As I've mentioned in many prior posts on this topic, they could switch CKWW and CKLW's programming, and provide the oldies format to a wider area, and probably attract a larger audience, sincie many areas don't even have that format anymore. AM580's signal serves Windsor/Essex Co. but starts to gets fuzzy 40 miles away. And if the commercial broadcaster (whatever the CHUM group in being called this week) doesn't want to do it, CRTC can decide for them, as a more efficient use of the radio spectrum.
Or put the CBC Radio 1 service that has been on 1550, and is being "downgraded," in my opinion, to a lower wattage FM service (they're in mono anyway) that won't even reach Ann Arbor anymore. That's where to use of 50kw that apparently nobody witha license thinks is worth anything - for more public service programming to extend into the US, as an alternative to WGTE, WCPN, and WUOM for listeners outside of the Detroit metro. And to five you one frequency to hear it from Windsor to Kitchener, and into the far north, instead of a disparate group of FM freqs that you have to search for on a car radio every 20 minutes.
I sure would have liked to have followed CBC on AM800 back down to Dayton on the day the US started the war in Iraq. Their coverage rivals ABC and the US commercial networks (or it did in 2003), and provided an important perspective that wasn't the same one that was influenced by American political interests on US commercial networks.
Or put the CBC Radio 1 service that has been on 1550, and is being "downgraded," in my opinion, to a lower wattage FM service (they're in mono anyway) that won't even reach Ann Arbor anymore. That's where to use of 50kw that apparently nobody witha license thinks is worth anything - for more public service programming to extend into the US, as an alternative to WGTE, WCPN, and WUOM for listeners outside of the Detroit metro. And to five you one frequency to hear it from Windsor to Kitchener, and into the far north, instead of a disparate group of FM freqs that you have to search for on a car radio every 20 minutes.
I sure would have liked to have followed CBC on AM800 back down to Dayton on the day the US started the war in Iraq. Their coverage rivals ABC and the US commercial networks (or it did in 2003), and provided an important perspective that wasn't the same one that was influenced by American political interests on US commercial networks.