Zach
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« Reply #20 on: November 20, 2010, 02:42:27 AM » |
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The thing I'd like to know is what the average listener thinks of BBC and paying an annual license fee. Is this a painless tax for a radio service that the public desires and of the standard the public wants or is the tax considered a required tax to be squandered by a government entity that serves only a portion of the general public. Would the British primarily commercial radio listener resent paying a tax each year?
I thought the tax was only a television license and that radios were not taxed? I can't find anything on a radio tax. Suffice it to say that a TV or radio license scheme such as what is employed in Great Britain (complete with the now-rare roving detection vans) would be met with collective indifference in this country and would be ignored on a universal scale.
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bturner
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« Reply #21 on: November 20, 2010, 10:55:18 AM » |
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I believe you are correct Zach. In the past radios were taxed...maybe 40 years back.
According to figures I've seen, there are nearly two radios per person in the United States. With the population at 300,000,000, the numbers can get really big if you applied a 50 cent a month or $6 a year tax on radio: 1.8 Billion Dollars...at $1 a month, this is 3.6 billion.
There are .7453 televisions per person in the USA according to an internet search. This is 223,590,000 TV sets. If the annual tax on an operating TV was, say, $2 a month or $24 a year this would be $5,366,160,000
While I see no figures on industry totals on television revenue, radio revenue in 2009 was around $16,000,000,000, down from almost 21.7 billion in 2006.
When one considers the number of radio stations required to covered the land area of Britain versus the USA, it is easy to see there would be fewer stations required. By vastness of real estate alone, the USA would required many more facilities to reach the population. Even so, are media revenue levels so low that an annual reasonable tax would eclipse that amount? When we consider the dollars we spend monthly on cable TV, cell phones, etc., could a radio and television model set up along the lines of $X per person in the city grade coverage area provide more revenue to operate non-commercially?
Imagine if you will, an option of a fund of radio/TV tax dollars doled out to broadcasters promising a certain level of service to the community based on the number of people in the city grade signal. A station could opt to take the money and provide the service or be 'independent' and sell advertising. The question of who can 'qualify' for the money would need to be worked out. Perhaps a system like the newspaper business in many states would be utilized. A 'newspaper of record' is voted on by local voters during elections. This newspaper of record is required to publish all required state, sounty and local, including school district, public notices (which is paid for by the governing entity at a rate per word). Instead of just one station being funded, perhaps a certain number could be allocated with the top vote-getters receiving money from the fund created by the radio and TV tax. Would this not center radio stations on serving the community?
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TheBigA
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« Reply #22 on: November 20, 2010, 11:15:18 AM » |
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Read my lips: No New Taxes.
Sure, the #1 complaint about OTA radio is the amount of commercials. Tell the public that if they approve the tax, radio would be commercial free. I dare say the public would vote for the commercials. People are cheap.
Here's the scary part: Right now in Congress, there is a proposal, made by the Democrats, that would impose a spectrum free on all broadcast stations to pay for universal broadband. I'm not kidding. Imagine being forced by law to fund your competition. That's what some in Congress want to do.
The mood in Congress about broadcasting isn't positive. Congressmen have been placed in a no-win situation over the performance royalty. They want broadcasters and the music industry to work it out themselves.
So there are a lot of issues here...a lot of reasons why the US isn't like the UK. There is a negativity in the US that I don't see in the UK...where people seek out what's wrong about things, rather than look for what's right. I don't see that in other countries. Europeans are more likely to follow the pack. Americans want it their way. Therefore, even if the US adopted a system more like Europe, with a tax on radio and TV, the people wouldn't like it, and they'd view the system as government-imposed media. That would lead to a competing system of commercial radio, just as it did in England and Canada. And we're right back to where we are now.
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johnbasalla
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« Reply #23 on: November 20, 2010, 12:46:00 PM » |
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The underwritings, particularly on TV, are so much like commercials anway. Let freedom ring. Let stations raise funds any way they want to. They want to sell advertising time, fine. They want to hit up their listeners with pledge breaks, fine. They want to do a combination of both? Fine. The combination option would be most useful for current non-comms who wish to continue programming that is less sustainable if they could only sell advertising. The trick would be to convince the audience that they need to support the station even though they have commercials. But, then again, you have 'almost commercials' masquerading as "underwriting" as it is, and that doesn't seem to hamper pledge breaks.
I would be one who would vote for commercials over higher taxes any day of the week... and not because I'm cheap, but I don't want the potentially freedom-stealing government to have any more control over things. You want money from the government, you have to jump through hoops to get it, make promises that otherwise would be bad business decisions, and do things that you are mandated to do.
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bturner
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« Reply #24 on: November 20, 2010, 03:24:37 PM » |
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Here, Here, I agree with the above posts. I do not want more taxes and I want less government intervention, period. I have always been a proponent on letting radio stations, for profit or non-profit, choose the elements of funding that works for their market and/or format.
The thing I have seen, especially in smaller communities, is how the communities work. Community A might be very prone to support their local media and be very likely to self-fund numerous local projects while Community B is an exact opposite and Community C is so politically divided or socially divided that they only support that which is 'on their side'. For public supported radio, this can be the difference between success or failure. Community A might see lots of local support for its radio station while Community B's station has incredible listenership but virtually no support and Community C has a nice listenership from both sides but only support from one clique in the community.
For the three case scenarios above, it is evident flexibility needs to be the plan for public supported radio.
Another factor is allowing supporters from out of town, especially those after the same customer as the in town business. A station has to strive for enough local support because if some of the support comes from out of town, especially when there is a local competitor, several to many in the local community will hate you for not supporting them even if they fail to support you.
In the past I've had to say "If you, the local businesses will support the station with the needed revenue, I won't solicit businesses out of town except those businesses offering services or products not available locally". It wasn't a threat but a bit of harsh reality. I had a car dealer that wouldn't spend a dime but when I explained car dealers were a good percentage of a typical radio station's revenue and I needed their dollars, they figured out spending with my station meant the out of town car dealers wouldn't be the ones asking for the town's business. I never 'denied' but didn't solicit, which works out prertty well since few businesses call you trying to spend their money.
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TheBigA
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« Reply #25 on: November 20, 2010, 03:37:56 PM » |
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Here, Here, I agree with the above posts. I do not want more taxes and I want less government intervention, period. I have always been a proponent on letting radio stations, for profit or non-profit, choose the elements of funding that works for their market and/or format.
Exactly, and your remind me that one thing not mentioned in the LA Times article is that BBC 4 is a national service, similar to NPR or American syndication. While there are local transmission facilities around the country, and they may be staffed to provide certain specific local services, the main programming on the stations comes from London. In this country, radio is seen as a more local thing, even if some programming comes from other places. Reagrdless of funding, it would be a difficult for most local stations to create the kind of professional programming that one can hear on BBC 4. And American radio stations (other than talk) have been more reluctant to give up large portions of their day to national programming.
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bturner
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« Reply #26 on: November 20, 2010, 05:13:07 PM » |
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I have to agree and note that the geographic components of the USA create a lifestyle that varies. A person in Florida is more likely to know little of bizzards as a Vermonter may have little knowledge of hurricanes. A North Dakotan would be more in tune to blizzards than a person in New Orleans. A Midwesterner less likely to know of earthquares and a Sothern Californian less of tornadoes. Likewise, a good game of curling might be big in Minot but unknown in El Paso. My point is a national service would have a difficult time serving the varied lifestyles of the USA based simply on weather and natural events than a national station reaching the British Isles.
Local or regional would have to come into play in the USA and those national shows would have to be focused on the commonality of the USA's interests alone and in such a dramatic way it could easily become uninteresting to the listener at large. No more Baskin Ribbins 31 flavors on national shows but a one flavor fits all. I can see a State network being able to work in many states but even there the lifestyles can vary greatly (South California compared to North California; Panhandle of Texas compared to the Gulf Coast; Sandhills of Nebraska to Omaha; Portland compared to Lakeview, Oregon; Las Vegas versus Battle Mountain, Nevada; New York City versus Watertown, etc.).
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johnbasalla
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« Reply #27 on: November 20, 2010, 05:55:15 PM » |
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I don't want government, directly or indirectly, to be the determining agent about most content areas.
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TheBigA
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« Reply #28 on: November 20, 2010, 06:10:44 PM » |
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I don't want government, directly or indirectly, to be the determining agent about most content areas.
I don't think anybody does. That's why CPB was created in the 60s. That's why it's chilling to have Congress threatening to defund public broadcasting because one commentator was fired. That's using the threat of the purse to control content. This is not to say that discussion of government funding isn't valid. But to have this direct connection between an action and defunding is improper. It's too bad more people don't recognize the impropriety of this. Back to the issue, there are ways to handle this kind of thing. But the key is the government knowing its limits.
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« Last Edit: November 20, 2010, 06:17:17 PM by TheBigA »
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Talk_Dude
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« Reply #29 on: November 20, 2010, 10:59:39 PM » |
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I don't want government, directly or indirectly, to be the determining agent about most content areas.
I don't think anybody does. That's why CPB was created in the 60s. That's why it's chilling to have Congress threatening to defund public broadcasting because one commentator was fired. That's using the threat of the purse to control content. This is not to say that discussion of government funding isn't valid. But to have this direct connection between an action and defunding is improper. It's too bad more people don't recognize the impropriety of this. Back to the issue, there are ways to handle this kind of thing. But the key is the government knowing its limits. The thing is, it doesn't take an express and explicit communique from a government official to communicate to the operator of a public broadcasting station, radio or TV, for the operator of the station to know which side his bread is buttered on.
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The three most important things on any music format station are the music, the music, and the music.
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