FM/AM switch off “not realistic” – Talksport head
October 30, 2009 by Infowars Ireland
The head of TalkSport, Scott Taunton, has told the Guardian that the government’s target for switching off AM and FM radio services is “not realistic”.
Asked about the government’s aims for turning the UK’s radio listeners over to digital and internet services in six years, Taunton told the paper: “I don’t think there is anyone who genuinely believes 2015 is realistic”, adding that the proposals were “over-ambitious to the point of being farcical”.
Expanding on the point, he explained:
“DAB (the primary digital network) is not necessarily a next-generation service. There is already DAB-plus, and in order to launch DAB-plus in the UK you would have to make the vast bulk of DAB sets redundant. The future at the moment is FM – the next generation is about iPhones with FM receivers”.
Taunton added that general commercial radio support for the 2015 deadline was being driven by his biggest competitor, Global Radio. They, he says, are supporting a fast move to DAB because – if digital was to be delayed for a significant time – certain existing FM licences would have to be re-auctioned off as existing franchises run out. Among them the valuable Classic FM licence owned by Global.
The big guys of commercial radio, therefore, the UTV man argues, want a quick switch to DAB to ensure they don’t lose one of their most valuable outputs. But a quick switch would, Scott says, “be wrong for the industry and wrong for the taxpayer”.
Global battle
Taunton’s dislike for Global is no secret, of course, and his recent decision to quit commercial radio trade body RadioCentre was over allegations Global management were too dominant within the cross-industry organisation. Taunton’s professional grievances with Global are at least partly down to a personal dislike for the boss of the relatively young but very big radio firm – Mr Ashley Tabor.
Noting that the Global chief’s sudden elevation to the biggest player in commercial radio was only possible because of his billionaire father’s money, which was used to acquire Chrysalis and GCap, Taunton dismisses Tabor as a “rich man’s son”.
He continues:
“He is a guy who is used to getting his own way. He isn’t from the same school of business, the same school of negotiation, that I am. Don’t get me wrong, he is a very clever guy but a very stubborn individual when it comes to negotiations. On a day-to-day basis I was not prepared to sit around an industry body with Ashley”. Read full article…
Related posts:
- Nokia to build radio ID chips into phones for inventory control Nokia, the world’s biggest maker of mobile phones, plans to...
- Ex-IBM Employee reveals TV Abandoned Analog Band to Make Room for RFID Chips According to a former 31-year IBM employee, the highly-publicized,...
- US to pay Taliban members to switch sides timesofindia.indiatimes.com WASHINGTON: US President Barack Obama has signed a...
- Spanish Government Plans To Close Down 3,000 ‘Pirate’ Radio Stations A new body, the State Radio Communications Agency, is...
- Don’t bother to learn foreign languages: Google to launch smartphones that will translate for you in real time By James Tozer www.dailymail.co.uk 08th February 2010 A mobile...
- Controversial ID cards coming to Germany in 2010 www.thelocal.de The German Interior Ministry confirmed on Monday that...
- Don’t be frightened into treaty ‘Yes’ vote Irish Independent Letters to the editor Last night, I counted...
- France considers tax on search engines Leigh Phillips euobserver.com The French government is considering taxing...
- Traffic wardens get head cameras www.telegraph.co.uk Council traffic wardens are being fitted with head...
- Irish company launches genetic test for ’speed gene’ in horses independent.ie Equinome, a new Irish biotech company, has announced...
































































Comments
Feel free to leave a comment...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!