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Current Events => Politics => Topic started by: SVPete on June 18, 2016, 02:20:17 PM

Title: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: SVPete on June 18, 2016, 02:20:17 PM
Public Radio’s Existential Crisis (http://www.wsj.com/articles/radios-existential-crisis-1466111586)
By ELLEN GAMERMAN
June 16, 2016 5:13 p.m. ET
wsj.com
Quote
When 73-year-old Garrison Keillor retires as host of “A Prairie Home Companion” next month, he’ll leave more than 3 million weekly listeners loyal to a show that began more than 40 years ago. Elsewhere on the dial, “Car Talk” ranks near the top of National Public Radio’s ratings even though co-host Tom Magliozzi died at age 77 nearly two years ago—his jovial cackle still echoing in “best of” versions of the show on more than 600 stations nationwide. Later this year, Washington talk-show doyenne Diane Rehm, 79, who boasts one of NPR’s 10 largest weekly audiences, will end more than three decades on the air.

“We’ve known that the so-called old guard would eventually have to retire,” said Mike Savage, general manager of public-radio station WBAA in West Lafayette, Ind., which has aired all three shows for decades. “There’s concern because these programs are well-known and well-loved.”

Public radio is facing an existential crisis. Some of the biggest radio stars of a generation are exiting the scene while public-radio executives attempt to stem the loss of younger listeners on traditional radio. At the same time, the business model of NPR—the institution at the center of the public-radio universe—is under threat: It relies primarily on funding from hundreds of local radio stations, but it faces rising competition from small and nimble podcasting companies using aggressive commercial strategies to create Netflix-style on-demand content.
I'll say it up front, in hope: Good! Riddance!

Ucky-Duck ... NPR funding is not straight forward, so I'll cover it briefly (from Wikipedia), and leave the guesstimational Math to ya'll: NPR gets ~50% of it's revenue from member stations; 2% of its revenue is in grants from Federal agencies. The member stations, as an aggregate, get up to 30% of their revenue from Federal, State, and local sources (including universities). So taxpayers susbsidize NPR fairly heavily, just not directly and in the open. So that's a big part of my, "Good riddance!"

NPR's business model is not viable in modern broadcasting! Politics aside - believe it or not! - that is a very good reason government, on any level, should not be subsidizing NPR and/or its affiliate stations. Force them to become viable, or become extinct. Personally, I believe their thinking is as dinosaurian as their business model, and they would become extinct, just like ...
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: thundley4 on June 18, 2016, 02:59:25 PM
Paul Harvey use to run on commercial stations and in almost every market, every single day, ratings for those stations jumped for the few minutes he was on each day.
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: Big Dog on June 18, 2016, 07:38:21 PM
(http://lefthandbrewing.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2014/04/well-bye.jpg)
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: BattleHymn on June 19, 2016, 12:59:36 PM
Prairie Home Companion is without a doubt the most wretched thing I have ever had the misfortune of hearing. 

Good riddance.
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: Fourwinds on June 19, 2016, 01:04:01 PM
What the hell is Prairie Home Companion?
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: SighLass on June 19, 2016, 01:27:35 PM
Next thing you know they will be rapping trying to get viewers...

Opps too late....

www.youtube.com/watch?v=vxRgNnue-zk
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: BattleHymn on June 19, 2016, 04:03:54 PM
What the hell is Prairie Home Companion?


Be very glad that you have to ask.  Avoid at all costs. 
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: franksolich on June 19, 2016, 04:11:00 PM
Be very glad that you have to ask.  Avoid at all costs.

I "heard" Prairie Home Companion one time, back when George Bush was president.

It was just the same old standard run-of-the-mill schtick, where the country folk and conservatives were the idiots, and the city people and liberals the smart ones.

Yawn.

Can't anyone think of any new line of humor?
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: Chris_ on June 19, 2016, 04:20:22 PM
Prairie Home Companion is without a doubt the most wretched thing I have ever had the misfortune of hearing. 

Good riddance.
This.  Many, many times over.

Their regular weekend programs are bad enough without throwing Garrison Keillor in the mix.  The only thing remotely listenable on Sundays is the Car Talk rerun at 6pm.
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: BattleHymn on June 19, 2016, 07:15:56 PM
This.  Many, many times over.

Their regular weekend programs are bad enough without throwing Garrison Keillor in the mix.  The only thing remotely listenable on Sundays is the Car Talk rerun at 6pm.

Yeah, Car Talk is something I won't turn the knob to escape.  It was/is actually pretty darn entertaining.
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: BattleHymn on June 19, 2016, 07:18:07 PM
What the hell is Prairie Home Companion?

Click at your own peril.  Don't say I didn't warn you.

http://prairiehome.publicradio.org/listen/full/?name=phc/2014/04/19/phc_20140419_128

If you're wise enough not to click that, this will do:

[youtube]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tmkq7yylRkU[/youtube]
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: Chris_ on June 20, 2016, 12:58:13 AM
If you're wise enough not to click that, this will do:
Close enough. :p
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: J P Sousa on June 20, 2016, 12:44:42 PM
My old neighbor was an executive producer for a PBS station, but became a minister after severe budget cuts. That was four years ago.  :-)
Title: Re: Public Radio’s Existential Crisis
Post by: obumazombie on June 24, 2016, 03:29:23 PM
I should post a picture of Garrison Keiller.
His lib face would tell the whole NPR lib story.