NPR Rant

Dec. 21st, 2010 12:25 pm
bjarvis: (Zorak)
[personal profile] bjarvis
No, not about NPR's week-long fundraising drives. I can understand those as a necessary evil to keep the system working. My complaint is about a recent trend I've noticed in NPR programs: segments on music VIPs are listening to.

Marketplace, Science and other programs have begun including five minute or longer segments where they interview a person of interest about the music they're listening to while they work, commute, think, etc.. Seriously, why would anyone care? I could understand asking people how they create a working or creative environment, but analyzing their choice of composer, performer, the cadence of the lyrics, the melody, etc.? Why?

I have a difficult time believing anyone producing the program actually thinks there's a market demand for this sort of pap. I strongly suspect this is simply an easy way to pad a half-hour program at practically no expense during an era of sharp budget cuts.

Date: 2010-12-21 05:55 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] rwgill.livejournal.com
I agree. It seems like a waste of time to record the sound bits, edit it into a "story" and air it during a ~22 minute program that is supposedly about money, markets & finance. What Joe Salesguy listens to before he flies home really doesn't interest me at all.

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