so for a "decade"-'s song....
For example,
if the artist wrote it on November 24, 1989,
recorded it in multiple sessions from December 29, 1989, to January 3, 1990,
and released it on the radio (as a single) or in stores (on an album) on February 7, 1990,
Is it an 80s song, or a 90s song?
As for my ideas of wasted signals...
These include directional AM stations near the coasts that send huge lobes out to sea. Saltwater conductivity is high enough already - you don't need 500kW ERP on a site a few miles inland to put a 5 uV/m groundwave signal a couple miles offshore, where nobody would likely be listening anyway. Exceptions of course would be places where there's a saltwater path between two places on land, like San Diego to Santa Barbara, or New York to Cape Cod.
Also I'd include stations licensed to a smaller city, but targetting a nearby larger city, doing comparatively nothing for their COL (except mentioning them in the buried legal ID at TOH). I kinda wish this practice would stop. Either get licensed to the larger city, or target your own smaller COL.
In one type of case, if a station's licensed to a smaller COL and doesn't re-license to the larger city, I think they should...
put no more than a 1 mV/m signal (or whatever would be an easily listenable signal to a DXer with little to moderate noise on a portable, assuming a not-too-noisy location in a house) to any spot within the larger city's limits (exceptions of course allowed where the COL borders the larger city, as you legally have to have 5 mV/m covering the COL and can't have a "step" down in field strength at a particular spot - I guess the closest you could come is build a directional array right on the border),
have no more than 50 uV/m signal (or whatever would be faint on a portable, but still barely copyable for a DXer if he concentrates on it in his headphones, in an outdoor park away from noise sources) in the downtown / prime target area of the larger city, and,
have less than 2 uV/m signal (or whatever results in a barely-detectable carrier using a beverage antenna and communications receiver, in an area with virtually no manmade noise present) over at least 12.5% of the large city.
In the other type of case, if a company owned a small station licensed to a small city, but they desire targetting a large city, they should have to change their COL (or stop targetting), AND sacrifice one of their big stations. For example, this might include something like the following (assuming the same company owned both stations - in the example below I don't believe so)
Re-license something like KMZT-AM or KROQ-FM (whichever bills less and/or has the smaller geographic signal footprint) to Los Angeles
Donate a station like KFI-AM or KIIS-FM (whichever bills more and/or has the larger geographical footprint) to a non-profit entity - for example a church whose membership is the size mentioned in Matthew 18:20 ("For where two or three are gathered together in My name," - Jesus speaking, btw - "there am I in the midst of them.") and whose pastoral staff is "not greedy for money" (ref. 1 Timothy 3:3&8 and Titus 1:7, NKJV) and follows the apostle Paul's example mentioned in 2 Corinthians 2:17.
As for wasted signals based on various formats, that's up to the ear of the beholder. I happen to enjoy traditional (non-rock) Christian music / classic worship music, lighter/slower 50s oldies and a quite a few Radio Disney songs, as well as some classical music (especially if piano is featured prominently), formats which not many people in general population seem to enjoy.
For example,
if the artist wrote it on November 24, 1989,
recorded it in multiple sessions from December 29, 1989, to January 3, 1990,
and released it on the radio (as a single) or in stores (on an album) on February 7, 1990,
Is it an 80s song, or a 90s song?
As for my ideas of wasted signals...
These include directional AM stations near the coasts that send huge lobes out to sea. Saltwater conductivity is high enough already - you don't need 500kW ERP on a site a few miles inland to put a 5 uV/m groundwave signal a couple miles offshore, where nobody would likely be listening anyway. Exceptions of course would be places where there's a saltwater path between two places on land, like San Diego to Santa Barbara, or New York to Cape Cod.
Also I'd include stations licensed to a smaller city, but targetting a nearby larger city, doing comparatively nothing for their COL (except mentioning them in the buried legal ID at TOH). I kinda wish this practice would stop. Either get licensed to the larger city, or target your own smaller COL.
In one type of case, if a station's licensed to a smaller COL and doesn't re-license to the larger city, I think they should...
put no more than a 1 mV/m signal (or whatever would be an easily listenable signal to a DXer with little to moderate noise on a portable, assuming a not-too-noisy location in a house) to any spot within the larger city's limits (exceptions of course allowed where the COL borders the larger city, as you legally have to have 5 mV/m covering the COL and can't have a "step" down in field strength at a particular spot - I guess the closest you could come is build a directional array right on the border),
have no more than 50 uV/m signal (or whatever would be faint on a portable, but still barely copyable for a DXer if he concentrates on it in his headphones, in an outdoor park away from noise sources) in the downtown / prime target area of the larger city, and,
have less than 2 uV/m signal (or whatever results in a barely-detectable carrier using a beverage antenna and communications receiver, in an area with virtually no manmade noise present) over at least 12.5% of the large city.
In the other type of case, if a company owned a small station licensed to a small city, but they desire targetting a large city, they should have to change their COL (or stop targetting), AND sacrifice one of their big stations. For example, this might include something like the following (assuming the same company owned both stations - in the example below I don't believe so)
Re-license something like KMZT-AM or KROQ-FM (whichever bills less and/or has the smaller geographic signal footprint) to Los Angeles
Donate a station like KFI-AM or KIIS-FM (whichever bills more and/or has the larger geographical footprint) to a non-profit entity - for example a church whose membership is the size mentioned in Matthew 18:20 ("For where two or three are gathered together in My name," - Jesus speaking, btw - "there am I in the midst of them.") and whose pastoral staff is "not greedy for money" (ref. 1 Timothy 3:3&8 and Titus 1:7, NKJV) and follows the apostle Paul's example mentioned in 2 Corinthians 2:17.
As for wasted signals based on various formats, that's up to the ear of the beholder. I happen to enjoy traditional (non-rock) Christian music / classic worship music, lighter/slower 50s oldies and a quite a few Radio Disney songs, as well as some classical music (especially if piano is featured prominently), formats which not many people in general population seem to enjoy.