http://www.wgbh.org/greater_boston/index.cfm
Look for "classical changes"
"Boos and hisses; problems, complaints, and some support"
Look for "classical changes"
"Boos and hisses; problems, complaints, and some support"
thetheo said:Thanks for posting this!
Still baffled how much bad press WGBH is getting for this move.
There were 2 ways things could have gone....
#1 - WGBH gets rid of classical because no one was listening, replaces it with other music / talk / news / etc......WCRB stays as is for a feew more months, til another suitor comes in (Entercom?) and buys it and flips it and then there is no Classical at all in Boston.
#2 - What actually happened.
There was no 3rd option the way I see it. Sure the signal may not be as great, but come on, it's better than NO Classical station right????
There's plenty of markets that no longer have a classical station, or do but only for a couple hours a day, or do but it's a national feed, and so on.
Be happy you have a 24/7 Classical station that is actually on the FM dial people!
raccoonradio said:Classical fans wish that the switcheroo a few yrs back didn't happen where Greater Media moved country to 102.5 and classical wound up on 99.5. Not as centrally located.
Scott Fybush said:Given the disparity in stick value between a Lowell-licensed, Andover-located class B (99.5) and a Waltham-licensed, Newton/Needham-located class B (102.5), it's questionable whether WGBH would have been able to afford the purchase of 102.5, had that been the signal that came on the market in 2009.
Instead of a $14 million purchase, 102.5 would likely have been valued at more like $25 million, maybe even more. Would WGBH's pockets have been deep enough to sustain that kind of a financial commitment?