But WUWF barely gets any signal in Mobile and it would be nice if expanded the signal to Mobile.
Mobile already has an NPR station: WHIL
But WUWF barely gets any signal in Mobile and it would be nice if expanded the signal to Mobile.
I think that supporters of the conservative talk station are a trifle jealous. Their hope is that if WUWF-FM is removed from the community, NPR listeners will seek out more conservative alternatives. That hasn't happened in other markets and I don't think it will happen here.
One comment on NPR's journalistic standards. While the network relys heavily on those standards, it should be pointed out that its opponents, starting with the current U.S. president, view those standards as supporting "fake news." In other words, if you have a debate between NPR supporters and opponents, you will get a lot of people talking in languages (even though they're all using English) that the other side completely fails to understand.
Besides WMPV and WHBR, WFBD is/was a commercial license. WDPM was originally a CP for a Pax TV (iON) affiliate. WFGX and WPAN were both previously religions stations.There is no market in the nation that is so over-indexed for full-service religious TV licenses. It does not help that two of them were planned commercial stations in the 1980s that failed to go anywhere. (Providence Journal owned the CP for WMPV, and an outfit named Harbour Broadcasting owned the CP for WHBR.) They probably saw what that market looked like with one indie (WPMI) and noped out. WMPV tried the CBN "family indie" route and evidently failed at it.