TheBigA said:
You're basing your opinions on an article in the Buffalo News, which, in my opinion, appeared to be biased. If we were to read a transcript of the reporter's interview, I doubt the emphasis would have been about Canadian programming. What I took from that article was the desire to share news reporting from the area with other NPR stations. For people who have pride in their local area, I'd think it would be exciting to have more news from WNY included in the national news.
Your omniscience is just one of the qualities that endear you to so many of the locals who post here and breathe in the day to day life of Western New York and Buffalo. Fine, it's a message board, it comes with the territory.
So you know better than I the intent and bias of Jane Kwiatkowski, the respected Buffalo News reporter. What I took from reading the article was an objective presentation of the facts. If anything, the story seemed to present WNED-TV and WNYPB in a favorable light. You "doubt the emphasis would have been about Canadian reporting" if you had access to the reporter's transcript. But if you'd read Mr. Boswell's comments or heard him speak to the subject of the impending acquisition of WBFO, you would know that he's mentioned Canada and Canadian listenership on at least two previous occasions.
I have no personal axe to grind with WNYPB's Mr. Boswell. He seems a good and fair man who's guided WNYPB over the years. He's known to be a "TV guy" and as has been noted, radio is not necessarily his strongest asset. As he is the CEO, no doubt he's intimately familiar with the operation of WNED-AM-FM-TV more than any of us who post here. But his decisions and plans regarding WBFO are not above objective scrutiny on this board.
Boswell appears to have a grand plan for WBFO. Grand plans often go awry because the devil is in the details. When Mr. Boswell many years ago arrived in Buffalo, he created the Buffalo Guitar Festival, which he envisioned would attract national and world class participants and contributors. That was a grand plan. He was on record as expecting the legendary Eric Clapton to participate. To the credit of the many people and organizations that worked on and promoted the event, the Buffalo Guitar Festival became a reality. It ran from 2001 through 2007 and had what could be called moderate success, attracting some well-known bands and first rate guitarists. Part of the Festival's success came as a result of other venues and events within the city working with Channel 17. In other words, although WNED-TV promoted the event, a significant amount of the heavy lifting was done by other organizations, taxing budgets and spreading thin the staffs that labored to "make it work."
Now, as WNYPB prepares to purchase WBFO, we hear of a plans to enhance Canadian Content and employ Canadian journalists-producers to create Canadian content news packages that would be picked up and re-broadcast by NPR. As if NPR's newsday isn't already full of daily breaking news from China, Israel, Iran, Iraq, Italy and Russia, to say nothing of stories that originate in Washington, New York, Los Angeles and Buffalo.
I'd simply recommend that WNYPB concentrate on making WBFO a better station that continues to appeal to and reach more Western new York listeners. The station is not broken or limping along. It is vibrant. Given increased visibility on WNED-TV and promotion on WBFO, it will to appeal to more listeners those on this side of the Niagara river, as well as Canadian listeners. Pledges from Canadian listeners may increase. There's no need to reinvent the wheel. Simply make sure it's regularly lubricated, proper tire pressure is maintained and the spokes are tightened.