Not only was I awake well before 8 a.m., many other Western New York residents were as well. It happens I was on the road. While driving I saw two police cruisers, and a utility company truck with a crew taking care of nearly-downed power lines. It may have been a holiday, but people were up and about. But you may be correct BA, Public Radio listeners may be "more forgiving." And these being different times, why shouldn't public radio stations, especially one as esteemed as WBFO, take a page from the corporate radio handbook? Voice track. Mail it in. Play 12 in a row. Do a news countdown of the top 100 classic news stories of all time.
WBEN is often criticized here, but Buffalo's only commercial news-talk station did live, local news and weather on Thanksgiving. Why should WBFO, simply because it's a public station, get a pass? WBFO has stated on numerous occasions (inside and outside of pledge drives) that news is an important and critical component of the station's mission. Having a carrier with no audio for 14+ minutes, compounded by unfilled local news breaks on Thanksgiving, seems to run counter to their mission statement.
BTW, Canadian listeners, for whom the NYPBA suits clamor, celebrate Thanksgiving in October. WBFO was on the air that day without interruption, and with a local news host in a.m. drive when Canadian listeners were on holiday. So there's something to be said for that. Cheers!