[Boatanchors] Short Wave Broadcast Folks:
Brian Carling
bcarling at cfl.rr.com
Wed Apr 16 12:38:20 EDT 2014
I have seen it only takes a handful of very wealthy donors to keep someone on the air like that.
We were once invited to a weekend retreat for the big donors to one of the popular religious shortwave broadcast powerhouses overseas.
There were only about 70 people invited to this event. Prestigious musicians and other presenters were invited to speak and entertain. There was fine dining and a lot of interesting presentations. I even met one person who had a relative flying over the Middle East looking for Noah's Ark. These were big donors. At the time we were completely broke and poor as church mice. We had a connection who was thinking about putting a program on their station and thus were invited. It was one of the most interesting weekends I have ever spent, watching these folks in action. Whatever you think about their behavior or their motivation it has certainly been an interesting run for religious broadcasters and I suspect they will be some of the last to go from the short waves.
Does anyone know if the tropical band stations are still on in various towns of South and Central America? I used to listen to a lot of those back in the early 1980s around 2 to 5 MHz. They had some very pleasant music programming and also some religious broadcasts. All in Spanish of course.
Best regards - Bry Carling, AF4K
> On Apr 15, 2014, at 10:48 PM, "Richard Knoppow" <1oldlens1 at ix.netcom.com> wrote:
>
>
> ----- Original Message ----- From: "David Stinson" <arc5 at ix.netcom.com>
> To: <boatanchors at mailman.qth.net>
> Sent: Tuesday, April 15, 2014 5:09 PM
> Subject: [Boatanchors] Short Wave Broadcast Folks:
>
>
>> I know there are some folks here who worked in SWBC.
>> As you know, most of it's gone now. |
>> But there are still a few big stations out there in the U.S. running multiple 100KW transmitters 24/7 and all they broadcast is religious "fringe" material.
>> One old guy who claims to have a personal hot-line to God is on several of these all day, every day.
>>
>> I do not understand the economics of running these stations. They've got big maintenance costs,
>> staffing and monster electric bills, yet one source tells me that the "Jesus Radio" audience runs about
>> 200 people on a good day and many hours with no one listening at all. The charge for hours of
>> programming on these stations isn't very high,
>> but 24/7 can amount to a lot each month.
>>
>> I don't get it. The math just "don't add-up."
>> How do these stations afford this?
>> Surely "Brother Stair" doesn't get enough from the 200 people listening to him to support
>> multiple 100KW transmitters, 24/7?
>> What am I missing here?
>>
>> 73 Dave AB5S
>
> FWIW, one of those evangelistic stations is not far from here KVOH, beamed to South and Central America. They transmit on a couple of frequencies, I hear them on 9975 mhz. They have a jazz and big band program (no fooling) on Saturday and Sunday evening from 8PM to 9PM Pacific time. Not too many "commercials".
> They have two 50KW transmitters built out of a single RCA 100H Ampliphase. RCA built only a handful of HF Ampliphase transmitters so it might be possible to trace this one. The transmitters as they stand are no longer Ampliphase type but I don't know what they were converted to. They sound OK but my hearing is not so good. There are some details of their antenna on thier web site. The station is near Simi Valley, maybe fifteen miles from here so I hear ground wave. There is a coverage map on the web site, those not too far off the beam can probably hear them pretty well. Whatever other religious broadcasters have I suspect this is an economy operation.
> I very much miss all the short wave broadcasting, even the propaganda stations, but especially the old BBC World Service. These days Cuba and China are about the only ones left.
>
> --
> Richard Knoppow
> Los Angeles, CA, USA
> dickburk at ix.netcom.com
> ______________________________________________________________
> Boatanchors mailing list
> Home: http://mailman.qth.net/mailman/listinfo/boatanchors
> Help: http://mailman.qth.net/mmfaq.htm
> Post: mailto:Boatanchors at mailman.qth.net
>
> List Administrator: Duane Fischer, W8DBF
> ** For Assistance: dfischer at usol.com **
>
>
> This list hosted by: http://www.qsl.net
> Please help support this email list: http://www.qsl.net/donate.html
More information about the Boatanchors
mailing list