Witchlover said:No it wouldn't, but the discussion veered off on that tangent a couple days ago. If a bad breaker box or a faulty main breaker is the cause of the shutdown, it is ironic that one relatively small link in the chain brought the whole operation to a halt.
Your observation is on point. The thread has ventured off in a tangent from the original post. If the company would put the eight stations in eight different crummy buildings, there would still be outages but not all eight on the same day at the same time.
In the last week I looked myself in the eye (using a warped mirror) and realized I have to change one significant philosophy and attitude about broadcasting and "consolidated ownership". Here is the problem: If the company put the eight stations in eight different locations, the probability of such a mass silence would be statistically improbable. The other side of the coin: The person or persons (plural) responsible for what the computer people call "moves, adds, changes" along with repairs would become much harder, much more expensive. The technical people, known in the previous generation as engineers, would spend as much time or even more time travelling between buildings than they would spend "fixing". The breakdowns at each of the eight stations would come more often. The repairs would take longer because the tech/techs would have to make trips back and forth between buildings scrounging for parts and tools left at the site of another incomplete move/add/change when they got called from lunch to go fix the other station.
I would suggest the real answer to the original, intended questions early in this thread is that WE ALL dream that the economics of the business would make it possible for every station to have a cast-iron rock-solid well-polished installation with redundancy built in. (Think NBC and CBS back in the late 30s, the 40s and going into the 1950s. Studio B has a problem? Move to Studio E.
Today's economy does not afford that luxury to very many stations today whether they are owned by the biggest of corporate owners or a little hometown station that has been in the family for three generations now. When you do find one.... it can be something of a religious experience just to tour the place!