webcastboy said:In WMFO's case, and arguably in WBRS's case, getting a few people in over the summer could quickly lead to more people next summer. Pretty soon you'll have some seats on the executive board. Within five years, you've effectively pulled off a bloodless coup and you're running any format you want.
Don't think you could do this at WMLN, though - they've got a pro GM who would stop a coup before it starts. And I forgot about WHRB...I suppose in theory you could attempt something like a coup there, but it'd be damned hard to get it past the alumni council.
The problem with trying to pull a community "coup" at student-run college stations is that if it's not officially sanctioned by the parent school, which usually view their student college stations as simply an on-campus activity for their students regardless of some having signals serving large portions of a major market, it will inevitably eventually run into problems when the school catches wind of what's going on, which usually happens when the station either needs money or falls into disrepair and calls on the college for help, or if students complain to the college that they don't have adequate access to their college station due to community infiltration. (Or, in the worst case, if a community host does something negatively controversial or illegal on the air, eliciting negative listener or FCC response to the college).
Then the school, which usually stays uninvolved, may start enforcing percentages of student vs. community members, making such threats as withdrawing funding or losing facility space if student percentages aren't met. There's nothing really wrong with this in my opinion, student college stations by definition are supposed to be for students, whose tuitions support the student activities budget which partially supports the stations, and it's benevolent of some colleges to officially allow any percentage of outside community members on board. The problem is that when community percentages become too large and are then cut down, programs that have become popular in the community are often suddenly canceled as a result.