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JasonW
Guest
DavidEduardo said:SayNoToIBOC said:They had been doing that, as I have been listening on AM/FM, long before Satelite Radio - wrong ! Every other stations I listen to, does the same thing !
You are so wrong I do not know where to start.
No ads are national on radio. They are local, but may run on staitons in many markets to get coverage, market by market, of the US:
There are no national ratings except for NETWORKS. Coast to Coast AM, Rush, Laura, Opie & Anthony, O'Rielley, etc., are network syndicated shows, run on dozens to hundreds of local stations. The advertiser buys a bunch of local stations packaged together in a network.
The fact that ads are for national brands does not mean the advertiser is looking for national coverage from one station. They are advertising a product that is available in many cities on stations in many cities using the same creative. So if you hear a national brand on WLW, the ad buy was for Cincy, not for anyplace else.
By the way, most ads you hear ont he radio after about 7 PM are generally bonus spots or really low rate add-ons to daytime campaigns, because daytime represents almost all the billing of US radio stations. A few young demo stations have alot of paid (and cheap) club ads at night, but nearly all paid and well paid ads are run in the daytime hours.
There is, today, no skywave revenue. There is no profit in broadcasting overnigh, and never has been.
Radio is not all about revenue. It is a service intended to serve the public (as in providing mass communications in emergencies), whose medium of distribution (the airwaves) is publically owned. Amateur Radio is also constituted as a service that is to be used for communications in emergencies. The fact that folks like you are allowed to make money through commerce on radio is merely a happy by-product. Because the government (We the People) own the airwaves, radio (and TV) could just as easily be government-operated with no for-profit broadcasting. As the residents of the Gulf region (especially Louisiana) discovered after Hurricane Katrina, skywave reception of distant AM stations unaffected by the storm became quite important for reasons that had nothing to do with money.
Radio and TV stations make money, and Ham Radio operators enjoy their hobby, but profit and fun are not the main reasons why the FCC regulates the airwaves. All of these communications outlets are licensed by the government to serve the public. Natural disasters and terrorist attacks can easily take down any city's power grid and/or destroy its local radio and TV stations (as well as land-line telephone networks, cellular telephone repeaters, and wired and wireless internet connections). In such situations, AM skywave reception is the only way that citizens can obtain news and information from the outside world, and that is why I oppose AM IBOC. No digital AM system that harms skywave reception should be allowed. I don't care that iBiquity has poured millions of dollars into AM HD, because the airwaves don't exist for their benefit.
Regarding national radio ads, spots for sponsors such as the C. Crane Company (one of the sponsors of Coast To Coast AM with George Noory, Art Bell, and Ian Punnett) are national and not local. The ad spots (some live, some pre-recorded) refer listeners to the company's web site and toll-free telephone number. Many of the program's other sponsors are advertised in this way as well.
-- Jason