I find it funny that people complain of oversaturation of Spanish radio stations when there are only three or four and there are 10 times that number of English stations. Remember, Spanish is a language, not a format, and there are many different Spanish-language formats. You can easily have two regional Mexican stations that have completely different formats as regional itself includes at least five formats with no one station combining more than three.
Also, keep in mind that many of the people who listen to Spanish radio speak English quite well, though they prefer to listen to music in their native language as that's what they're most comfortable with and what they relate to best. My experience has also been that far more immigrants who come to this country at least try to learn English than not, and the children of immigrants generally learn English quite well while the native language completely disappears with their grandchildren.
If we debated it, you'd likely find that we agree quite-a-bit on immigration issues, but this is a place to discuss radio, not asinine government policy on immigrants and immigration. Remember, it's only radio, not the end of the world. When a station I like flips to Spanish-language programming, it's really no different than if it flips to hip-hop or religious. It just becomes another station I don't listen to. It's also not like any of us know Sunny 100 will flip to a Spanish-language format. While I would agree it's quite likely, it doesn't seem like anything has been set in stone yet. Also, remember that, if there is an oversaturation of Spanish-language programming, the market will solve that problem, much like it is solving the problem with oversaturation of urbans. Notice how WFOX flipped to classic hits almost a year ago?
Also, keep in mind that many of the people who listen to Spanish radio speak English quite well, though they prefer to listen to music in their native language as that's what they're most comfortable with and what they relate to best. My experience has also been that far more immigrants who come to this country at least try to learn English than not, and the children of immigrants generally learn English quite well while the native language completely disappears with their grandchildren.
If we debated it, you'd likely find that we agree quite-a-bit on immigration issues, but this is a place to discuss radio, not asinine government policy on immigrants and immigration. Remember, it's only radio, not the end of the world. When a station I like flips to Spanish-language programming, it's really no different than if it flips to hip-hop or religious. It just becomes another station I don't listen to. It's also not like any of us know Sunny 100 will flip to a Spanish-language format. While I would agree it's quite likely, it doesn't seem like anything has been set in stone yet. Also, remember that, if there is an oversaturation of Spanish-language programming, the market will solve that problem, much like it is solving the problem with oversaturation of urbans. Notice how WFOX flipped to classic hits almost a year ago?