Sirius/XM Drops WRN on Channel 120

Posted on April 25, 2013

As of April 25, 2013, Sirius/XM satellite radio has dropped World Radio Network 
(WRN), formerly on channel 120, from its line-up of offerings.  As is always 
the case with Sirius/XM, the act was accompanied by no explanation or 
justification.  WRN had informed its listeners that such an eventuality was 
imminent in a posting earlier in the month on its web page.  There, too 
however, there was no explanation forthcoming.

This seems a curious move by Sirius/XM.  Radio is becoming increasingly a niche 
medium and serving those many niches would appear to be the preferred strategy 
for attracting and retaining subscribers to a satellite delivery service.  
Music radio is in some jeopardy, given the competition posed to it by services 
such as Spotify, Pandora, etc., and its future as a prime program source would 
seem less than secure.  WRN is definitely a niche service with interest to the 
relatively small community of listeners seeking international news accompanied 
by international perspectives on that news.  Stating to listeners who complain 
(as I did) that they still have BBC World Service on channel 118 is a rather 
insulting response in that it implies that such listeners should be satisfied 
with one alternative on a distribution platform with over 200 channels.

“Spoken word” programming on Siriius/XM are accorded very limited bandwidth as 
evidenced by the satellite provider’s poor audio quality on those channels.  
Little is saved in this regard or available for other services by dropping WRN. 
 It’s possible that a dispute over costs or full time availability could be the 
genesis of this act, but that is only speculation.

I have contacted both WRN and Sirius/XM for their perspectives, explanations 
and justifications; but I’m not at all sanguine about receiving an 
acknowledgement of my correspondence, let alone any useful details.  WRN 
remains available via other platforms, including via internet-delivered audio, 
the Tune-In app for Mac and Android and partially via WRMI, Miami on 9955 kHz. 
shortwave.  The latter has indicated that it may increase its carriage of WRN 
as a result of Sirius/XM’s decision.

John Figliozzi
The Worldwide Listening Guide
www.wwlgonline.com
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