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If you want to talk about the issues about WHYY not truly serving Delaware and the city of license: Wilmington, this is the thread to do it in.
Thanks for the history. I didn't know Delaware broke away from Pennsylvania, but I'd say New Castle Co. DE is to Philadelphia, much like Central NJ is to New York. There's a reason there is SEPTA rail service between Wilmington and Philadelphia And another thing there is no $4 toll each way put in place between DE and PA on I-95 like there is between DE and MD, where there is no bridge/tunnel/river either and just an arbitrary you're changing states, let's put up a toll. If they eliminated SEPTA service, and implemented the high toll like there is between Wilmington and Baltimore, there'd be fewer commuters each way from DE and PA and eventually Wilmington metro with much more indepndent. But I d think DE could use better TV service, like a cable news channel or a station like WFMZ. But there are newspapers to fill that void.MikefromDelaware said:I would disagree with only one point you made. Channel 12 should be for Wilmington, not Dover. The Wilmington market contains about 680,000 of Delaware's 880,000 population. The Wilmington Metro area is Delaware's only metro area containing two of Delaware's largest cities (#1 Wilmington and #3 Newark) [#2 Dover has a couple thousand more people than Newark, but doesn't come close to approaching Wilmington's population].
Delawareans do not consider themselves to be a suburb of Philly. Delaware broke away from PA back in 1775 (that's the reason the upper boundary of Delaware is rounded). As Dover and the Lower part of Delaware do get excellent TV news coverage from WBOC, meaning that 1/4 of Delaware's population gets reasonable TV coverage while 3/4's of Delaware's population gets ignored. No, the FCC should force channel 12 to do it's job correctly.
DX said:imhomerjay... "Betray" in the sense that if Public broadcasting's quest for young audiences forces it to merely replicate the material available from entertainment media, what's the point for its existence?
DX said:Whether or not WHYY TV was licensed to Wilmington, let's face it: Local news content - whether for Wilmington or Philadelphia - especially of the kind that attempts to serve as an alternative to the commercial Philly TV channels (more on politics, social, economic, and religious trends) - will NEVER draw a significant chunk of the younger audience, regardless of platform!
DX said:Should public broadcasting yank the News Hour at six because it draws a much smaller audience than the traditional national 'casts on ABC, CBS, and NBC?
DX said:And if remaining news staffers are stressed providing content for multiple platforms, the on-air content inevitably suffers.
DX said:Having said all of the above, I believe - for the foreseeable future - you'll always have SOME younger audience for serious content on traditional platforms; it just won't be a mass audience. I was struck when a longtime Rowan University professor of communications told me this month that his students seemed disinterested in all his talk about new platforms; they were still drawn to traditional broadcasting. Now maybe we could dismiss these students as atypical; maybe they're all geeks.
Agreed, but you still have to acknowledge the realities, one of which is the bottom line. If you must get enough funding to continue to exist, then there needs to be some level of appeal to the people who donate. You can’t pretend that the audience in 2009 is the same as it was in 1979 and wants the same type of content. (Well, you can if you want to go belly up.)DX said:But, public broadcasting was NEVER intended to reach mass audiences; it was intended to fill the holes left by commercial broadcasting.
DX said:Now, if we had the sort of broadcasting structure that exists in Commonwealth countries (for example, the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation north of the border!), then you'd have slightly different rationale. The CBC plays a much more central role in Canada. Many Canadians saw it as the guardian - and bastion - for Canadian content against the commercial onslaught from south of the border. Yes, CBC carries some U.S. commercial content, but the key evening news hour is much more influential in Canada.
DX said:But, we're ignoring the elephant in the room: WHYY's grossly-overpaid CEO, a team of PR people, a bloated bureaucracy which presided over WHYY in its heyday. THAT component of WHYY should have gotten slashed before the Wilmington operation. Chris is a good egg, but he can't exactly attack his boss! Let me draw a parallel. I'm much more inclined to donate to the Salvation Army - or some other efficient charity - then to a non-profit charitable organization which, nonetheless, has a highly-compensated CEO. ...Seems to me if you believe in the cause, you believe in the cause!
DX said:Doubtless, a lot of out-of-work broadcasters who believe in the spirit of public broadasting would glady take some of those jobs at a lower compensation level. For the record, I'm NOT a disgruntled, out-of-work broadcaster. Nor have I ever drawn a paycheck from WHYY.