Scope and Nature of the Radio Industry

Sunday, January 4, 2009

FM, AM, and Nonecommercial Radio

The FM (frequency Modulation) signal is wider, allowing the broadcast not only of stereo but also of better fidelity to the original sound than the narrower AM (Amplitude Modulation) signal. As a result, people attracted to music , a radio staple, gravitate toward FM. People favoring news, sports and information tend to find themselves listening to FM dial.


Radio is Local


No longer to compete with television for the national audience in the 1950s, radio began to attract the local audience. Because it cost much more to run a local television station than a local radio station, advertising rates on radio tend to be much lower than the television. Local advertisers can afford radio more easily than they can television, which increases the local flavour of radio.


Radio is Fragmented


Radio stations are widely distributed throughout the United States. Virtually, every town – even those with only a few hundred residents – has at least one station. The number of station licensed in an area is a function of both population and proximity to others towns.


Radio is Specialized


When radio became the local medium, it could no longer program the expensive, star – filled genres og its golden age. The problem now was how to program a station with interesting content and dos o economically.. But stations soon learned that a highly specialized audience of particular interest to certain advertisers could be attracted with specific type of music.


Radio is Personal


With the advent of television, the relationship of radio and its audiences changed. Whereas families had gathered around the radio set to listen together, we now listen to the radio alone. We select personally pleasing formats, and we listen as an adjunct to other personally important activities.


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