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Tuesday 15 January 2008

Best Satellite Service, XM or Sirius by Tim Somers

Some people can't live without the Howard Stern show, Martha Stewart or 24/7 Bruce Springsteen, while others need to have the Glenn Beck show, Oprah Winfrey and hits from the 1930s and 1940s. While the two stations may support a merger this year, for now you'll need to know the difference between the two available satellite radio service providers: Sirius Radio and XM Radio.
Country Music Fans may like the XM Radio satellite service, which provides listeners with two extra stations - one focusing on Americana Country like Robert Plant or Blackfoot, and the other focusing on Folk Country like Tim Garrison and The Nitty Gritty Band. Both stations have country music from the 80s and 90s, new country, bluegrass and classic country.

Christian Music Fans may like XM Radio. This service includes one more Christian music channel than Sirius - in addition to Christian Pop / Rock and Gospel, XM also hosts a Southern Gospel channel with Gold City, Greater Vision and The McKarneys.

Electronic Music Fans will prefer the Sirius radio service if they'd like a Breakbeat/Old SKool station, in addition to the usual Trance/Progressive stations that both satellite radio services provide. XM Radio has exclusive rights to acclaimed BPM, but Sirius has a special Dance Hits station.

Rock Music Fans will probably prefer Sirius Radio. While XM provides four different "alternative radio" stations, a punk station, a heavy metal station, a jam bands station, a college indie station and three classic rock stations, Sirius gives subscribers roughly 23 stations with everything that XM's service has -- plus New Wave, Glam Metal, Jimmy Buffet, Grateful Dead, Elvis, Canadian rock, UK rock, Garage, 60s Rock, 70s Rock and an additional punk/ska station. World Music Fans will find that both service providers offering two French stations, but Spanish-speaking subscribers will find XM Radio the better option, since they offer Rock En Espanol, Regional Mexican, Latin Pop, Latin Jazz, Hispanic Rhythmic and Spanish AC. Sirius, on the other hand, has only one Spanish music station for Latin Pop. Additionally, XM has a station for African and a business station in Italian.

Rap and Hip Hop Crooners may prefer XM Radio because their service focuses on more Soul and Funk, along with uncensored Hip Hop and Urban Contemporary -- unless they're big Slim Shady fans, in which case they may need Sirius Radio's Eminem station.

You'll probably find talk radio that you like on either satellite radio service. Be aware that there are some exclusive contracts, however. For example, Howard Stern and Martha Stewart only deal with Sirius Radio, whereas Oprah Winfrey, Casey Casem, Colmes and Good Morning America are only on XM Radio.

Sports Fans will find huge similarities in XM and Sirius service options. For instance, both providers have ESPN, Nascar and NHL exclusives, as well as both college and NFL football. XM gives better golf / PGA Tour coverage and Fox Sports, while Sirius gives better NBA coverage. On XM, catch shows with Jimmy Johnson, Dale Jr, Coach K, James Carville, Luke Russert and Cal Ripkin. With the Delphi SkiFi2 radio, you can get a sports ticker to show game scores on your display screen and the SportsCaster comes with 30 sports presets programmed in. However, Sirius gives you game alerts, 30 presets and lists all your favorite teams in one category with the Sportster and Streamer satellite radios. Additionally, get exclusive programming with Jerry Rice, Daryl Johnston, Randy Cross, Adam Schein, Shannon Sharpe, Ray Evernham, Tony Stewart, Rick Ackerman and Frank Isola.

A Sirius / XM merger could rock the satellite radio service world. On one hand, it would violate the Clayton Anti-trust Act, allowing a major monopoly and the squelching of all competition. But on the other hand, it could allow more channels for subscribers who may be straddling the fence between both providers and it could free up more money for program development and innovation.

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