This has been a/an harsh, yet informative thread. I have to say that my eyes were opened reading the financial report linked herein. Still, for some reason, I wasn't shocked. Mildly piqued and surprised perhaps, but not shocked.
I like Public Radio in general and I'm glad Buffalo has not one but three Public Radio news stations, two of them offering extensive news programming. Like commercial radio, Public Radio is NOT perfect and it isn't really as "public" as the Washington PBS-NPR corporate types would have the average Joe, Mike, Jane and Marsha in the street believe it is.
What strikes me particularly hard is that some listeners and some "inside the NPR-PBS loop" higher-ups act and believe that NPR is perfect.
Few things, if any, in Public Radio or the Commercial sector are perfect. WBFO-FM and WNED-AM are very good radio stations, staffed by professionals in all departments. Yet between the two WNED-AM seems to me to be "the go-to news station" while WBFO-FM seems a better rounded "lifestyle" station offering news and jazz and blues. Conversely, WNED-AM has a problematic signal while WBFO-FM has a very good signal. And FM beats AM as far as awareness is concerned amoung those who don't even know this board exists (i.e., the general public.)
I've often wondered why these two fine stations don't combine staffs (please do not even THINK of the words consolidation or down-sizing) and with their combined manpower, offer the finest radio news department in the city, strong enough to rival and out-hustle commercial news radio WBEN. Surely, some of the wealth that's spread amoungst the upper echelon could be saved and distributed to the men and women who do the heavy lifting.
Compliments to "alw" for his brief but salient offering regarding the similarities and differences between Public Radio and Commercial radio as well as his attitude of dealing with those who can sometimes be strident in their criticism of NPR's upper echelon. Clearly, from his posts, he's not at that pay scale. Like Commercial Radio, the guys on the first floor have little in common (especially pay) with the guys in the corner offices on the third floor, or those in DC.
As to NPR's defense of it's real estate on the FM band, it's somewhat understandable if not disingenuous with regard to doctored third adjacency interference claims. Still, I can understand NPR's position of not wanting the Pray For Pay outfits to confiscate any more FM real estate than they already have, especially at the expense of what NPR Public Radio has staked out. There's already a plethora of Family Strife religious stations on the FM band, sucking up full-power channels and translator space. Enough is enough.
What we really should be lamenting is the fact to guys like cee and Voice Of Reason can't land a 100 Watt FM to serve their communities because stations owned by The Money Changers In The Temple have squatted on the frequencies, more than those Corporate Public Stations.
Maybe the system has been corrupted, but I wouldn't be so quick as to throw the Public Radio Baby out with the bath water.
It would be funny and informative to have some of these NPR big shots dogged by local guys in Michael Moore - Mike Wallace fashion and their responses, or lack thereof, posted on YouTube or independent websites.
OK, enough metaphors and analogies from me. It's just my buck tree eighty.