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What do you all think radio would look like today if FCC had kept their 7 AM, 7 FM, 7 TV rule? Do you have another suggestion? .
Just curious.
The FCC should have never allowed this to happen.
http://articles.boston.com/2012-05-16/business/31718403_1_radio-station-fm-scott-fybush
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When you've seen one shopping center you've seen a mall
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-- Art Norwalk
Norwalk Communications, Inc.
Advertising - Marketing - Public Relations
Tel 401.421.4310
"How You Say It DOES Make
A Difference"
May I be so bold as to suggest that the dearth of good new music making it into the public consciousness (as opposed to good new music being made, of which there is much, but which often gets lost among the bad) is the lack of a concentrated place to be exposed to it. That place is radio as it was, with enough stations to be able to get it out there (as well as record companies willing to try something new and which had enough distribution to coordinate a promotion). That concept still works; look at how today’s major labels coordinate campaigns to push predigested crud on audiences via corporate broadcasting. Sure, there’s YouTube, but unless it’s a novelty that catches on for its “15 minutes of fame,’” that’s not a parallel.
And yes, I have satellite radio. Great stuff, but the sound quality is only fair to good (“almost FM”) and it goes in the car; but it costs (a lot) extra to have a receiver in the house or on a portable unit for the beach or elsewhere. Terrestrial radio is “everywhere” – and it’s free. (And “thanks” to corporate multi-ownership, today’s terrestrial radio all sounds the same in almost every damn market.)
Long live WBRU – and BSR. And keep waving the flag as long as you can, WFNX.
From: wb...@googlegroups.com [mailto:wb...@googlegroups.com] On Behalf Of d...@donberns.com
Sent: Tuesday, May 22, 2012 11:59 AM
To: wb...@googlegroups.com
Subject: Re: another nail in radio's coffin
It's sad (to me, anyway---and maybe because I remember what radio was...and should be) that radio is steadily losing cume; the result of the big box mentality is actually driving listeners away. Rather than evolve and compete, radio seems to be just fading away, and since the accountants and lawyers who are in charge seem to know nothing about what they are in charge of, they are unwilling or unable to compete and adapt.