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America's rural radio stations are vanishing – and taking the country's soul with them
Portrait of Mark Lucke inside the radio station in Willcox, Arizona.
Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
At a time when local newspapers are disappearing, the loss of a radio
station leaves a community with another cultural and informational gap
by Debbie Weingarten in Willcox, Arizona
When
I arrive at the radio station, Mark Lucke is standing in the doorway,
looking out at the spitting, winter rain. He’s slim and stoic, with sad,
almost haunted, eyes. The first thing he asks is if I’d like to see
“the dungeon”. Who wouldn’t?
Lucke pulls on a Steeler’s jacket and a baseball cap over brown hair
that falls halfway down his back, and leads me across the five-acre
yard. Out here, 90 miles east of Tucson, the desert is a long sweep of
brush the color of beach sand. Lucke seems to slip through the rainy day
like a ghost.
The radio station, whose call letters are KHIL, has long been the
daily soundtrack for this frontier town (population 3,500) that prides
itself on its cowboy culture and quiet pace of life. But six decades
after the founding of the station, the property is in foreclosure, with
utility disconnect notices coming nearly every month.
In the kill zone of the radio tower with the dungeon in the background in Willcox. Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
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Small-town
radio is fizzling nationwide, as stations struggle to attract
advertisement dollars. And as station owners are forced to sell, media
conglomerates snap up rural frequencies for rock-bottom prices, for the
sole purpose of relocating them to urban areas. In a more affluent
market, they can be flipped for a higher price. With limited frequencies
available, larger broadcasters purchase as many as possible –
especially those higher on the dial – in a race not dissimilar to a real
estate grab.
The “dungeon” turns out to be benign – just the original radio
station building. Lucke explains that country music star Tanya Tucker
“used to hang out here with the jocks”. This was before she recorded
Delta Dawn at the age of 13 and left Willcox to produce a slew of hits,
which landed her in the Country Music Hall of Fame. Her familiar drawl
can still be heard at the top of every hour on KHIL, saying, “Hello,
Willcox. This is Tanya Tucker, and you’re listening to the station I
always listened to when I was a kid.”
Except for a washing machine and stacking radio conductors, the
dungeon is empty. From here, in a feat of electrical wiring, several
radio stations (four of which are run by Lucke) are connected to the
5,000-watt radio tower behind the dungeon, and pushed out into the sky.
KHIL was founded in 1958 by Rex Allen, who gained notoriety as the last of the singing cowboys. On the silver screen, The Arizona
Cowboy could be seen strumming a guitar from the back of his horse,
until the genre came to a close in 1954. He would go on to narrate a
plethora of Disney movies, including Charlotte’s Web, and for years was
the voice behind Ford truck and Purina Dog Chow commercials.
Allen – who died in 1999 – is now immortalized by a statue in the
historic downtown. Born 31 December 1920 to Horace and Faye Allen in
Willcox, Rex Elvie Allen was cross-eyed at birth, reads the plaque below
the statue.
Left: Dennis Williams next to his radio where he listens
to KHIL in Kansas Settlement. Right: Dale Allen frequent KHIL listener
in his pickup at his home in Sunsites Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The
Guardian
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At
a time when local newspapers are vanishing at an alarming rate, the
loss of a radio station leaves a community with another cultural and
informational deficit. Communities are diminished when they lose their
local radio stations, says Dennis Deninger, a communications professor
at Syracuse University’s Newhouse School. His first media job was
working at an AM station in Hornell, New York, where obituaries were
read on air along with board of education updates.
“We connected with people,” he remembers. “We told them stories about
a fender bender that happened down on Main Street, or a local parade
coming up, or the success of a youngster at the local science fair.”
The 1996 Telecommunications Act changed the radio landscape
dramatically, allowing for deregulation, which led to the rapid
consolidation of the industry. In the months after the act’s passage,
Reed Hundt, then the FCC Chair, spoke before Congress about “fostering
innovation and competition in radio” and “[promoting] diversity in
programming and diversity in the viewpoints expressed on this powerful
medium that so shapes our culture”.
And yet the act did not deliver on these ideals. Instead, for the
first time, large media companies were allowed to buy up multiple
stations without restriction. By 2002, the radio industry was
essentially an oligopoly – just 10 parent companies controlled
two-thirds of the listeners and revenue.
The hallway of the radio station in Willcox. Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
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“Consolidation
has, in a lot of ways, killed the radio business,” says Barry Cohen, a
former rural radio host and managing member of AdLab Media
Communications, LLC. “With consolidation comes scale, and then you end
up with an 800lb gorilla that has hold of resources, licenses and the
market. You can have one entity owning six of the top stations in a
single area.”
Those large operators “buy up the best stations and signals, sucking
all the money out of the marketplace”, says Cohen. As advertisers flock
to larger stations, small independent radio operators like KHIL end up
with fewer listeners, fewer sponsors, and far less revenue to get by.
Today, the industry centers on remote service agreements – a shift
driven by economics that has profound consequences for radio listeners.
It’s common now for a single automated center to feed content to a slew
of stations across the country.
Left: Mixer and headphones at the radio station in
Willcox. Right: a radio transmitter inside the dungeon. Photograph:
Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
Deninger sees this as particularly problematic for small communities.
“If local radio stations are getting their content fed in from some
distant studio in another state, you have less information about your
home,” he says. “Having less information about where you live and the
people you live with …” He trails off. “I can’t think that’s a good
thing.”
But it’s not just information on the chopping block – it’s also
identity, something that music uniquely reflects to a listener. Willcox
rancher Dennis Williams explains that his agricultural community “is
struggling to hold on to its identity”, and he regards KHIL as a
critical touchstone, especially for the ageing population. Currently,
21% of Willcox is over the age of 60.
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When
old-timers call the KHIL station to request a song, Lucke will scour
eBay for records. When the vinyl arrives, sometimes from overseas, he’ll
hand-repair any scratches and spend hours adding them to his
11,000-song digital music library, which he’s built over 14 years with
personal funds. One elderly woman, who lived in the assisted living
facility behind the station, sang a particular song at the county fair
when she was 14 and hadn’t heard the song since – until Lucke found it
online and played it on KHIL for her.
“Lonesome Wilcox” is a short documentary produced by independent
filmmakers Zack Wright and Ryan Maxey who stumbled upon KHIL in 2016.
Dale Allen, who lives in the nearby community of Sunsites, Arizona,
says the music on KHIL reminds him of growing up in Iowa and hanging out
with his friends at a local hamburger joint. He doesn’t have a computer
or the internet, but listens to KHIL from a radio in his bedroom.
“I play it all night long,” he says. “I mean, I sleep, but I turn it
on and listen to it, and then I go to sleep … It reminds me of the good
old days.” On a few occasions, he’s wanted to find a specific song from
his youth, and so he’s developed a relationship with Lucke by phone.
Lucke always comes through. “I’ve never seen a man more knowledgable
about music,” he says.
Years ago in Fort Worth, Texas, Lucke went to a honky tonk bar called
Billy Bob’s and had an experience that would transform the way he
thought about curating music. “You can imagine me in a redneck bar,” he
tells me. “I’m the first one to get killed. I do not fit, especially
when I have on my Van Halen T-shirt.” He’s also not a drinker because of
childhood trauma – his parents both struggled with addiction – so Lucke
says he people-watched, studying their reactions to the music.
“You have your typical George Strait po-dunky songs, and there are
people out there, but it’s boring. No one’s alive. And then all of a
sudden, they put on Michael Jackson. And that dance floor was packed,
like sardines. And then they went back to po-dunk, and it died.”
The radio tower for all five stations in Willcox. Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
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For
Lucke, the lesson from Billy Bob’s was clear as day. “There are no
genres,” he says, “These people may be mostly urban cowboys, but they
want to hear Michael Jackson. The construction worker who listens to
George Jones and Merle Haggard, I can have him listen to Van Halen if I
trick him. If I package it.”
He likens packaging it to painting. He boldly mixes formats and
weaves genres; his library is 75% female artists, even though he knows
the old-timers will complain about too many women on the radio. And he’s
forever on a search for what he calls “nuggets” to add to his library –
those songs with such emotional heft that the listener is entirely
consumed by the story or the feeling and is transported to a different
world.
“Sometimes the songs talk to me, sometimes they don’t. If they talk
to me, I’ll find a song and put it on my station. If they don’t talk to
me, I keep looking.”
“What does it sound like when they talk to you?” I ask. “What does it feel like?”
He pauses.
He points to the very center of his chest. “It makes this terrible pain in here go away.”
Portrait of Tristain and Mark Lucke in Willcox, Arizona. Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
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The
main station building is crisscrossed with wires, soundboards and
computer monitors. Several household fans keep the equipment from
burning up since the AC went out. The rest of the building is virtually
empty, with the exception of two offices turned bedrooms where Lucke and
his 21-year-old son, Tristan, sleep on cots. They’ve lived here
together since 2008, when they began sleeping on the floor of the lobby
to deter vandalism and watch over the equipment.
When Lucke began working at the station in 2003, KHIL and its sister
station KWCX (then the only FM station in Willcox) were owned by
Lakeshore Media, a national conglomerate. Then, the station employed a
staff of 10 people. But over the next several years, there were multiple
failed attempts to relocate KWCX to Tucson, which spooked advertising
companies into pulling their ads. And because advertisements were sold
for the two stations as a package, the financial damage spilled over on
to KHIL.
In 2007, a North Carolina based company purchased the sister stations
and attempted to relocate KWCX to Tucson again. Again, the deal fell
through. By 2008, Lucke says he was “the only employee here doing the
job of three or four people, alone”.
The first room when you enter the radio station in Willcox, Arizona. Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
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In
2017, KHIL was sold again, this time to a local resident who gave Lucke
minority ownership of the business and promised him a $1,500-a-month
stipend to manage the station. But in May 2018, Lucke says that the man
ordered him to divert ad revenue from KWCX (which was still owned by the
North Carolina media company). Lucke says he refused and that he hasn’t
been paid since; according to a Department of Economic Security form
signed by the owner, the non-payment was attributed to a lack of funds.
The new owner did not respond to requests for comment.
Lucke says he can’t remember the last time he had a day off, and the
homepage of his personal website now proclaims: “KHIL has not paid Mark
Lucke since April 2018! HVAC has been broken since December 2017! And he
has still kept it on air!”
Mark and Tristan rely on Snap and Medicaid. He also hosts an online
shop for his self-published horror novels and poetry collections, as
well as KHIL coffee mugs and other merchandise. Both say that the only
thing that makes them feel “normal” is going to the Pizza Hut a few
blocks away and sitting in the sunny window.
It is there at the Willcox Pizza Hut, over a bowl of pasta
and marinara sauce (which will last Lucke two meals), when he tells me
that the pain in his chest feels like it’s bursting out of him. Some of
his earliest memories involve being taken to the honky tonk bar by his
parents, and watching them get drunk. “I saw horrible things as a
child,” he says. Ironically, many of those memories are set to the
soundtrack of classic country music – Conway Twitty, Jim Reeves, Mel
Tillis singing Send Me To Tucson – and can trigger his post-traumatic
stress disorder.
Lucke has a complicated relationship with Willcox, perceiving that
much of the town thinks of him as a “hippie” or an “outsider”, or
assumes he’s a drug dealer because of his long hair. Still, Lucke has
continued playing music for Willcox.
Landscape right before you enter Willcox, Arizona. Photograph: Cassidy Araiza/The Guardian
For rural radio stations to survive, Barry Cohen says “they must
become embedded in the community to the point that they are considered a
necessary utility. In turn, the community must support them with both
listenership and ad dollars.”
“Most people don’t know that KHIL is in trouble,” says Dennis
Williams. “But if they did know, I think they would step up for Lucke. I
really do.”
And if the station were to have more support, Williams says he can
imagine an expansion of programming – early morning weather reports or
community bulletins, and more interaction with the community. But for
now, he says, “Lucke’s whole focus is keeping that radio station alive.
He asks nothing else from the world. And if it didn’t exist, it would be
a big hole in the community.” This article was supported by the Economic Hardship Reporting Project and the Puffin Foundation.
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