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Losing The Signal

Started by FOTD, November 11, 2007, 03:10:00 PM

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FOTD

This is the time of what next not what now.
Shameful how we've lost some of our community connectiveness through local music. KAKC where are you?

http://www.tulsaworld.com/entertainment/article.aspx?subjectID=70&articleID=071110_8_H6_spanc46062

KVOO pulls the plug on all locally produced programming...

Senate Takes a Stand on Media Ownership: Bipartisan legislation would put the brakes on FCC plan to gut media ownership limits


WASHINGTON -- At a Senate Commerce Committee hearing today, Sen. Byron Dorgan (D-ND) and Sen. Trent Lott (R-MS) announced plans to introduce legislation that would halt the Federal Communications Commission's rush to gut longstanding media ownership rules.

The bipartisan "Media Ownership Act of 2007" -- co-sponsored by Sens. Barack Obama (D-IL), Olympia Snowe (R-ME), John Kerry (D-MA), Bill Nelson (D-FL), Maria Cantwell (D-WA) and Diane Feinstein (D-CA) -- would direct the FCC to conduct a separate proceeding on localism and create an independent minority and female ownership task force before moving forward with any changes to media ownership limits. The bill would also give the public a 90-day comment period on any proposed rules.

Last month, Senator Dorgan uncovered FCC Chairman Kevin Martin's secret plan to eliminate longstanding media ownership limits before the end of the year.

Ben Scott, policy director of Free Press, made the following statement:

"We are thrilled to see members from both sides of the aisle stand up for the public. This critical legislation will restore fairness and transparency in what has become a corrupt process at the FCC.

"In the rush to gut media ownership rules, the Commission has ignored the American people, neglected the media diversity crisis, and buried evidence that consolidation harms local communities. The Media Ownership Act would hold the FCC accountable for listening to the public and ensuring that the public airwaves reflect America's diverse local communities.

"The American people overwhelmingly oppose any rule changes that would allow big companies to swallow up more of their local media. This bill is an important reminder from Congress that the FCC must answer to the public, not corporate interests."

Conan71

When it comes to conglomerates who primarily are prgramming music and not commentary over the airwaves, I really don't care how many stations they own.  

Even on the news/commentary side, I don't see how a company with 50 AM stations all over the country is any more detrimental than a national cable news network.

I don't spend all that much time listening to the radio anymore.  About the only time I do is when I'm driving and I've noticed lately I don't even always have it on.  I mostly listen anymore to avoid traffic tie ups and wrecks in the morning and afternoon.

I think it's a big to do about nothing.  The fact that Obama and Kerry are both signed on to this makes the intent fishy.
"It has been said that politics is the second oldest profession. I have learned that it bears a striking resemblance to the first" -Ronald Reagan

FOTD

The trouble with the world is that the stupid are cocksure and the intelligent are full of doubt.  ~Bertrand Russell