Goat Rodeo Cowboy said:
Anyway, I live in a small town (where radio is still 'in the hands of locals') and I can tell you: none of our stations would do any of the above, either. Hell, a storm comes through and they all go off the air
! If it weren't for weather radio and the internet, we'd never know when a storm is coming, because the local TV stations' weather coverage stinks. Small markets, for ya. :
I still think there's a market for those of us who just want music (sat. radio) and those who want a lot of local interaction (terrestrial radio). The wireless internet future will eat into the sat. radio pie, but it won't be giving you election results (unless they come from Bangalore) or weather reports (unless they come from Vancouver) or traffic (Berlin?)... And if you stream your local station, why not just tune it in on the ol' radio?
It pains me to see little local radio stations doing nothing. Not covering the storms. I have been spending some time brain-storming the buggy-whip scenario for the last four years. What can a "micro market" station do that most are NOT doing currently, and how can they enhance revenues in order to pay for what OUGHT to be done.
Some of us live in counties where county government streams a video of election results. Why couldn't the operator of a micro-market radio station be doing that. Why would local radio stream? Because they are daytime only? Because the night-time power gives them 5 or 6 miles of coverage when they need 8 to 12. Because expatriots living in the big cities where the jobs are still want to keep up with home town and will listen to election night stream, sports night stream, storm night stream. Many of them return home often enough that advertisers want to keep in touch with them. Many of them are responsible for aging parents back in the little town and are making buying decisions for the parents that can be influenced by the radio/streaming advertising.
If you sit down night after night and while watching Miami C.S.I. and Law and Order you take your legal tablet along and start jotting down whimsical ideas, you soon come up with 173 or 229 bright ideas.... of which 30 or 40 might be practical and take that broken down (during the storm) radio station and make it into a viable enterprise that becomes the talk of the town.
(Any body interested in buying my list? <insert big, wide grin here.>
P.S. Atlanta traffic is SO BAD and SO BIG that listening to terrestrial radio traffic is pretty sad. They try to cover it all and they talk so fast you can't understand what they are saying. And typically they are telling you what was the situation 90 minutes ago. If they say a road is blocked, chances are it's clear by the time they report it.