1st Edition

Radio’s Digital Dilemma Broadcasting in the Twenty-First Century

By John Nathan Anderson Copyright 2014
198 Pages
by Routledge

198 Pages
by Routledge

198 Pages
by Routledge

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... Read more

1. Identifying Radio’s Digital Dilemma  2. The Developmental Trajectory of U.S. Digital Radio  3. The Fundamental Detriments of IBOC-DAB  4. FCC "Deliberation" of HD Radio  5. The Troubled Proliferation of HD Radio  6. Tweaking an Imperfect System  7. HD Radio’s Murky Future  8. Confronting Radio’s Digital Dilemma

Biography

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.

"Anderson provides a detailed and shocking look into how compliant regulators and a few well-connected private actors can conspire to thwart both the market and the public interest. This is a startling and well-documented indictment of an epic failure of our media system that should enrage both liberals and conservatives alike." -Ted M. Coopman, San Jose State University, USA

"Anderson’s text elucidates an important, and overlooked, policy fight. Largely out of sight of the public, and over an extended period of time, broadcast conglomerates and related interests pushed to replace our current open broadcast system with one based on a technically deficient, proprietary standard, that they controlled. Anderson has forensically assembled this story, showing us how obscure policy battles over technical standards can have long-reaching impacts on the media that act as conduits for so much of our culture." - Andrew Ó Baoill, Cazenovia College, USA