Why Satellite Radio Will Beat FM
The Death of FM Radio is on Its Way
By Phil Dotree, published Nov 22, 2006
Published Content: 458 Total Views: 750,659 Favorited By: 30 CPs
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I wandered over the median while trying to find something listenable in Louisiana.The last two hours had been filled with commercials, annoying DJs raised in the Gilbert Gottfried school of not annoying people, and radio friendly alt-rock that would make Phil Collins wince.
An oncoming car swerved out of my way and flashed its lights, honking angrily. That was it. This was getting dangerous, and I was getting tired. No more radio.
There's something desperately wrong with FM radio if I can't find a song or show that stops my scan button; I'd been driving for hours on a solo tour for an acoustic album I was trying to sell, and at one point my cigarette had even burned my fingers because I hadn't moved them from the dial for so long.
So, as soon as I reached the next town, I bought a satellite radio at the first Best Buy I saw.
FM radio has been a good friend to me in the past, but it's past its prime in a number of ways; there are thirteen minutes or more of commercials every hour, each song is thrust onto the air by a corporate bribe to a radio station head leaving independent music out in the cold, and the censorship was getting so bad that I started to notice words like “suicide” and—I swear to God - “Rock and Roll” being unnecessarily edited out for fear of an FCC fine. It was time to leave FM radio dying in the gutter and embrace a new medium.
Satellite radio has been gaining popularity for quite simply becoming what FM radio should have been for the last dozen or so years: a free-spirited place to listen to music and opinions, the material only censored by your own discretion, the channels vast and varied in their content. Satellite radio offers a steady signal nearly anywhere in the United States, which FM can't claim, and its audiences pay a monthly fee to keep commercials where they should be—far the hell away from music.
Since my switch to satellite radio, I haven't looked back in distaste at either the money I've spent or the old friend I've left behind. As Dylan said, the times they are a changin', Dylan who, by the way, has a show on satellite radio (XM, specifically).

Why Satellite Radio Will Beat FM
FM radio was a great friend, but it's doomed to extinction.
Credit: cooljinny
Copyright: www.sxc.hu
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Did You Know?
On average, FM radio has 13-14 minutes of commercials per hour, compared with 4-6 minutes on talk stations on satellite radio (most satellite music stations don't have commercials).Today's Most Commented On
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