| A Non-Profit Educational Media Organization. |
| Mission: |
To produce/promote the broadest
possible spectrum
of news/views/culture in the Virginia media. |
Our "Video" NPR TO KILL CHURCH/CIVIC
RADIO?"
Is Ready for National Distribution
...
See below for the script to the video slide show and more detailed
information as well as better shots of some of the pictures seen in the
video. You can also email us and we can customize the video with your local contact information to create a very powerful organizing tool for you!
| DOWNLOAD THE "VIDEO"
and the
Lookup a Cable Public Access studio near
you HERE. Don't
forget that most Cable Public Access channels are designed to be a free or nearly free "electric soapbox" for citizens within the coverage area
of the cable franchise. Exercise your rights and call for your slot today!
Public Service Announcements
for sympathetic community & microradio stations.
[See Script below or jump to it HERE]
[MP3 format sampled at 96kbps mono]
[NOTE: Right click your mouse and choose
"save link as" to save files to your harddrive.] |
This "Video" can help us
help you help us get Low Power FM stations on to the air!
...and help you organize citizens
in your area at the same time ...
When the Radio Free Richmond Project of the Virginia
Center for Public Press ran a different version of this slide Show
on Richmond's MediaOne Cable Public Access channel last year:
-
We got 60 hits a day to our website.
-
We now have 300 people on our email alert list,
-
1200 people have signed up for more information or
an offer to help or at least hear more about what's going on in the future.
-
We now have 2200 signatures on two petitions and
-
15 major
organizations such as the NAACP, The Mayor of Richmond, Va., Unions,
The Richmond School Board, a children's hospital etc. behind us and ready
to do radio shows.
-
Our live call-in talk Cable Access shows easily get
15-22 phone calls an hour.
I have worked in commercial talk show broadcasting and I can tell you there
are 50,000watt Clear Channel Stations that run Rush and Dr. Laura who would
kill for that kind of response! People DO want to talk about the
fact that the "Emperor Has No Clothes" and until LPFM is here to provide
the forum to do that, Cable Public Access provides at least one outlet
for that.
Radio Free Richmond has had almost NO exposure to the public outside of
Cable Public Access and word-of-mouth.
This video can begin your foray into Bypassing The Status-Quo-MediaFilter.
The other wonderful advantage for you to the SlideShowSeries
is that the video remains the same for several months ... but the audio
can be changed every week or as often as you can create and edit audio
content that is the same length as the video slide show.
This way you can show off audio-radio shows and
bands to people who would otherwise not hear them !
Directions:
-
Decide if you want us to customize a SlideShow for
your group to help you with organizing in your area.
Email us to arrange
customizing SlideShow for your group, or just save time and immediately
use the generic version provided on this website. If you decide to
use the generic version on this website:
-
Click on SlideShow link in the "Download The Video"
box to the right of this text and save it to your harddrive.
-
Right-Click on the audio downlink above to get it
to save to your harddrive.
-
Set up a way to bump the SlideShow to VHS videotape
(see
below) ....
-
Set up a patch from the sound card to the VCR or
Camcorder ...
-
Load both files from the harddrive into their players
(MicroSoft PowerPoint and an MP3 player) and reset to the beginning and
pause ...
-
The audio portion has a seven second delay for you
to get the slideshow going.
-
Start the MP3 player ... then task-switch over to
the PowerPoint Player, Under View choose "SlideShow" ...
-
Play both of them from your Harddrive and bump them
to a VHS videotape.
-
Submit the tape to Cable Public Access in your
area.
-
Then re-submit the tape again next week or next
month with a new audio track ...
-
SHOW people what you think LPFM should sound like
!! You can get interesting audio shows from radio4all.net
or Webactive.com.
This then becomes a major organizing tool and you can begin "radio on your
TV", your own "audio indymedia".
-
GET HUNDREDS OF PHONE CALLS (if we customized
the SlideShow with your contact information) from people in your area who
want to join you in bypassing the Staus-Quo-MediaFilter.
How to put a PowerPoint Slide
Show on to VHS videotape:
The best way is to use a gadget that converts VGA to NTSC video
format (that your VHS videotape machine will read), such as this this Averkey
iMicro PC/Mac-to-Video converter that is normally used for presentations.
Method #2: find a good screen and simply point a camera or camcorder
at the screen. The best way is to feed the video from the camcorder
(don't forget to turn off any character generation features) into a VCR.
I find that laptops are especially good for this with their flat active-element
displays. Other than that find a monitor with a fairly high refresh rate
to avoid too much "banding".
Oh, another point, you can adjust the VGA converters to "overscan "
or not and shrink or expand the image to smaller, or larger than the screen's
physical size. You could also shrink the image in the PC monitor to slightly
less than total coverage and get black around the screen shot in your video.
This will be less distracting than if you can see the PC monitor screen
body in the shot.
Don't forget to turn the lights way down or off for the actual videotaping
if you use the camera-at-the-screen method.
| Radio Shack sells an adapter cable that goes from
the 1/8th inch plug found on most sound cards to an "RCA Jack" (female,
like on the VCR deck) or "RCA Plug" like you would see on a patch cable
that goes from the CD Deck to the amp. |
Then run an adapter cable from the sound card into the sound in on the
VCR. This is better because the VCR has a "line level" input whereas most
Camcorders are designed for a microphone input only. The "impedance" of
the microphone input is different enough from the earphone out or line
level out of a sound card that you can get significant distortion.
Even with the adapter cable running into a "line level" input on the
VCR, you will want to keep the volume low coming out of the sound card
to reduce distortion.
SCRIPT AND SHOTS FROM THE VIDEO
WITH LINKS AND FURTHER EXPLANATIONS:
How would your life be different if you had a radio station?
What different music would you hear?
What different people would be interviewed?
What different events would be "newsworthy"?
We created this video to help you grab this historic opportunity to
get your voice, values and culture on the airwaves that you own!
Hello! My name is Janet Lundy
My name is Leland Maurello
Hello, My name is Christopher Maxwell. I have the honor of leading
a group of people calling ourselves the National LPFM Applicant's Committee.
We exist to help each other get our voices on the air using a new kind
of radio station called Low Power FM radio station.
You too can join our effort to bring new voices to the FM dial, your
voice!
Low Power FM, also called LPFM, was approved by the Federal Communication
Commission FCC in February 2000.
LPFM stations are specifically designed for NEW and NEW LOCAL nonprofit
organizations with an educational mission to create programming "For The
Rest Of US" whose values, culture, news and music are not aired on existing
radio stations.
The large broadcasters, represented by the National Association of Broadcasters,
or NAB and National Public Radio, NPR, oppose LPFM stations because they
allege LPFM stations will put signals on the air that your radio will not
be able to separate from theirs.
Their fear is that you will turn on your walkman or shower radio and
our world music or techno, polka music, or civic association talk show
will bleed into their station's signal.
Their fear is that you will of course simply move on to another station,
or the Internet or buy a Satellite radio receiver or any one of other gadgets
that download music and news and talk shows to play later.
The NAB testified to Congress that allowing LPFM stations would be a
disastrous
abandonment of strict regulations designed to prevent signals from mixing
by competing for your receiver's attention in the guaranteed signal coverage
areas. NPR also testified that LPFM stations would destroy the reading
services for the blind.
There is only one glaring problem with their testimony, if those were
GOING to be problems with LPFM stations, then it would ALREADY have BEEN
a problem for 30 YEARS!!!!
Do you recall any such rancorous debate in the last thirty years? NO
of course not.
|
Selected Washington DC Short
Spaced Grandfathered FM Pairs
|
|
First Station
|
Second Station
|
WAVA 105.1FM
41,000 watts
Arlington VA |
WQSR105.7
50,000 watts
Catonsville MD
43 mi NE of WAVA |
WTOP107.7FM
29,000watts
Warrenton VA |
WRQX107.3FM
34,000 watts
Washington DC
43 mi ENE of WTOP |
WROG 102.5FM
3500 watts
Winchester VA |
WUSQ102.9FM
32,000 watts
Cumberland MD
44 mi SE of WROG |
WJZW 105.9FM
28,000 watts
Woodbridge VA |
WWMX 106.5FM
7400 watts
Baltimore MD
44 mi NE of WJZW |
WJFK 106.7FM
22,500 watts
Manassas VA |
WRQX 107.3
34,000 watts
Washington DC
9 mi NE of WJFK |
Source: NAB
Comments in FCC official record
for Docket 96-120 Appendix 3 |
You see, there are already HUNDREDS of radio stations on the air right
now that are just as close OR EVEN CLOSER TOGETHER as LPFM stations would
be. It is that distance or buffer space, that is the center of this debate.
These existing stations are called "SHORT SPACED" because they are closer
together than theory recommends in order for your radio to separate the
signals.
That theory was established by regulations in 1964.
In truth, 30 years of experience shows that this is much farther away
than is necessary since your radio will choose whichever one is loudest,
and simply ignore the other one.
This theory has forced stations to park, so to speak, further apart
on the dial than they actually need to.
The wasted space for unneeded buffers creates an ARTIFICIAL scarcity
of radio stations.
This artificial scarcity helps prevent your voice, culture, news and
music from having competing outlets to serve you.
We live in a society that has become so reliant on technology for our
very survival that now political public policy debates are often DISGUISED
as technical debates.
Unfortunately, for the public to actually make their voices and wishes
heard on such debates, the public must either rely on "public interest"
groups to represent their interests OR, the public must be sufficiently
educated to enter the debate themselves.
This process is time consuming, but since Low Power FM is designed to
be grass roots radio, it’s our feeling that we must take the time to educate
the public on the details of this debate.
So you may at times feel that this tape is a technical discussion and
say
“why should I care about such things?”
Because while the real fight is political, it is disguised as a technical
debate
Remember, knowledge is power, if you UNDERSTAND how they frame the
issue, then you can draw your own valid conclusions and fight for your
right to have your needs and values considered in the halls of power.
00:05:00
So allow me to briefly review the issue.
There are two major points of contention:
First, the NAB testified to Congress that your receiver would hear both
an LPFM station and a full power station and that it would sound like this
(play bit from NAB track).
Pretty scary eh? The Congressmen certainly thought so.
The problem with that testimony is that it was literally made up, manufactured
on the spot by a hired scientist (hired by the National Association of
Broadcasters) with a laptop. The hired scientist literally played two soundtracks
smoothly mixed together in his laptop PC.
Your slide show has a picture of his PC shortly after he completed
his testimony and you can still see the waveforms visible.
As the scientist from the United Church of Christ Dr. Rappaport, who
is seen sitting to the right in the picture said, THAT'S NOT HOW FM WORKS!
The meeting was shortly adjourned after that rejoinder.
Dr. Rappaport has real world evidence on his side.
We drove for three hours to find an area of a few hundred feet along
highway 1-495 near the intersection of highway 50.
We recorded this sample of a weak distant station
(the contemporary music, the strumming guitar in the foreground)
experiencing an incursion of a classic rock tune from a powerful local
station.
The distant station you hear first playing the contemporary music,
the strumming guitar, is WPLC 94.3FM at only 2000 watts from over 30 miles
away in Warrenton Va. The strong classic rock station you hear breaking
in is less than 10 miles away in Bathesda is WARW94.7FM at a powerful 20,500
watts
.
When you listen to this clip, pay attention to the QUALITY of the sound.
Do the two signals sound anything like the NAB testimony? Are they
smooth like in a studio? Here we go ... (play the clip).
OK, time for guess that tune, what classic rock song was that?
Just one more time, notice that the station we are TRYING to hear is
VERY VERY WEAK to start with.
IN fact, it sounds so bad, it is probably safe to say that there are
mighty few listeners of that station at near that intersection that evening.
It’s not just because they are so full of static, but they’re not playing
anything that is unique from other stations in the area.
That is probably why no-one is storming the doors of the FCC to have
that issue resolved between those two stations.
Here we go, what is that tune(play clip again) and the final
question, would you be listening to this distant station anyway? Let's
face it, they aren't' doing anything unique that would drive people to
try very hard to listen to them.
During the debate at the Congressional hearings you see in the picture,
one of the Congressmen kept asking, "What is 'acceptable interference'?
You just heard it folks. This is acceptable because hardly anyone is listening,
no-one cares enough to complain!
We literally found the worst receiver we could find and had to search
for three hours to find this brief area of interference that was a few
hundred feet in length. Keep in mind that any LPFM stations would be a
tiny fraction of the power of the two stations sampled here and it is doubtful
we would even be able to hear an LPFM station at the distances used in
this test at all!!
As evidenced by millions of people struggling to hear tinny sounding
Internet Radio stations, and thousands of pirate radio stations, what people
really want is VARIETY of programming content.
As you can hear, the manufactured NAB clip of alleged interference between
an LPFM and a classical station just does not sound like a real world example.
It is funny that the NAB felt they had to manufacture
such testimony since there are half a dozen "SHORT SPACED" stations in
the Washington DC area.
Any Congressmen could listen for himself.
He would see for himself with his own radio.
For example;
WAVA 105.1FM in Northern Virginia is just as close as an LPFM station
would be to WQSR105.7FM in Maryland.
Actually its not funny because the Congressman would be very hard pressed
to find any moment when the two stations caused his radio to have a problem
separating the two signals.
Let us briefly re-investigate this whole SHORT SPACED issue again.
WAVA 105.1 in Northern Va. is 41,000 watts
WQSR 105.7 in Cantonsville MD, is 50,000 watts
They are 43 miles apart
But according to the THEORY, 43 miles is not enough distance for them
to be so close together ON THE FM DIAL.
Notice we are talking about TWO kinds of distance measured.
FM radio jumps from station to station on the ODD numbered frequencies.
105.1 is three “jumps”, or three “channels” away from 105.7.
In radio jargon this is called a “Third Adjacent Station”.
Let’s make an analogy. Suppose the radio stations are parallel parked
on a street, and they park that way by pulling IN like a bus does. To prevent
the bus from smashing into the cars parked on either side of the stop,
there needs to be plenty of room in front and in back of the actual spot
where the bus will be.
Well, back in 1964, all that buffer space was considered necessary because
the old vacuum tube transmitters and receivers would fidget all over the
dial like a 6 year old on two cans of Pepsi!
Well some of the kids didn't fidget that much and to follow the analogy,
not all of the drivers (stations) were that sloppy. Some of them learned
how to BACK into a parking spot that was easily between two other stations.
These stations were allowed to continue violating the theoretically necessary
spacing requirements because they were already there and no-one was complaining.
This continued for thirty years. More stations were added when libertarian
Federal Communication Commissions allowed stations to agree to interfere
with each other or when a mountain was in the way and it was proven that
the station on the other side of the mountain was just not going to be
a problem. The FCC granted what were called "waivers" of these spacing
rules for years ... and why not?
In 1996, the National Association of Broadcasters themselves argued
that their own "SHORT SPACED" stations on each other's "THIRD ADJACENT
FREQUENCIES" be allowed to remain there.
The NAB in 1996 also argued that these hugely powerful stations, such
as 22,500 watt WJFK106.7FM and 34,000 watt WRQX107.3FM which are ALMOST
next door to 29,000 watt WTOP107.7FM be allowed to continue violating the
theoretically necessary buffer space rules. Why? because in the NAB's own
words in the official record say,
"The current rules as they relate to these affected stations, are in
certain instances overly-restrictive."
The NAB went even another step closer to what is now called anarchy
by asking that these stations be allowed greater flexibility of movement,
to scoot their towers around like chess pieces when they lose their lease
on a tower or something.
And again, why not? The NAB defended this on July 22nd, 1996 saying
that " ... progress in radio receiver design ... in some cases, provides
better rejection of second and third-adjacent channel interference."
Guess what? THE FCC AGREED!
There are now hundreds of radio stations that are AS CLOSE OR CLOSER
than a mere 100 watt LPFM stations would be ... BUT AT HUGE POWER LEVELS.
Lets look at just one last example that illustrates this.
Northern Virginia's WJFK is at 106.7 on the FM dial with 22,500 watts
of power.
IT IS ONLY 9 MILES AWAY from WRQX. WRQX is only three parking slots
or channels away at 107.3 on the FM dial and broadcasts at 34,000 watts!!
By contrast, an LPFM station must have at least a 20 mile buffer all
around, not including the original spacing between stations AND an LPFM
station is only allowed a maximum of 100 watts.
Consider that contrast that if WRQX wanted to get on the air today,
they would have to get a waiver from the FCC or they would have to apply
under the LPFM rules, which would require that they move almost entirely
out of Washington DC altogether as well as drop their power down 29 THOUSANDTHS
, that is 0.0029 the current allowed power level of WRQX.
Put another way, an LPFM station is just 1/15th the power of your hair-dryer!
But the current WRQX is over 22 times MORE powerful than that hairdryer.
Now really, does it not strain credibility to say that the laws of physics
are going to work differently for LPFM stations owned by minority subculture
educational nonprofit groups? If NAB full-power “Short Spaced” stations
can be CLOSER together than an LPFM station would EVER be allowed at 340
TIMES AN LPFM STATION'S POWER LEVEL ... and not cause a storm of protest
... why would we?
They have framed this issue as a purely technical debate, but as you
can now probably see, we are only asking that we be allowed to enjoy the
same benefits of technology as they are enjoying. IF new digitally tuned
receivers allow WJFK and WRQX to coexist and at dozens of tens of thousands
of watts, surely we can coexist with the power of your refrigerator light?
The 14th Amendment to the Constitution says that we all have a right
to be treated equally by the laws of the land. The FCC did not give those
"Short Spaced" stations a waiver to break the rules just to snub us. The
FCC granted those waivers because it seemed like the right thing to do
at the time. Experience has proven that the FCC WAS doing the right thing.
By granting those waivers, the FCC allowed hundreds of radio stations
to come on the air and present programming other stations might not have.
WJFK does excellent talk shows. WTOP does a lot of news, WRQX plays some
great techno at night.
That would all be missing if the FCC had not allowed them to break
rules that the National Association of Broadcasters accurately argued were
"Overly restrictive”, an argument the FCC agreed with.
Now a few years later, the same National Association of Broadcasters
want you to believe that the FCC has “abandoned interference standards”.
That is not true!
The new LPFM regulations simply allows nonprofit educational institutions
to apply for the same variance in rules that were allowed these hundreds
of hugely powerful, politically influential and wealthy “short spaced”
radio stations.
How funny then that the NAB is NOW saying that if we are allowed to
do what they do, it will be anarchy!
18:00 NOT including the clips played.
In a very similar manner, National Public Radio NPR is alleging that
LPFM stations will cause a destruction of the reading services for the
blind.
Again, it is a political debate CLOAKED as if it were a purely technical
debate.
And once again, if LPFM stations WERE GOING to be a problem for the
reading services for the blind ... then it WOULD HAVE BEEN A PROBLEM ALREADY
FOR MANY MANY YEARS.
This brings us to the second point of contention:
(slowly bring up other two voices singing row row row your boat at
obviously different frequency ranges)
(and in the further background, one of us whistling at a steady tone
to simulate the stereo pilot subcarrier tone)
Reading services for the blind are carried on what is called a "Subcarrier
Channel".
Pardon just one more time a technical description that we hope can help
you understand the issue.
Imagine that we are at a crowded party and that you are trying to follow
this narration, or that you would rather listen to one or both of the party
animals singing row row row your boat behind me. Your brain is able to
pick out one of the voices and filter out the others.
That is exactly what happens with the reading services for the blind.
An FM transmitter has generally at least four “voices” that are “singing”
and speaking all at the same time on the same channel … and the receiver
filters out just the voices it needs. Stereo is made up of three voices,
the tone that activates the stereo light and circuits. Those stereo circuits
then filter out the left and the right channel information that are on
two more subcarrier channels, or voices that get filtered out.
(graphic of subcarriers with colored arrows indicating the monaural
is the narrator, then the whistle tone, then the left and the right channel
info as the two “row row row your boat “ singers)
(now add a fourth “voice”, one of us frequency shifted into chipmunk
range reading a newspaper)
That is how many blind people get their reading services, the exact
same way that you get two stereo channels out of one radio signal, from
the subcarrier channels.
(now finally add an arrow to the highest graphic saying “reading service
for the blind)
So anything that harms the subcarrier reading services would also harm
the stereo signal.
That means that the hundreds of registered "short spaced" stations
discussed earlier would have trouble existing in stereo.
Truth is that the hundreds of short spaced stations that are just as
close together as LPFM stations would be have little or no problem existing
in stereo.
This indicates that they have no substantial problem with their subcarriers
either.
NPR also claims that their classical music is especially subject to
disruption.
We know this is not true from experience.
WCPE is a full time classical radio station that subsists ENTIRELY
from donations, and is based in Raleigh, North Carolina.
In 1996 they testified to the FCC that they did not had any problem
from a SECOND ADJACENT station, that is, short spaced TWICE.
Furthermore, WCPE is supporting a local noncommercial radio station
that wants an increase in power, despite also being "short spaced" to WCPE.
Note that I said "SECOND ADJACENT" ... that is one less "jump" on the
FM dial of buffer space than is even provided for LPFM stations!
Yes, there ARE EXISTING stations that are MUCH closer together on the
FM dial than what would be allowed for LPFM stations ... they don’t cause
trouble and some even receive support for their power increase from the
station next door on the radio dial!!
And a high quality classical radio station at that which relies on
satisfying its only source of income, their listeners.
 |
And now, for one final point: There are companies that make a lot of
money selling information to businesses on those subcarrier channels.
Many of them such as CUE Corporation have voice-mail beepers that work
worldwide in countries that use a U.S. style FM transmitter.
CUE technology also can send out emails with graphics to fancy digital
beepers over these subcarrier channels.
Another example is Command Audio, that sells you a gadget to download
certain programs like "All Things Considered" or Investment Discussion
shows. The programs are stored in a special radio for your car or office
... and just like an MP3 player, you play those programs when you have
time to hear them. Command Audio is like an MP3 player that downloads its
programs through the subcarrier channels of a local FM station.
If indeed LPFM or the hundreds of existing hugely powerful "Short Spaced"
stations were really causing trouble for subcarrier channels, you would
expect that these companies that use subcarrier to make money would be
screaming to kill LPFM.
No comment either way has been heard from these companies as of this
taping.
Furthermore, the technical expert who wrote the National Federation
of Community Broadcasters comments to the FCC in FAVOR of LPFM is himself
just such a subcarrier businessman!
That's why NPR's complaints that LPFM will destroy blind reading services
are misleading
So as you can see, this is NOT a technical debate, it is about justice,
about everyone getting the same treatment before the law.
It is about access and taxation without representation.
Will you enjoy the same access and protections for your tax money that
they receive?
23:00
| PSA
Scripts
Veto
Anti- LPFM (mp3) 2.4M
[NOTE: Right click and "save link as"
to save it to your harddrive.]
Hello, I would like to talk to you, our listener, about something that
is vitally important to independent media.
There are over 1200 groups that have applied for licenses to build
Low Power FM radio stations in the last 6 months alone with thousands still
to come.
If National Public Radio (NPR) gets their way, you will never
hear most of them.
NPR President Kevin Klose pushed Senate Bill 3020 called the “Broadcast Preservation
Act” that would preserve the status quo for the big NPR and commercial
stations but kick Radio Free Richmond and thousands of other groups nationally
off the air.
For more information you can always visit Radio Free Richmond’s website
at
http://members.aol.com/wrfr again that is http://members.aol.com/wrfr
Thank you for your attention.
"Kernel
Of Truth" :
NPR
Kills LPFM (mp3) 1.5M
[NOTE: Right click and "save link as"
to save it to your harddrive.]
National Public Radio, NPR is spending your tax money to kick thousands
of Low Power FM church, civic, and educational radio stations off the air.
Especially disturbing is the evidence that NPR is doing this largely
on its own … not at the behest of a majority of the NPR affiliates.
NPR President Kevin Klose held the meeting of the NPR Board of Directors
in the same hotel and on the same weekend as the National Association of
Broadcasters. There was a demonstration outside and a presentation inside
by LPFM supporters asking NPR to lay off.
Several of the supporters of LPFM are existing NPR affiliated broadcasters
such as Michael Brasher, manager of KANW in Albuquerque NM. He runs a 100,000
watt NPR station and SUPPORTS LPFM and was NEVER ASKED IF HE WANTED NPR
TO REPRESENT HIM AND OPPOSE LPFM. Brasher said “it was like waking up one
day and finding out there was an election for President and I was never
told.”
Please call your local NPR affiliate. Ask them to request that NPR drop
its opposition to LPFM, and also ask your local NPR affiliate to support
LPFM. Low Power FM radio is a logical extension of the purpose of PBS.
The Carnegie Commission founded PBS in 1967, “To help us see America
whole, in all its diversity,’ serve as ‘a forum for controversy and debate,’
and ‘provide a voice for groups in the community that may otherwise be
unheard.’"
If your local affiliate carries programs like Lassie, Lawrence Welk,
or Lectures by Dr. Laura, ask them to explain how that fulfills the Carnegie
Commission vision for PBS to “provide a voice for groups that may otherwise
be unheard”. Ask them how NPR opposition to Low Power FM furthers that
vision.
You can ask these questions directly to NPR President Kevin Klose at:
Kklose@npr.org
Or call him at 202-414-2000 (ask for the ombudsman)
Or fax at 202-414-3329
Again that contact information is
Kklose@npr.org again, Kklose@npr.org
Or call him at 202-414-2000 (ask for the ombudsman) , again, 202-414-2000
Or fax at 202-414-3329 and again 202-414-3329
For more information and links you can always visit Radio Free Richmond’s
website at
http://members.aol.com/wrfr again that is http://members.aol.com/wrfr
|
Now we get to the part of the program where you can apply this new knowledge.
The Big Broadcasters of NPR and the National Association of Broadcasters
have ganged up to sponsor bills in the Senate that would destroy your ability
to enjoy an equal opportunity to be heard!
Two of these bills are generically referred to as the "Broadcast Preservation
Acts".
The bill numbers for the "Broadcast Preservation Acts" in the Senate
is SB2068 and SB3020.
The latest Senate “Broadcast Preservation Act of 2000”, now with a new
bill number SB3020 is exactly the same wording as the
house bill HR3439 that was passed by almost two thirds vote.
SB3020 is touted as a “compromise” that allegedly allows LPFM to proceed
while supposedly protecting current broadcasters.
But SB3020, “The Broadcast Preservation Act of 2000” would only “preserve”
the double standard that allows huge broadcasters like WAVA and WRQX mentioned
earlier to create space on the packed FM dial of Washington DC by using
“third adjacent frequencies… but denies us the same opportunity!!
Thus SB3020 “Broadcast Preservation” would wipe out the vast majority
of LPFM applications inequitably and unconstitutionally since we are guaranteed
by the 14th Amendment, equal protection under the law. If we can’t use
third adjacent frequencies, then WRQX and WAVA have to also come off the
air. Or they let us on!
This cuts the number of LPFM stations possible from hundreds to dozens
and NONE in major metropolitan areas!
These are the bills that must be defeated if your voice is to be heard
using Low Power FM radio stations.
Senate SB2068 simply makes LPFM illegal entirely.
No LPFM of any kind is allowed under Senate bill 2068 as of this taping.
SB3020 denies most LPFM applicants the same rules the big NPR and NAB
stations enjoy.
Thank-you for taking the time to consider this issue and act hopefully
in an enlightened self-interest that the founders of the United States
expected for its citizenry.
I am looking forward to hearing you on an LPFM station soon.
Time: 29:12 minutes
Radio Free Richmond
seeks to be a light unto those
who are not illuminated by existing commercial, religious or public
radio stations.
We will play the News Views Jazz and Blues techno and
free-form other radio stations would rather not use.
In this way we will contribute to a stable and just
society where everyone can become who they want to be.
We seek to enable
the weakest links in our society to become strong so that no-one
can thrive on the pain and weakness of others.
We are
"Radio For
The Rest Of Us."
Get on the air before 2000:
More information
on LPFM
Effort to defend
our ability to hear WDCE 90.1FM as well as any new LPFM stations.
The Fall 2000 "Murrow's Hope"
newsletter is the Video SlideShow and Audio File (playing now on AT&T
and Comcast Cable Public Access channels)... or you can read the script
here.
Read more details on
the LPRS in Spring'99 Newsletter "Murrow's Hope"
Radio Free Richmond Founding Premises:
| Premise: |
Our Democratic Republic depends on a careful balance of power and an
effective “free press”
that is neither onerously influenced by government or
overly centralized private influence. |
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| Premise: |
"Freedom of speech does not exist in the abstract. On the
contrary, the right to speak can flourish only if it is allowed to
operate in an effective forum -- whether it be a public park
or
a radio frequency.
For in the absence of an effective means of communications,
the right to speak would ring hollow indeed. And, in
recognition of these principles, we have consistently held that the
First Amendment embodies,
not only the abstract right to be free from censorship,
but also the right of the individual to utilize an appropriate and
effective medium for the expression of his views."
Justice of the Supreme Court William Brennan
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| Premise: |
The American Dream is
to be who you want to be
as you define it. |
To realize this
you must be informed
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| Premise: |
"Media is the lifeblood of a Free Society",
Newt Gingrich
"Information is the currency of democracy.",
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| Premise: |
A stable society is an inclusive and just society..
Media is the feedback loop
between those who make policy
and those who suffer from policy. |
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| Premise: |
America can only function with justice so
long
as the media includes the broadest possible
spectrum
of news/views and culture. |
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| Concluding
Premise: |
A truly free press, free of concentrated
control by any group of people, governmental, business or
religious
and that provides a place for everyone's stories
to be heard ... is vital to the continued success and just stability of
the Great Experiment, the United States. |
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