You may not have a station that caters to that particular music taste. People in that demo in Philadelphia listen to WXPN. It is very popular.
As a non-com, it gives the people the music they want for free with no commercials. Same with WRTI, the local classical station. But if Temple University decides to sell the station because it lost federal funding, the listeners can't do anything to stop them.
If nobody listens to radio, why are religious people buying stations? There must be someone listening. Otherwise, they're idiots.
Correct. However, there is money being taken AWAY from other non-coms. Money that was appropriated 4 months ago, and budgeted for by these stations, and has now been taken away. In some cases, it may be enough to cause some colleges to consider selling. That's the topic of this thread. Religious radio is likely to be a beneficiary of government policy.
As I've been saying, this is bad for radio in general because a lot of these stations were playing music that is unprofitable for commercial radio. Their listeners will be forced to use subscription services because their free public radio station was sold to a religious operator. It's something that's already been happening for the past 5 years.
Are non-coms not taking money away from commercial stations because people are tuning into them instead? Especially since, as you point out, those stations are commercial-free? I'm a young guy who loves oldies. I'm fortunate that there are still a few (for profit) oldies stations near me. But throughout most of the country, that format is no longer profitable. Lots of oldies listeners have had to revert to streaming. Tough. That's life. Radio formats die. I'm not sure if unprofitable formats should be propped up by taxpayer funding. I'm not saying they shouldn't exist. But if they're popular enough... listener support & donations?
There is also a big difference between an AAA station in a city and a station like what
@SomeRadioGuy is doing in Alaska. In that case, I have absolutely no problem with federal funding and my taxpayer dollars going to help support a station like what he is running where he is running it. It's needed in his geographic area, and there are not enough people with enough $s to support it. Cell service is poor, information is hard to get. Radio still makes sense as a public service there. The people in a city that looses an AAA station because my taxpayer dollars no longer fund it have other avenues to get that music. It is in no way a critical service. People in areas like the one Paul serves literally do not have alternatives to get the information he provides. If the station he runs goes away, people go without crucial information in their community.
I do not understand the hate for religious stations on this forum, either. The consolidation a lot of the operators have gone through is not much different from the big for-profit owners as I understand it. It's not like a lot of big commercial operators are exactly serving their local communities, either. Just sayin'. Even a lot of non-comms are running a lot of nationalized programming these days...
I personally don't think public radio should be funded by government dollars except in certain cases. Public radio is not the entity it was 40+ years ago. Most public stations are running formats such as News/Talk and are cookie cutter formatics (Morning Ediion; All Things Considered among others). The reasoning is this maximizes underwriting and donations and ability to get grants to maximize the operating budget. Ratings show many such stations are major contenders in their market. I would say it is all about maximizing the listener base. That does not diminish content. In other words, if it's a money loser or can't do well, it goes away. My point is public radio has become an entity unlike the station that needed financial help in Reagan's day. With that said, I strongly disagree with the knee-jerk reaction of cutting off everything. I would support a plan of weaning off the fund over, say, a decade to allow stations to make a more comfortable transition.
This, too. I'm not in favor of stations running syndicated shows (some of which are partisan political opinion shows) with my taxpayer dollars. These stations are absolutely competing with commercial stations, too, and pulling listeners away from them. That's not cool. Some of these local stations have gutted their news departments and have relied on more national content. WESA in Pittsburgh (my closest non-com news station) has cut a lot of its local programming over the past few years.
I agree that non-coms are different in a lot of ways from what they were back in the Regan years, and a lot of them should not be getting taxpayer dollars. Pittsburgh's non-com AAA WYEP and NPR affiliate WESA are unionized. In the Regan years, WYEP didn't even pay many of the volunteer DJs from the community, let alone have them on their payroll as union members. Fundamentally different operation.
I also don't think clawing back money in the way the current administration went about it is appropriate. A phase-out over a few years would have been more appropriate.
Yes, stations will die as a result of this. But AM stations are also dying. I'm not going to argue that the government should prop them up. Time marches on.
I'll close by saying that I love radio. I love listening to Pittsburgh's non-com WQED-FM and its classical format. I don't want it to go away. I also love 770-AM WKFB's oldies. I don't want it to go away, either. I also don't think people's tax dollars should be forced to go to either station. The only time I think taxpayer funding makes sense for radio is when it is an essential public service, like what
@SomeRadioGuy is running. Otherwise...