Re: [IRCA] IBOC battle begins
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Re: [IRCA] IBOC battle begins



Russ Edmunds wrote:

> *** And I think this aptly illustrates one of Scott's secondary points
> - the decline of AM over the past years is such that there is less to
> listen to. Baseball games come to mind for me in particular, but when
> you have an AM dial with as much syndicated talk, opinion or whatever
> programs on at least one station in every market, the number of ethic
> stations broadcasting in languages I can't understand, the number of
> local phone-talk programs featuring hosts and callers who are mostly
> infatuated with themselves or, yes, too many religious broadcasters on
> AM as well, there's really not much left to listen to on AM.

I would disagree with Russ on just one of his points - I'd actually 
contend that the "ethnic stations broadcasting in languages I can't 
understand" are actually among the signs of decent health for the AM 
dial. Granted, I may not understand most of what they're saying...but 
the fact that they're on the air (often on leased-time signals where you 
HAVE to be making money in order to stay on) is a good sign that 
SOMEBODY is finding their programming valuable. I'm not sufficiently 
infatuated with myself to believe that the only programming worthy of 
airtime is that which I personally enjoy listening to :-)

What's more, those foreign-language signals are doing, in their own way, 
what AM radio still does best: providing the sort of programming no 
other medium can easily offer. There aren't enough Hmong in Minnesota or 
Vietnamese in Houston to make an FM signal or a local TV newscast work 
(well, not yet, anyway) - so why shouldn't they benefit from an AM 
signal or two? Someone may as well.

If someone came to my house and dropped off the license to a Rochester 
AM station (and wouldn't THAT be nice!), I'd probably have it 
broadcasting in Spanish before the month was out. There's a massive 
unserved audience in this particular market - some 40,000 second- and 
third-generation Puerto Rican and Dominican immigrants, with a smaller 
number of more recent arrivals from Mexico and Central America - and 
just some weekend leased-time programming on WLGZ 990 serving them.

s
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