WNSC has gone NPR News/Talk. The question is haven't these people heard of WFAE?
I'm not going to take that route. I decided to get my own computer so I'll have plenty of expenses. However, for various reasons I won't take advantage of Internet radio. Chances are at the price I'll be paying for "high-speed" access it'll seem like dial-up. There's no other way they could make it so affordable. And radio sould slow it down. Plus there may be a limit on what you can do each month. I read some services were doing that because of all the music and video downloading.gymbeaux120 said:Yet another reason to go to satellite radio.
upstate29651 said:WNSC, while in a roundabout way is (was) geared toward Charlotte, is a Rock Hill/ Northern SC ETV radio station, supported by the taxpayers of SC, for the residents of SC. That seems to be forgotten here.
The decision to do what was done was not a ratings issue, or an advirtiser issue, as it is a public radio station.
G
Most major NC markets DO HAVE local public/NPR stations--in addition to WUNC-FM (as well as several others) in the Triangle, there are local NPR affils in the Triad, Charlotte, New Bern-Greenville, Wilmington, Asheville, and others. WUNC-FM certainly does provide excellent local programing to the Triangle, and yes, they do have two satelite transmitters in areas (Rocky Mount and Nags Head) which would most likely have no local public radio signal otherwise. And, UNC-TV provides an outstanding public TV service throughout NC, and areas of VA and SC as well. I know as a resident of SC, I prefer UNC-TV to SCETV, and I am definately a PBS fan.w00t said:Most of that is no different than NC. UNC-TV doesn't even locally produce legal IDs anymore, much less feed local programming. The only difference we have is that most NC markets had their own public radio stations before WUNC decided to expand. They don't produce anything local that I'm aware of either.