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WGBH Initiates Layoffs

Add them to the list of WBUR, KQED, KPCC, and lots of other public stations, as well as Beasley, Audacy, and iHeart.

The advertising depression has also affected non-commercial sponsorships and even donations.
Maybe it's just me, but it seems like no matter how many times one of us tries to explain that ad revenue is down across all media, it's usually met with crickets or another post about how someone is doing layoffs. It's almost like reality doesn't stick.
 
Maybe it's just me, but it seems like no matter how many times one of us tries to explain that ad revenue is down across all media, it's usually met with crickets or another post about how someone is doing layoffs. It's almost like reality doesn't stick.

But the minute a DJ uses VT, they're destroying radio. People want what they want, they want it their way, and they want it for free with no commercials or begging for money.
 
Maybe it's just me, but it seems like no matter how many times one of us tries to explain that ad revenue is down across all media, it's usually met with crickets or another post about how someone is doing layoffs. It's almost like reality doesn't stick.

Well there's no debate there - anyone who reads radio or any media trade can see that. In Q1 I think Audacy was the only radio company that wasn't down? But it was only up by a percent or two.
 
I noted that some of the local PBS affiliates WETA and WMPT are running much more NHK and BBC news and shows than home-grown. I'd imagine that programming is either a yearly flat rate that stations pay anyway, or free.
i can tell you BBC is a flat free, for radio, per year.
 
They cut 31 staff members & 3 TV shows:
Unfortunate. Thank goodness here in Phoenix, the public broadcasting model is different with the PBS station (KAET) owned by Arizona State not owning the main NPR station KJZZ, although they do have a classical station KBAQ & they're not having any of these issues with the amount of local programming they've got & compared to GBH & WETA, they're not a major PBS affiliate. Helps being owned by a major university in ASU.
 
Unfortunate. Thank goodness here in Phoenix, the public broadcasting model is different with the PBS station (KAET) owned by Arizona State not owning the main NPR station KJZZ, although they do have a classical station KBAQ & they're not having any of these issues with the amount of local programming they've got & compared to GBH & WETA, they're not a major PBS affiliate. Helps being owned by a major university in ASU.
There are lots of that same model everywhere, and they're all suffering the same thing. WAMU in Washington, DC is owned by American University, consistently top three in major demos, yet still is feeling the slow down in underwriting, having to lay off a batch of folks recently. WAMU has to pay for NPR programming like everyone else. WHUT-TV is owned by Howard University, and a PBS affiliate, and they've cut back on expenses too. At this rate, it's only a matter of when, not if, ASU will need to cut expenses.
 
What does it say about staffing levels when 31 positions are cut. And 96% of positions remain? 31 positions are 4% of your workforce? That’s a staffing level divorced from reality.

Keep in mind it's both a TV and radio station. And they're not co-owned with anybody else. So they don't share back office, engineering, or maintenance staff with 6 others stations. They're all in Boston. This is what radio was like when a company owned an AM, FM, and TV in one town. You prefer consolidation?
 
Keep in mind it's both a TV and radio station. And they're not co-owned with anybody else. So they don't share back office, engineering, or maintenance staff with 6 others stations. They're all in Boston. This is what radio was like when a company owned an AM, FM, and TV in one town. You prefer consolidation?
I liked it just as you described: an owner could have ONE AM, ONE FM, ONE TV station in a city/town. I, too, am probably divorced from reality, according to some (many?).
 
Maybe WGBH should use its near 100K ERP signal for something Boston doesn't have Jazz and Blues and move away from News/Talk. Los Angeles has six Jazz stations. One of them, KKJZ (KJAZZ) is very popular and streams world-wide. Listener supported radio stations should offer the listener more options other than just news/talk on both GBH and WBUR. Even Boston's classical station WCRB, owned by GBH, has its transmitter in North Andover doesn't work south and southwest of Boston.
 
Maybe WGBH should use its near 100K ERP signal for something Boston doesn't have Jazz and Blues and move away from News/Talk. Los Angeles has six Jazz stations. One of them, KKJZ (KJAZZ) is very popular and streams world-wide. Listener supported radio stations should offer the listener more options other than just news/talk on both GBH and WBUR. Even Boston's classical station WCRB, owned by GBH, has its transmitter in North Andover doesn't work south and southwest of Boston.
Like most NPR affiliates around the country, this isn't about a lack of listeners. It's about a lack of advertisers/underwriters buying traditional media. Also, surveys have shown the public is suffering from what's called 'donor fatigue' that is weighing on public stations being able to maintain budgets from donations. Changing formats to some jazz-fusion, or whatever music genre would probably kill an otherwise successful station.
 
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