I grew up in the heyday of college radio in the late '80's-early '90's and it has been very formative in my life. So I would have been very interested in reading this book anyway, but, full disclosure, I was also interested because my brother, who was a college DJ at WXYC in Chapel Hill, was interviewed and mentioned (pg. 264!). WXYC comes up multiple times no doubt due to its prominence as one the best college stations out there, but there are multiple other stations that I've listened to over the years (WXDU, WKNC, WQFS, WUAG, WMNJ, WPRB, WFMU) which is a testament to the broad reach, but also fragmented nature of college radio. The author does a pretty good job of taking the overwhelming number of stations across the country with multiple issues and stories and making a cohesive narrative out of it. Of course, it could have been easy for her as some of the same conflicts repeat frequently whether it's the station staff vs. the university administration, the stations vs. the FCC (more formative to the creation of these stations than I realized), or just DJ's fighting among themselves about which music to play. College radio is well past its heyday, and alternative music distribution models like the internet, podcasts and satellite radio (what I mostly listen to despite still being in range of WXYC) have taken (grown with?) most of the original audience, but its influence is still strong and this book is a nice overview of it.