stations that are having problems converting to HD! Hey, where do we sign up for THAT great program??
RW, what's up? During the HD debacle your coverage has at least been reasonable and mostly balanced. But this editorial pegs the Stupid Meter.
Earth to RW: most stations I know of wouldn't convert to HD, even IF THE EQUIPMENT WAS FREE. The technology is DEAD. No stations want it. No listeners want it. It solely a narcissistic product of the group station owners who bought into it and who, for completely internal reasons having to do with corporate egos and the politics of bringing bad news back to the boardroom, can't bring themselves to pull the plug and walk away.
And the notion of redistributive, confiscatory revenue sharing within the industry isn't just another unwarranted public benefit to be showered on a company - iBiquity - which has arguably already gotten too many freebees (which it has apparently squandered.) It's outrageous.
I also note for the record the RW editorial nod to a "bailout" the DOJ has extended to satcasters. First of all, it isn't a "bailout." A bailout involves the active use of public funds to prop up a private company, like Chrysler in the 1980s. Nobody is proposing federal funds be used to prop up XM and Sirius. It's just a finding by Justice that a merger won't be a restraint of free trade. This is just another paranoid anti-satcaster rant, echoing the tiresome nonsense constantly chanted by the NAB and the Alliance. The Radio industry needs to stop whining about competitors and pay attention to its own shortcomings.
There isn't enough money in the world to prop up HD Radio, which is fatally defective and offers no meaningful benefits in the real world. It's engineering scientology. And it needs to be executed, quickly, cleanly, and without ceremony.
Can we please have some reality? Can we please just get this over with and move on?
RW "mulls options to encourage further adoption of HD Radio," which is kind of like proposing to Americans that they weigh in with "new and creative ways to increase taxes and government intrusion into your lives." C'mon, everybody - let's hear your ideas!
RW suggests various scenarios to help broadcasters assist the FCC and ibiquit-monopoly jam an expensive, unwanted technology down their own throats and at their own peril. Among these bright ideas are a Federal tax deduction for HD equipment purchases (yet another taxpayer subsidy for iBiquity); a coupon redemption idea for listeners a la HDTV (who would pay for this?); "regulatory relief" from the FCC although no specifics were given as to which regulations RW thinks radio needs relief from - although there was the perfunctory parallel to regulatory relief extended to XM and Sirius; a suggestion iBiquity provide zero-cost financing and suspension of licensing fees (not gonna happen) and - most outrageous - a confiscatory plan imposed on all broadcasters whereby a "portion of everyone's revenues goes into a digital conversion fund that is shared with stations that need grants to convert to digital." Great! So a portion of my hard-earned radio revenues would be shared with the Clear Channel or CBS stations that are having problems converting to HD! Hey, where do we sign up for THAT great program??
RW, what's up? During the HD debacle your coverage has at least been reasonable and mostly balanced. But this editorial pegs the Stupid Meter.
Earth to RW: most stations I know of wouldn't convert to HD, even IF THE EQUIPMENT WAS FREE. The technology is DEAD. No stations want it. No listeners want it. It solely a narcissistic product of the group station owners who bought into it and who, for completely internal reasons having to do with corporate egos and the politics of bringing bad news back to the boardroom, can't bring themselves to pull the plug and walk away.
And the notion of redistributive, confiscatory revenue sharing within the industry isn't just another unwarranted public benefit to be showered on a company - iBiquity - which has arguably already gotten too many freebees (which it has apparently squandered.) It's outrageous.
I also note for the record the RW editorial nod to a "bailout" the DOJ has extended to satcasters. First of all, it isn't a "bailout." A bailout involves the active use of public funds to prop up a private company, like Chrysler in the 1980s. Nobody is proposing federal funds be used to prop up XM and Sirius. It's just a finding by Justice that a merger won't be a restraint of free trade. This is just another paranoid anti-satcaster rant, echoing the tiresome nonsense constantly chanted by the NAB and the Alliance. The Radio industry needs to stop whining about competitors and pay attention to its own shortcomings.
There isn't enough money in the world to prop up HD Radio, which is fatally defective and offers no meaningful benefits in the real world. It's engineering scientology. And it needs to be executed, quickly, cleanly, and without ceremony.
Can we please have some reality? Can we please just get this over with and move on?