That's a choice, and it appears that creating the Part 15 and programming it is a big part of t he satisfaction of hearing your own music selections and lists.
Yes, it is. Basically, I wanted to hear the music as it first appeared to me over the radio, which, incidentally, happened to be primarily over AM (I witnessed, apparently, the last gasp of oldies/classic hits and adult standards on mainstream commercial AM radio in San Francisco (KFRC 610 and KABL 960, respectively), and I enjoyed every minute of it). The music is mostly on FM now, but none of it is anything I care much for. I
also don't care much for the sterility of online streams like Spotify et al (having infinite choices is all fine and good, but sometimes
"Less Is More"), so I for all intents and purposes I made up my own stream, which happens to
also be over the air
Personally, I don't program music and entertainment unless there is a transfer of money to my account. I enjoy programming, but not as a hobby. So you and I do things from different perspectives.
You've been in the business most of your life and you've accomplished quite a bit in that time, so you deserve to be paid for your efforts. I wouldn't mind getting there myself someday with whatever I do (be it programming/operating a radio station or something else), but for now, given that I'm interested in learning how to program a radio station, but lack the means and opportunity (and, to a point, education and experience) to pursue a job at an actual station, I figured I'd have some fun building and programming my own. I was very excited when I discovered in early 2021 that legally broadcasting on AM without a license via Part 15 was a thing, or else I'd have done it
years ago.
As I have said over and over in recent threads of this type, you are what researchers call "outliers" and you will never be happy with non-personalized radio formats... so we don't event try!
Yup. I'm "one of those"
Based on my likes and interests, I feel like I seem to have more in common with Boomers and Gen X than I do Millennials (of which generation I'm a member). It's no coincidence, therefore, that I like music of the 50s through the 70s best, and that the average age of many of my friends is 65+.
Thus, 98% of all radio stations trying to target everyone younger than 65+ are of virtually no interest to me at all.
Anyway, for a feeble attempt to make all this somewhat relevant to the topic of this thread (
sure...), I have a feeling that hobby stations might be the future of AM at this point, since the band is pretty much useless for anything else, and once all the commercial stations go dark, what else could the band be used for? The Netherlands or some such northern country opened up the AM band to hobbyists, and it's
"working", so there's precedent for this idea....
c