NPR

New Unity on Community Radio Translator Debate; LPFM Still 'Troubling' To NPR

In a rare instance of unity, religious broadcast network Educational Media Foundation (EMF) and grassroots radio advocate Prometheus Radio Project have found common ground regarding the future of Low Power FM (LPFM) and translators.  Over the past decade, Prometheus and EMF, the owner of the nationwide KLOVE/AIR 1 FM network, have held opposing views regarding the remaining available radio spectrum. Now for the first time, the organizations have come together on a mutually beneficial policy proposal, submitted to the FCC as a Memorandum of Agreement. 

Click here to read more.

 

Push to Grow the Audience

Station Resource Group in coordination with CPB recently released its final report in their "Grow the Audience" series.  Just the title of it explains the most important priority in public media now: growth.  One has to question whether public media is venturing too far into commodification (too late), pressuring stations to perform better at whatever the cost.  It is obvious in commercial radio that appealing to the lowest common denominator brings the most ratings.  For years NPR has been the alternative to this formulation, offering programming that may be considered a little more thought provoking.  It is almost intuitively seen that some listen to NPR merely because it is the only alternative to commercial radio.  But what happens when NPR tries to step over that line to take a dip of the commercial audience that simply don't consider themselves public radio listeners.  Let's face it, many people in American culture have differing tastes when it comes to news, eg, what is Paris Hilton up to, or image of Jesus shows up on a pancake.  Can NPR appeal to these people without losing its "intelligent" audience?  Does NPR assume these listeners won't drop NPR simply because there is no other alternative on the radio (except for LPFM--and maybe that is why NPR sides against LPFM?).  The report proposes the desire to double the number of people using public media each week in the next decade; that's quite a goal. 

Syndicate content