Menu limited, portions too small and the food is bad.
Very interesting - and provocative - article in Sunday's (09/26/2010) LA Times:
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-cultural-exchange-radio-20100926,0,86260.story
The article also points out that Brits listen longer. US time spent listening is two-thirds what it is in Britain. The article attributes radio's popularity in Britain to a combination of quality and variety which makes US public radio sound pathetic by comparison. Even US radio during the medium's so-called "golden age" seems anemic next to Radio 4 (what used to be called "The Home Service"). And Radio 4 is only one BBC radio "channel" among 10 national channels and 40 regional channels (plus "independent" or commercial radio).
The article makes the case that radio over there is still relevant to real people (folks other than people in the biz and radio geeks) and beyond that, still has buzz. It's one thing to think radio has lost it from listening but it's another to think radio has lost it, maybe never had, from hearing what others can get.
Very interesting - and provocative - article in Sunday's (09/26/2010) LA Times:
http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-ca-cultural-exchange-radio-20100926,0,86260.story
Radio 4 in Britain is evidence that the medium is as popular as ever
More Britons are listening to the radio than ever — over 90% of all adults in the U.K. — and the channel offers quality programs unequaled in the States.
The article also points out that Brits listen longer. US time spent listening is two-thirds what it is in Britain. The article attributes radio's popularity in Britain to a combination of quality and variety which makes US public radio sound pathetic by comparison. Even US radio during the medium's so-called "golden age" seems anemic next to Radio 4 (what used to be called "The Home Service"). And Radio 4 is only one BBC radio "channel" among 10 national channels and 40 regional channels (plus "independent" or commercial radio).
The article makes the case that radio over there is still relevant to real people (folks other than people in the biz and radio geeks) and beyond that, still has buzz. It's one thing to think radio has lost it from listening but it's another to think radio has lost it, maybe never had, from hearing what others can get.