w9wi said:
Mark Jeffries said:
jason99 said:
Ahhh another Classical Radio station thought we had enough of them?
You're calling WPLN part-time "enough" classical music? You must be one of those Vanderbilt students who thinks that punk rock is art.
There is some on WMOT now. (I wonder if that will continue?) But between WMOT's part-time classical and WPLN-FM's overnight classical it still didn't amount to one fulltime station.
If I recall properly, last night on channel 4 Rob Gordon said WRVU would be using WPLN-HD3. (probably only until the students lose interest

)
WPLN-AM had been on the HD3, and the HD2 had been all classical. I wonder how those two services are going to shake out? The obvious answer might be to move WPLN-AM from HD3 to HD2, but there is no HD on 91.1 and that's not likely to happen in the near future. HD may be a near-complete failure with the commercial stations but it's not as much of a non-entity at public stations.
Friends, this has the potential to amount to a total apple-cart turnover of the reserved part of the FM band in the Nashville market. It appears now that with WPLN going all news-talk, Nashville Public Radio will not need a separate AM frequency. I am sure that, shortly, it will be mothballed and probably sold to an ethnic entity (e.g., Hispanic). Meanwhile, on the FM, this will have ripple effects. A few months ago, WMOT dropped daytime jazz in favor of classical, which was intended to gain the old WPLN daytime audience alienated by the fall 2009 format flip. With WPLN back in the classical game with the new WFCL, WMOT basically has nowhere to go, having spent the past two years blinking at WPLN's every move. Everyone knows that, even with classical audiences aging, jazz audiences are dying off every day. WMOT is probably not going to be able to justify continued existence in this new environment; Nashville Public Radio will in effect have put them out of business, with WFCL the final nail in the coffin. I would not be surprised to see MTSU officials any day now announce that they are throwing in the towel at 89.5, something they seriously considered two years ago. This will in all likelihood witness a big-time religious caster snapping up that frequency in the future.
VSC would not have even thought about putting WRVU on the block had it not been for the hard fact that kids do not listen to radio--and especially not youngsters at an elite educational institution, who have more than enough disposable income to afford all sorts of techie ways to get access to alternative rock and other specialty genres. WRVU's main backers, it seems to me, were the (non-country) musician community and alumni DJs, two groups without a lot of money to back up their valiant efforts. The main part of the student body appeared to not give a damn one way or the other (in fact, conservative students are probably overjoyed at having one less frill to involuntarily pay for in the student activity fee, paying for programming they likely thought was too far-out or subversive). Put all of this together with a likewise hard fact that demographic research has shown that NPR listeners, especially those under 60 or so, overwhelmingly prefer news and talk to classical music (which prompted the original WPLN format change in 2009), and pressure simply built up for Nashville Public Radio to move the FM to full-time news-and-talk; the AM and format change were really just stopgap measures. Despite a personal sympathy I feel for this David-and-Goliath scenario, David's slingshot just didn't Goliath's head in this instance.
This has already happened in Houston and San Francisco, and it is going to happen elsewhere. For the most part, college radio is dead, and it may be best to give it as dignified a funeral as can be given. Same goes one-time specialty stations like WMOT. Enjoy them as long as you can, but be ready for them to be taken away at any time. Governments and institutions of higher education, whatever their ideological composition, are getting out of the non-commercial radio business. In other words, there is no use in pouting or crying about it; we have to learn to adjust--life has to go on.