Sep 6, 2010

MMMM # 109 - Public Radio Changes

     Alabama State University licensed Public Radio station WVAS (90.7) in Montgomery will sponsor a Jazz on the Grass event today, starting at 11:00am on the Alabama Shakespeare Festival grounds. ASU is a predominantly black school, and I've always wondered if their young student body actually listens to their jazz format.
     Personally it is one of my favorite stations in the city, but I'm an older than college student aged white guy.
     Meanwhile Alabama Public Radio...a coalition of several stations that does not include WVAS, is increasing the amount of Classical Music they air...at the same time that global sales of classical music---like all genres---is continuing to fall. But classical is falling faster than the rest. Worldwide sales represent somewhere around 5% of all music sales, and my gut tells me the figures in Alabama have to be significantly smaller than that.

Here's how APR explains the decision to air classical music evenings from 8-10pm:

In an effort to pay attention to listener preferences and look for opportunities to improve our public service, Alabama Public Radio is changing its weekday evening and weekend schedule beginning Monday, September 6.
Monday - Thursday evenings, beginning at 8:00 p.m., listeners will hear full-length performances from some of the country's leading symphony orchestras, from the New York Philharmonic to the Chicago Symphony, as well as concerts recorded in the Concertgebouw, considered one of the finest concert halls in the world.
BBC World News will be more accessible when it starts airing at 10:00 p.m. seven nights a week.
Weekend programming changes will include adjusted times for APR's Sunday night local music line-up, with "Getting Sentimental Over You" starting at 5:00 p.m.

     Personally, I am one of the five or six people who are actually listening to the BBC at 3:00am...on APR's Selma-Montgomery frequency (88.3 FM) as I drive to work each morning. So it will actually be less accessible for me.(see note below)
     Announcements on the station say the program grid online has been updated, but that's not the case as of this Saturday Morning as I work on this MMMM for Monday. So I don't know about some other local music programs. I also don't know if the program changes will represent a financial savings for the stations...but those syndicated shows do not come free!
     NPR, the major source of programs for most public stations, does charge its member stations, and has managed to weather the Great Recession better than most media, perhaps thanks in part to that $200 Million grant from the widow of McDonald's founder Ray Kroc in 2003. With so little radio news left, their programs are truly a public service. Some local public stations have managed to increase their local news coverage too, despite the troubles economy.
     Read about Public Radio WABE in Atlanta, for example, on an Atlanta-Journal blog entry.
     WBHM in Birmingham added news and talk programs at the expense of Classical, and seems to have survived the experience.
     All media are struggling right now, trying to find the right combination of programs to hold onto an increasingly antsy audience.
      Here's Tim's Take: Public Broadcasting exists to offer choices that other media are not, so WVAS---perhaps swimming against the Rap and Hip-Hop wave of its student body---may be on track. And perhaps APR's offering of the diminishing Classical programs also serve that need.
     But I sure am going to miss my BBC Radio at 3:00am.
     When will someone invent a TiVo Radio? (See note below)

[ALSO: Anyone who thinks broadcast news mistakes don't come with a price needs to read the NY Times account of The London Times "oops" in incorrectly identifying a photo. How about---literally--- 99 lashes?]

[AND PLUS: The old argrument: should the Media report what people want to know, or what they should know. Technology is making the former much easier to determine.Is that a good thing?]

[NOTE: See the comment section for an update/correction regarding the BBC and the APR online program listings.]
[The Monday Morning Media Memo is a regular feature of this blog.]

2 comments:

  1. Just to let you know, Alabama Public Radio will still be airing the BBC News service during the wee hours of the morning. It will be on from 10:00 p.m. - 5:00 a.m.

    Also, the new schedule has been updated online as of 09/07/2010.

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  2. Troy University Public Radio's HD Channel 3 also carries the BBC 24 hours a day.

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