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Look meaningfully forward. Why bring up this discussion, again? Because the other day I was reading an opinion piece about AM Radio, and the best the writer could do, to no purposeful end, was bring up the failed efforts and lost opportunities on the part of the FCC to help save AM radio. Everything the author wished for is the past — left undone — and, now, too late. Clearly not distracting, degraded, static-y AM. We already required the move, years ago, of broadcast TV from analog to digital.
There is no rational reason for not mandating the same of broadcast radio. In fact, digital broadcast television is already evolving to its next, forward-looking advancement: ATSC 3. The same FCC computer software that came up with the new digital TV channel assignments can take another whack at moving all of the relatively small number of channels on 5 and 6 to other channels. In the broadcast television realm, digital transmission is so spectrum-efficient there are many, many examples of stations in close geographic proximity to each other that are on first-adjacent channels.
For example, in the Austin, Texas, television market, to my south, the full-power not Class A NBC and PBS stations are first-adjacent to each other on digital channels 21 and 22, respectively. In the big TV market to the north of me, Dallas-Fort Worth, there are a half-dozen examples of full-power stations first-adjacent to each other!
Move AM stations into the 21 st century and onto all-digital FM channels, and stop all the insane and hopeless non-revitalization nonsense. AM radio is dead. AM is dead, FM is close behind. Hopefully auto dealerships will be going soon. I can only receive AM in a basement, or far up north out of the city. WWL is showing the vital nature of AM broadcasting as a means of reaching the mass population in an emergency. If people no longer are smart enough to own at least one radio that picks up AM, they are foolish.