D
Don62
Guest
Let me restate, I agree with David on this one.
DavidEduardo said:Name one viable radio station in the U.S. that has closed in the last five decades.
TheFonz said:Not much overhead in running infomercials.
Where are those headcount numbers you were going to get us?
DavidEduardo said:¨Print can only give you how many papers were sold, not even how many were picked up at the door and even read.
DavidEduardo said:KeithE4 said:Newsflash: All publicly-traded companies, regardless of what their product is (broadcasting, cars, steel, or hamburgers), are mandated by Federal law to maximize profit for their shareholders. That is Job One. If that means producing a mediocre-but-money-making product with the least number of humans possible, so be it. Blame the SEC and Congress, not the corporate executives who are required by law to do this.
That is totally and irresponsibly untrue.
vibe said:I'm sorta surprised as to the relative lack of interest/response to this topic. Look at all the people who have switched over to satelite. I would guess that one of the reasons is that conventional radio sucked and sucked badly.
Here in Central Mass the FM band is cluttered with a lot of crappe from Boston, Providence, Hartford, Springfield. In SW Fla the stations from Tampa-Ft. Myers, Naples equally suck. The common theme-playing the same tired old "hits' (and at this point they need to be retired).
It was refreshing to go to Brattleboro VT this week hit the scan button, land on 92.7 and have the first song come from the Grateful Dead.
Are there any markets where radio doesn't suck?
Non-radio people do notice that. I had a co-worker, unsolicited, who brought up the fact that an oldies station in Springfield, Mo., used the same liners as the oldies station in Kansas City, which has since dumped oldies.gr8oldies said:We are a very nationalized society. Unlike when most of us were growing up, teens and 20-somethings can communicate, share music and TV shows, etc with the other people in their school and their cousins three states away with ease on a daily basis. I really don't belioeve, outside of boards like these, anyone is saying "dammit if my top 40 station is a Kiss, the one in the next city better damn well be a Z and the one after that bettwr be a Q". So I and my cousin both have a "Kiss" that plays the hits? It'd be a little like me, when I was growing up, hearing Johnny Mann jingles on another station and saying "That's it! They've got the same jingles as CKLW. I'm never listening to CKLW again!!". People really don't think like that.
KeithE4 said:I can't find the exact CFR regulation or entry in the U.S. Code at this moment, but American case law says otherwise. One of the most famous cases predates commercial radio by a year - Dodge vs Ford Motor Company (1919).