Radio’s Digital Dilemma

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communication
Convergent Media Environment
digital audio transmission
Digital Radio
Digital Radio System
Digital Radio Technology
Digital Sidebands
economics of digital radio transition
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eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
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FCC
FCC Chairman
FCC Commissioner
FCC Proceeding
FCC Ruling
FCC's Decision
FCC’s Decision
Federal Communications Commission
HD
Hd Radio
Hd Radio Signal
Hd Radio System
Hd Radio Technology
Hd Receiver
history
iBiquity Digital Corporation
IBOC Digital Radio
IBOC System
IBOC technology
Lucent Digital Radio
mass
media
media policy analysis
monopoly
National Public Radio
National Radio Systems Committee
NPR
policy
public broadcasting policy
radio
Radio World
spectrum management
technology
transition

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415656122
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 16 Dec 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Radio's Digital Dilemma is the first comprehensive analysis of the United States’ digital radio transition, chronicling the technological and policy development of the HD Radio broadcast standard. A story laced with anxiety, ignorance, and hubris, the evolution of HD Radio pitted the nation’s largest commercial and public broadcasters against the rest of the radio industry and the listening public in a pitched battle over defining the digital future of the medium. The Federal Communications Commission has elected to put its faith in "marketplace forces" to govern radio’s digital transition, but this has not been a winning strategy: a dozen years from its rollout, the state of HD Radio is one of dangerous malaise, especially as newer digital audio distribution technologies fundamentally redefine the public identity of "radio" itself.

Ultimately, Radio’s Digital Dilemma is a cautionary tale about the overarching influence of economics on contemporary media policymaking, to the detriment of notions such as public ownership and access to the airwaves—and a call for media scholars and reformers to engage in the continuing struggle of radio’s digital transition in hopes of reclaiming these important principles.

John Nathan Anderson is an Assistant Professor and the Director of Broadcast Journalism in the Department of Television and Radio at Brooklyn College, City University of New York. Formerly a radio journalist, he’s been working in the fields of media policy and activism for nearly two decades.

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