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Tuesday, March 6, 2012

Playboy Satellite Radio

By Owen Jones


Satellite radio has really taken off in some parts of the world, predominantly in countries with a huge land mass. Places like America, Canada, Europe and Australia, places where it is difficult to realize national coverage with traditional land-based radio broadcasting without hundreds of expensive sub-stations to amplify the signal.

Yes, without a shadow of a doubt, satellite radio is here to stay for several reasons. First of all, satellite radio is digital and therefore is able to deliver sound of very high quality. Terrestrial digital radio can do that too, you could say.

Yes, that is correct, but the coverage of terrestrial digital radio is quite small which means tht if you are driving a long way, you will have to keep retuning your radio to a different station, whereas with satellite, the footprint can cover thousands of square miles.

A lot of new satellite radio channels are springing up all the time. It appears that everyone wants to get their hands on this new phenomenon of wide-area coverage at a cheaper price than it used to cost to cover a county. And why not? The advertising possibility is quite fantastic compared to the old fashioned local AM or FM radio stations. Radio has now gone nationwide.

Playboy Satellite radio is one of those companies that has realized the potential of satellite radio and set up its own channel with a large footprint. It was launched in March 2006 on the Sirius network by Christie Hefner and now boasts over one million subscribers, which is a truly remarkable figure. There have almost certainly never before been a million opt-in subscribers to any radio network channel ever in times gone by before.

What makes this number of one million subscribers even more impressive is that the Playboy satellite radio channel is not part of a package or a bundle of other channels. No, people have to voluntarily phone up or go to the Playboy website and request membership personally, that is to say that it costs time and effort to sign up and one million people thought that it was worth it.

Something else that is curious is that the Playboy brand is associated with visual material - naked ladies, in fact - and radio is well-known for not being particularly good at visual representation. It is clear that no radio station is going to make much progress in the market place with nudity as a trump card.

So what is happening here? Well, the fact is that no-one is really quite certain. You have to subscribe, but it is free at the moment. It is also true that the Playboy brand is considered cool and distinctive among a certain echelon of society, but will that be enough to keep people listening in? Only time will tell.

The answer almost certainly lies in the fact that it is free and that it can be accessed over a large area, but they cannot be the only reasons. There is probably a curiosity value as well and the quality of the programmes will have to be high as well.




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