12 In a Row said:
I never understood the "college radio" mentality.
Radio is a profession, radio IS a business.
Why some let you "do whatever you want' boggles the mind.
Teach them how to properly read a ratings book. A seminar on how to own and operate. Teach them without ratings/listeners you will have no money to pay the bills. Thats why they call it show BIZ.
Isn't higher education here to educate and prepare for the real world?
Imagine the same mold for future doctors, dentists, just to name a few. YIKES!!!!!!!
Some college stations do not have the intended purpose of preparing students to be professional broadcasters. Do you think students go to M.I.T. or Harvard to learn to get into radio?!?
Of course not! They're learning how to be scientists, doctors, and all kinds of high-tech and top-level corporate careers that we couldn't even imagine, far more lucrative than broadcasting.
So, the college stations at those institutions are defined as simply recreational activities and extra-curricular hobbies for their students. They're there to have fun on the radio while they're in college and play music that they like, not to learn about broadcasting as a career.
Also, in most cases, some community volunteers get to do radio on those stations as well, and serve area listeners with niche programs unavailable elsewhere.
Radio is not a profession or a business at those stations where no one is paid, and due to that fact, their overhead is low enough to allow them to get by with low ratings and the sufficient donations from a small audience that happens to enjoy different aspects of their programming, coupled with a little university student activities department funding.
Students who want to learn about professional radio as a career go to schools with a communications and broadcasting curriculum such as Emerson, where stations like WERS are run professionally by those departments specifically as training for students in broadcasting. They learn about ratings, how a station makes money, etc... there, not at M.I.T., Harvard, B.C., Tufts, or Brandeis.
On the non-comm ratings site I linked above, you'll see that WERS is listed. They are the only area college station that subscribes to Arbitron, along with the professional Public Radio stations. The others have no need to spend money on an Arbitron subscription.