Yes, and in the long haul, what does it matter. Eight people on a message board devoted to radio, spurred by one guy who noticed the outage, discuss the issue. The average Joe and Joan don't care. The WBFO blues shows on Saturday and Sunday nights and the new Saturday afternoon line-up of Dr. Zorba Pastor and the Peoples' Pharmacy? Same thing. They're there if I remember, or don't have anything else to listen to.
Push another button. Hit scan. Click an app. There's always another choice, another source. Jocks mail in their voice tracks during a storm and the PDs insert them by remote control. WBFO probably could have done the same with local news breaks on Thanksgiving morning. I expect WBFO will have this system perfected by Christmas.
If people really want the news, skip the middle man and go to the source of every Buffalo radio station's news: http://www.buffalonews.com/ WBFO will continue to bang the drum about membership falling below the seven per cent threshold while NPR bangs the drum about using their apps. http://www.npr.org/ In a way, what's going on with radio and content providers like WBFO and other stations is reminiscent of the CD. Recall record companies championing "the crystal clear sound of the CD." Until... people began ripping CDs like mad and sharing the files with friends. The bottom fell out on CD and music sales. Blinded by science.
The latest Nielsen Listener Analysis is revealing but not surprising. Save for aging demographics, radio TSL is down, notably among teens. Television viewers in increasing numbers watch their favorite shows on DVR where they most likely FFx4 past the commercials. And those six, eight, nine minute commercial breaks twice an hour on FM music stations? Soon as the jock says "comin' up next..." the in-car listener (radio's prize target) is pressing the scan button on the steering wheel, changing the station or the source to smart phone. Pledge drive breaks? "Surely you don't expect me to pay for content? It's free on NPR, PBS, Drudge, ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, Facebook, Twitter." There's always another source for local and national news, and smart phones give us pictures, too!.
Fourteen plus minutes of dead air and no local news presence on a holiday? I concede. The point has been made, "insignificant."
Push another button. Hit scan. Click an app. There's always another choice, another source. Jocks mail in their voice tracks during a storm and the PDs insert them by remote control. WBFO probably could have done the same with local news breaks on Thanksgiving morning. I expect WBFO will have this system perfected by Christmas.
If people really want the news, skip the middle man and go to the source of every Buffalo radio station's news: http://www.buffalonews.com/ WBFO will continue to bang the drum about membership falling below the seven per cent threshold while NPR bangs the drum about using their apps. http://www.npr.org/ In a way, what's going on with radio and content providers like WBFO and other stations is reminiscent of the CD. Recall record companies championing "the crystal clear sound of the CD." Until... people began ripping CDs like mad and sharing the files with friends. The bottom fell out on CD and music sales. Blinded by science.
The latest Nielsen Listener Analysis is revealing but not surprising. Save for aging demographics, radio TSL is down, notably among teens. Television viewers in increasing numbers watch their favorite shows on DVR where they most likely FFx4 past the commercials. And those six, eight, nine minute commercial breaks twice an hour on FM music stations? Soon as the jock says "comin' up next..." the in-car listener (radio's prize target) is pressing the scan button on the steering wheel, changing the station or the source to smart phone. Pledge drive breaks? "Surely you don't expect me to pay for content? It's free on NPR, PBS, Drudge, ABC, NBC, CBS, FOX, Facebook, Twitter." There's always another source for local and national news, and smart phones give us pictures, too!.
Fourteen plus minutes of dead air and no local news presence on a holiday? I concede. The point has been made, "insignificant."