Posted on 07/16/2025 10:09:53 AM PDT by dangus
NPR is warning that without federal money, some stations might even close down. Even from the point of a person who liked NPR, why would that be a bad thing?
The three states of Southern New England have a combined area of about 14,000 square miles, considerably smaller than several counties, like San Bernadino, California. Back in the days of VHF and UHF TV, you could cover the area with a single TV station, but the networks would put two TV stations in the region. If you wanted to splurge on radio stations, you could make the case for as many as four: one for Connecticut, one so that Rhode Island could have its own for state news and strictly in-state businesses, and if gave Connecticut and Rhode Island stations exclusively for their own state, you might want to put another station in Western Massachusetts.
But Southern New England has more than four NPR stations. Way more. It has 45. Four in Rhode Island alone. 12 in Connecticut. And 29 in Massachusetts. And none of them are AM versions of FM stations. Even though public radio basically quit playing music, they blanket the lower end of the FM dial.
It's pointless and absurd enough that just within the city limits of Boston, there's not one but three NPR stations, playing the same content. But there's also three NPR stations in the tiny town of Sharon, Connecticut, population 2,680.
College radio used to be so students can learn journalism, station management and DJ skills. It was the incubator of alternative movements in music. Now, most college radio is nothing but leftist propaganda produced hundreds or thousands of miles away. How does hosting NPR shows 24-hours-a-day help any communications students? "You'll lose local news!" the NPR supporters say... but "local news" means three minutes just before the top of the hour during certain, select news shows. Wouldn't you get far more if local universities actually produced their own content?
Let's look at more sparsely populated states. Shouldn't someone have to make the case that Vermont radio stations in Sunderland, Manchester (yes, VT), Battleboro, Randolph and Bennington couldn't provide the news that Rutland, Vermont residents need?
These stations get a lot of money from the federal government, but they also get money from the various states. Why are red states' governments shelling out to provide the Democrats 24-7 advertising?
(All station data comes from Wikipedia)
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My favorite reason is what Schmucky Schumer says “NPR is needed in rural areas”. Huh? Is this 1950?
The last time I was in a “rural area” (read that farm communities), it was not 1950 where there were few radio stations. Back then, most were AM and not far left NPR on FM.
Today, many rural stations are either Mexican or Christian (just doing the dial search when I am out there).
No self respecting farmer gets their ag and weather news from NPR.
AM doesn’t air much programing for rural gay, trans and multicultural children, so you can understand Chuckie’s concern.
>> Large cities still have NPR music. Here in Phoenix, the main station, KBAQ, is classical music 95% of the time. The news station is relegated to a secondary FM digital signal, with smaller stations that are secondary to KBAQ music. <<
KBAQ is not an NPR station at all. But some NPR stations still play a little classical music, because they only have to spend x% of their overall budget and y% of their CPB budget on NPR.
>> The AM stations like WABC in New York, KDKA in Pittsburgh, and WLS and WBBM in Chicago, have a clear channel, and what Rush Limbaugh used to call a “50,000 watt blow torch”. Those do NOT get handed out easily, and most are heritage stations. If NPR in CT wanted to move to AM, it would NOT get a 50,000 watt station, like WTIC-1080 has. It would more likely get 5,000 watts like WPOP. <<
I’m only talking about reaching New London or P-town from Boston. No 50,000-watt blowtorches necessary. And by the way, low-frequency FM stations are the ones that travel the best, and retain the best sound quality, and NPR so thoroughly dominates the low-frequency end that in most cities, you can’t find any stations that are NOT NPR on the low end, so I wouldn’t worry about them having access to very best stations.
>> Some stations only have 1,000 or 2,000 watts and are obliged to signoff at sundown. <<
Not NPR stations, so your technical data, while correct, are an irrelevant smokescreen.
In order to better waste taxpayers money and fund leftist propaganda.
NPR stations remind me of the Russia propaganda short wave stations in the 50’s and 60’s they made communism sound like a gift from God.
Just like the modern day left does today embrace it comrades and be saved.
To cut through a lot of smokescreening data:
WGBH-FM NPR Boston has an official range of about 70 miles. That’s lower because it’s FM. AM has more frequencies and carries much further. Two such stations would blanket most of New England, although you’d possible want to go with three (Hartford, Providence). And if you wanted 100% coverage at the highest sound quality, you’d probably want repeaters in Yarmouth and something on a hilltop in the Berkshires; past Barnstable, you’d start getting a weaker signal.
PBS carries the Roadshow. NPR is a different corporation that the PBS stations host. A difference in details. PBS does have decent content sometimes like Masterpiece-Mystery. NPR is pure Marxist propaganda garbage. Even worse is Pacifica News. If you can imagine that
I want to second what Seruzawa said about Pacifica “News” being even worse than NPR.
“Few had rotors”? I guess your father and family friends had no interest in sports broadcasts as motivation.
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