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Time for National Private Radio (The death of classical music on Washington's NPR station)
The Weekly Standard ^ | February 28, 2005 | Andrew Ferguson, for the Editors

Posted on 02/21/2005 1:42:21 PM PST by RWR8189

ON THE EVENING OF FEBRUARY 10, the board of directors of WETA-FM, the only commercial-free classical music station in Washington, D.C., voted overwhelmingly to eliminate its music and arts programming. At the end of this month, someone will flick a switch and--thud!--WETA will fall to earth as just another all-news, all-talk station, and the nation's capital will be left without a public radio station devoted to beautiful and intelligent music.

WETA's transformation is a blow to the cultural life of the Washington metropolitan area, of course, which despite its succulent demographics in income and education levels has always struggled to maintain institutions that promote the fine arts. Yet our local station's fate should be of more than local interest. It confirms and will likely accelerate a trend already gaining momentum in public radio nationwide. A few days before WETA cheerfully announced its own death as a music station, WFDD in Winston-Salem, which has broadcast classical music to the North Carolina piedmont for more than 30 years, announced that it too was scrapping music in favor of all talk all the time. Together they join more than 50 public radio stations who in the last several years have given themselves up to news 'n' chat exclusively, leaving their music-loving audiences out of luck.

Something big is happening here, in other words, without fanfare, and with only token public deliberation. Public radio in the United States is remaking itself according to a wholly new sense of its mission. Originally conceived as a service for preserving and encouraging minority tastes ignored by the market--particularly in the arts, not only in classical music but also in jazz, bluegrass, cabaret, folk--public radio is being transformed into the nation's first government-funded news service. We would like to draw the attention of members of Congress to this sly conversion, and to its likely long-term effects. In the coming months congressmen will be sifting through the government's books in search of outlays that have outlived their usefulness. The $80-plus million now being spent to build a federally subsidized news organization, under the auspices of National Public Radio, would be a good place to start.

One comment, from WETA's president, Sharon Percy Rockefeller, struck us as revealing. "We're in the business of trying to create a larger audience," she told the Washington Post, explaining the board's decision. Her line of reasoning is shared by the new generation of station managers who have gained control over public radio in the last 15 years. According to their conventional wisdom--though whether it's wisdom or merely convention has yet to be determined--news and chat inevitably bring in more listeners, and more affluent listeners, than classical music or jazz. And affluent listeners draw higher-class advertisers (called "underwriters" in the painstaking lexicon of public broadcasting) and respond more generously during pledge drives.

Perhaps only students of public broadcasting will see the revolutionary nature of Mrs. Rockefeller's remark. For the point of subsidized radio has never been to maximize its audience, and certainly not to maximize its income. It has always been sustained instead on an odd, but sturdy, rationale: Public broadcasting needed to exist because its programming wasn't terribly popular. The dissemination of certain kinds of music and arts programming was a good in itself, and the government had an interest in roping off a part of the marketplace for its preservation. After all, if arts programming were sufficiently popular, the market would take it up--as the market has, for example, in the cataract of commercial talk and news stations flooding every region of the country, the very stations that public radio has now chosen to compete with. Pursue Mrs. Rockefeller's line of reasoning, on the other hand, and you're led quickly into absurdities: If a public radio station is in the "business" of drawing big audiences, why not fill its airwaves with Green Day or Alicia Keys and really pull 'em in?

Public radio hasn't sunk so low, not yet, and in fairness it probably won't. The present generation of public radio station managers take their market reasoning only so far, just to the point where it coincides (amazingly enough) with their own preferences in programming. As mostly white, affluent baby boomers, proud of their advanced educations and utterly ignorant of the arts, they share the tastes of the audience of doppelgängers they hope to attract: an indifference to forms of non-popular music and an endless appetite for chatter. We're disheartened to admit that the market strategy is working; these programmers may be tasteless but they aren't stupid. Today the public radio system has grown into a colossus of the American media landscape. NPR's two signature news shows, Morning Edition and All Things Considered, are the nation's second and third highest-rated nationally syndicated radio programs, after Rush Limbaugh. Several of its other shows, such as Car Talk and A Prairie Home Companion, routinely win their time slots in markets across the country. NPR has become, as its marketers like to say, a hugely successful brand, aimed straight at the nation's most affluent demographic cohort.

Congress has tried before to tamper with the subsidy to federally funded radio. The attempt stands as one of the signature failures of the fabled Republican-revolution-that-wasn't, away back there in the dreamy days following the election of 1994. "If the Corporation for Public Broadcasting still exists in two years," Newt Gingrich said then, referring to the government agency that funds public radio, "then we will have failed." Ten years later, Gingrich is gone but NPR survives, as one further indication of who really wears the pants in the great big family that is the federal government. A chief reason for the failure was the bureaucratic flow chart of public radio--a system of funding that would have puzzled Rube Goldberg. National Public Radio itself receives no direct subsidy from CPB; the money is instead laundered through local stations, who return the money to NPR in payment for the programs it produces. The intricacies and indirections of the system might lead a skeptic to think they were designed precisely to frustrate any congressional attempt at privatization.

But as our friends in the White House constantly remind us, we live in a transformational era--a time for trying the impossible. And public radio's continued success, measured in purely commercial terms, provides an excellent justification for removing the subsidy. Already the country is awash in news and talk and "informational programming." Is it fair to those commercial broadcast companies--who really are forced by the market to draw large audiences--to compete with government-subsidized stations aiming to fill the same market demand? Most public radio programmers are happy to boast of their success. Indeed, if you pump them with enough Chablis, they will even acknowledge that their strategy of eliminating arts programming has been so successful, and revenues to NPR's member stations have risen so high, that the $80 million in federal money is probably no longer essential to the system's survival.

Let's see if they're right.

 

--Andrew Ferguson, for the Editors


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Editorial; Government; News/Current Events; Politics/Elections; US: District of Columbia; US: Maryland; US: Virginia
KEYWORDS: andrewferguson; classicalmusic; music; npr; privatize; sharonrockefeller; socialistradio; weeklystandard; weta
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To: RWR8189

Defund them and auction their spectrum if they fail to be commercial successes.
Especially if all they are doing is parroting socialist news.


21 posted on 02/21/2005 2:57:58 PM PST by axes_of_weezles
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To: HarryCaul
Thank god I live in in a place with a station like KUSC, a station with hosts who actually know something about he music they play.

I agree with you. In fact I just pledged $120 bucks to KUSC last week. We ARE lucky to live someplace with a good classical station.

But I disagree that it's not a great loss for people that live in places where there is no other classical stations. I agree with that author that the preservation and promotion of classical music and the arts IS a good unto itself.

22 posted on 02/21/2005 2:58:33 PM PST by Smogger
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To: RWR8189
The reason that I never donate to NPR is that they use whatever funds come in to buy more talk shows and eliminate the music. Other than the Car Talk brothers there is not a talk show on NPR worth listening to.
And I need not mention the left wing bias of every one of the talk shows.
23 posted on 02/21/2005 3:01:25 PM PST by curmudgeonII (Time wounds all heels.)
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To: Smogger
I agree with that author that the preservation and promotion of classical music and the arts IS a good unto itself.

I'll bite...is a good that you want me to pay for?

24 posted on 02/21/2005 3:03:11 PM PST by Drango (NPR/PBS is the propaganda wing of the DNC.)
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To: RWR8189

Its amazing that commercial classical stations survive when they have to compete against subsidized channels. We listen more frequently to our commercial station because the music is more frequently light classical


25 posted on 02/21/2005 3:06:21 PM PST by gogipper
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To: RWR8189

Holy mackerel! Even OMAHA has a classical station, and a good one! (shameless plug for KVNO 90.7 FM or KVNO.org)


26 posted on 02/21/2005 3:13:00 PM PST by IronJack
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To: cyborg
QXR is still on the air. I just turned it on.

FM, yes: but WQXR-AM was taken off the air maybe ten years ago and it's combination of classical music and New York City style was a (nightime) breath of urbanity to people up and down the East Coast.

27 posted on 02/21/2005 3:14:19 PM PST by Grut
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To: Grut

Ah I see... yeah there are no classical stations or oldies anymore on AM. Caribbean and spanish barely squeak by late at night, and I mean LATE *lol*


28 posted on 02/21/2005 3:15:29 PM PST by cyborg (http://mentalmumblings.blogspot.com/)
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To: Grut

Gahhh! "it's" = its.


29 posted on 02/21/2005 3:17:08 PM PST by Grut
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To: IronJack

Omaha has classical music! Great. Here in Boston we have some but very little opera. The Harvard station is quite good but their football games bump the opera program and their range is only about 2 miles from Harvard Square. Forget about WGBH and WBUR - our public radio stations. Can't listen to Nina Choke-your-words!


30 posted on 02/21/2005 3:25:38 PM PST by ladyjane
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To: Cornpone

http://www.current.org/stream/ Here are some more Public Radio links


31 posted on 02/21/2005 3:49:15 PM PST by philo ("We not only sing , but we can dance just as good as we walk." Archie Bell)
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To: ladyjane

Nina Totenbag? Arrrrrgh. She'd be enough to make me listen to the (c)rap station. Well ... maybe not ...


32 posted on 02/21/2005 4:09:05 PM PST by IronJack
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To: RWR8189

Classical music has got to go!Apparently tonal music that has resolution is patriarchal.


33 posted on 02/21/2005 4:24:25 PM PST by kennyo
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To: Cornpone

what about 103.5 WGMS? It has classical music. Do we really need commercial free radio paid for by tax payers?


34 posted on 02/21/2005 4:28:12 PM PST by q_an_a
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To: RWR8189

Consider this quote from Professor Susan McClary, a musicologist, on Beethoven's ninth symphony: "The point of recapitulation in the first movement of the ninth is one of the most horrifying in music, as the carefully prepared cadence is frustrated, drumming up energy which finally explodes in the throttling murderous rage of a rapist incapable of attaining release.-http://www.eunacom.net/publ_003.htm

Classical music is no longer PC.


35 posted on 02/21/2005 4:33:19 PM PST by kennyo
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To: q_an_a

That's what I listen to, 103.5, but I think it is part of WETA. WETA has a number of broadcast call letters for various towers to cover the region I think. And I don't think 103.5 has commercials.


36 posted on 02/21/2005 4:33:29 PM PST by Cornpone (Aging Warrior -- Aim High -- Who Dares Wins)
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To: Drango

"Does the constitution even suggest that government should fund propaganda?"

I think at the very least it shouldn't fund enemy propaganda.


37 posted on 02/21/2005 4:34:04 PM PST by atomic conspiracy (This message prepared with MS-CBS Word 72 software)
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To: Cornpone
RadioValc Classic.
38 posted on 02/21/2005 5:57:25 PM PST by perfect stranger
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To: Drango

As opposed to what? Paying for news?


39 posted on 02/21/2005 7:26:15 PM PST by Smogger
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To: feinswinesuksass
NPR lies about not having advertisers? They're dumping classical music for nonstop liberal propaganda? And on my dime? Damn.

According to their conventional wisdom--though whether it's wisdom or merely convention has yet to be determined--news and chat inevitably bring in more listeners, and more affluent listeners, than classical music or jazz. And affluent listeners draw higher-class advertisers (called "underwriters" in the painstaking lexicon of public broadcasting) and respond more generously during pledge drives.

40 posted on 02/21/2005 8:47:36 PM PST by GOPJ (Liberals haven't had a new idea in 40 years.)
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