SirRoxalot said:Dog, you're the one that said:
the imposition of ownership caps from the past would cause more pain with no benefit
Yes, that's what I said but you manufactured this thought for me:
SirRoxalot said:"You've been told by "corporate" that companies like Clear Channel "saved" radio so many times that you now believe it. That's a prime example of "the Big Lie"."
I'll tell you what I believe and you don't have to do it for me thank you very much.
SirRoxalot said:It has been amply demonstrated that the "economies of scale", "regional synergies", attempts to create virtual monopolies in local broadcasting, and all the other ideas that Clear Channel (and others) rolled out to try an justify their overspending on radio stations have failed miserably.
Again, your trying to refute things that I didn't say. I'm saying that technology changed the media landscape (as it's changed just about every other business) and you can't recreate 1970's radio by reimposing government regulation. It's gone and it would be gone if Clear Channel had never existed and if the FCC had kept ownership caps in place.
If the Internet was regulated the way radio spectrum is, you would only be able to own a set number of websites and those websites would be available on Macs or PC's but not both. I am well aware of the analogy between radio spectrum and scarce real estate but it is a flawed analogy created by the adoption of hardware standards way back when. That prevented the kind of transmitter and receiver innovation that would have made spectrum usage available to a lot more people.