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Industry News

Hearst Head Gets Virtual NATPE Honor

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years 4 months ago

The National Association of Television Program Executives (NATPE), which is staging a virtual NATPE Miami conference in 2021 due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is presenting the President of Hearst Television with one of four Iris Awards.

The 2021 Iris Awards ceremony will take place as part of NATPE Virtual Miami on January 21 at 1pm Eastern.

Among the honorees is Hearst head Jordan Wertlieb. He will be receiving the Lew Klein Award for Leadership.

NATPE’s Iris Awards were created to recognize best-in-class executives, program producers, creators, talent and content that makes a significant impact on the industry and our culture.

The Award for Excellence in Performance will be presented to Kelly Clarkson, while long-running syndicated entertainment news magazine  Entertainment Tonight will be honored with the Award for Excellence in Programming as host Kevin Frazier is given the Award for Career Achievement.

RBR-TVBR

Reports Offer Insights on the Podcast Listener

Radio World
4 years 4 months ago

It’s clear from two recent reports that podcast listeners love audio and want to hear more.

That’s the consensus from the new Westwood One 2021 Audioscape report, which looked at podcast consumer trends using data from Q3 2020 Share of Ear report by Edison Research.

While AM/FM radio continues to dominate much of the audio landscape, podcasting is one area that continues to see significant growth. According to the Audioscape survey, podcast listeners are dedicated audiophiles. On a typical day podcast listeners spend 41% more time listening to audio during the day as compared to the average U.S. consumer, which spends a little more than three and a half hours with all forms of audio on a daily basis.

[Read: Share of Listening to Podcasting Hits All-Time High]

When people listen to podcasts, they remain a devoted bunch, the Westwood One report said. Among those that listen to the podcast format, podcasting becomes the listener’s number one platform. Once people become regular podcasts customers, nearly one-third of their daily total spent with audio is devoted to podcasts.

The surveys also found that the podcast audience is significantly younger than the listeners of other media. The median age of the podcast audience is 34. According to the Westwood One survey, the current median age of podcast listeners is 13 years younger than AM/FM radio and two decades younger than broadcast television network audiences.

The Edison survey also found that most podcast listening occurs at home throughout the day, with a 60% share as compared to podcast listening in the car (21%), at work (15%) or at some other locale (4%).

The Edison Research report also looked at how much time is spent with four audio content types: music, sports, news and talk/personality. The Edison survey found that podcast listeners are twice as likely to listen to news and three times as likely to listen to personalities and sports formats when compared to nonpodcast consumers. “It is not surprising to see podcasting’s share of time spent soaring over time among those who use spoken word formats such as talk/personality, news, and sports,” wrote Brittany Faison, the insights manager at Cumulus Media/Westwood One in a blog about the two surveys.

The post Reports Offer Insights on the Podcast Listener appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

ACA Connects Head: TVPA Stopped More Retrans Harm

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years 4 months ago

Once again, retransmission consent negotiations gone bad generated many news headlines over the last six weeks. Yet, ACA Connects President/CEO Matthew M. Polka notes, those talks have mostly concluded.

Not surprisingly, he says, the results “were consistent with what was expected as broadcasters continued to impose unconscionable rate hikes on consumers for what they call ‘free TV.’”

Oh, boy … What else does Polka have to say about retransmission consent — still a sore subject for Suddenlink and Cox Media Group, and for Frontier Communications and Gray Television?

“In addition to big rate hikes, we’ve also seen more than a few TV station-initiated blackouts without much warning and a lot of miffed customers,” Polka opines in commentary distributed Wednesday (1/13) by the pro-small MVPD lobbying group.

The only bright side, Polka says: “It could have been even worse for many smaller cable operators had the door not been opened for buying groups to enter the picture.”

How so? Polka explains, “The FCC just released a report showing, in 2019, that cable operators paid more than $5.5 billion dollars in retransmission consent fees — once again, for the right to deliver ‘free’ over-the-air television stations. This represented a 19.2% increase over fees paid the previous year at a time when the general rate of inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, was 2.5%.”

The report, Polka adds, showed that smaller cable operators were “disproportionately harmed” financially by retransmission consent. Small cable operators paid on average $178.13 per subscriber, per year in retransmission consent payments, while large cable operators paid on average $124.67 per subscriber, per year, he says. “In other words, small cable operators paid on average at least 43% more than larger operators,” Polka says. “And, according to the FCC, the disparity between small and large cable systems is getting only bigger.”

Polka also shares that in 2019 there were 219 instances of “blackouts,” a number likely tied to an individual channel’s prevention, by law, from reaching MVPD subscribers without a retrans consent pact in place.

What about 2020? “[All] the anecdotal evidence we have seen suggests that the magnitude of rate increases has gotten only worse in last year’s negotiations,” Polka believes.

Among the ACA Connects members that refuse to accept new agreements as suggested by broadcast TV stations, many of whom have increased value for their properties thanks to investment in local news operations across a pandemic, are BOYCOM Vision, NNTV, Mediacom, TDS, GCI, Shentel, WOW! and Cable One/Sparklight.

As Polka sees it, the MVPDs have done nothing wrong in their negotiation process, putting all of the blame on a two-sided arrangements on broadcasters and their “unreasonable demands for higher fees.”

While the blame game will likely continue for months, if not into 2022, Polka is pleased that 2020 saw the implementation of the first set of retransmission consent negotiations conducted after passage of the Television Viewer Protection Act of 2019 — a law that ACA Connects and its members “fought hard to pass.”

The TVPA requires large TV station ownership groups to negotiate retrans in good faith with buying groups like the National Cable Television Cooperative (NCTC).

Polka’s not entirely pleased with the TVPA’s results, but he’s more than satisfied.

“Make no mistake, the broadcasters still have an incredible amount of leverage and the terms and conditions of these deals were not great for the small cable operators opting into them,” Polka says. “But those deals involved lower transaction costs than individual negotiations would have had.  And, hopefully, they resulted in lower rates than individual negotiations would have produced.”

The bottom line for Polka: “Most of what’s awful about retransmission consent stayed the same, and it’s getting worse for consumers,” he says. “The old and outdated federal retrans rules from the 1990’s need to be reformed or, better yet, thrown out.  Change through laws like the TVPA is a terrific start, and ACA Connects will continue to fight for reform — just as it successfully did with the TVPA.”

Adam Jacobson

EMF Installs Custom Antenna in San Juan

Radio World
4 years 4 months ago

From our Who’s Buying What page: Dielectric reported the installation of an antenna for Educational Media Foundation in Puerto Rico, and pointed out some unusual aspects.

EMF installed a broadband model DCR-M antenna for noncommercial WJKL(FM) in San Juan, to serve WJKL on 105.7 MHz and a second station at 104.7 FM) in the future.

[See Our Who’s Buying What Page]

“The center-fed DCR-M accommodates both frequencies (with 1 MHz separation) through a special reduced bay-spacing design that eliminates the need for future field tuning,” the manufacturer stated in an announcement.

“EMF also added a new, specially designed two-station branch combiner to serve both transmission frequencies, and prevent intermodulation issues from signal mixing inside the transmitters.”

The antenna is side-mounted to a mountaintop tower with a center of radiation at 118 feet above ground level. Its design was developed with storms in mind, including hurricanes.

“The project was in fact delayed due to several harsh storms including Hurricane Maria in 2017, which caused widespread devastation to the island,” Dielectric stated. “The project was revived once power was returned to the remote site and the general infrastructure was restored.”

Dielectric worked with Sabre to develop a custom mounting system that could support the antenna’s unusual bay-spacing design.

“This included a standoff pole for the tapered tower architecture, and a bracket design that eliminated complex anti-rotation elements for the antenna bays,” it said. “Dielectric also added its ‘funky elbow’ design to reduce ground radiation from the DCR-M, through a robust inter-bay feed system that optimizes signal coverage without directing radiation downward from the tower.”

Send news for Who’s Buying What to radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post EMF Installs Custom Antenna in San Juan appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

An FCC Swan Song For Ajit Pai

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years 4 months ago

It was a cavalcade of achievements that went on for hours. This included a review of the Media Bureau and Incentive Auction teams’ accomplishments since late January 2017.

All of the presentations, however, couldn’t overshadow the biggest takeaway from the Zoom-delivered highlight reel of The FCC’s Past Four Years: Ajit Pai, Chairman of the agency overseeing media regulatory policy in the U.S., has presided over his final Open Meeting before departing next week.

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Adam Jacobson

Sinclair Gives an Early Yes To Some CBS Affiliate Renewals

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years 4 months ago

Its broadcast properties include such CBS affiliates as WPEC-12 in West Palm Beach.

And, that affiliation — along with those for 12 other stations — won’t be changing anytime soon.

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Adam Jacobson

Two More Media Companies To Present at NobleCon17

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years 4 months ago

It’s a big deal for attracting institutional investors, and Townsquare Media had previously announced that its CEO, Bill Wilson, would be presenting.

Now, two of its audio media industry peers have revealed they, too, will be presenting at NobleCon17.

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Adam Jacobson

P&G’s Pandemic Ad Push: A Big Instance Increase From 2019

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years 4 months ago

It’s well-known across broadcast media that Marc Pritchard, the well-respected and admired Chief Brand Officer at Procter & Gamble Co., believes in the power — and Return on Investment — of traditionally delivered radio and television.

In 2020, with some brands pulling back on their advertising activity due to the COVID-19 pandemic, P&G increased its outreach to consumers, according to new data from Media Monitors.

Procter & Gamble aired 22% more spots in 2020 than in 2019.

Specifically, the consumer products goods giant aired 23,154,642 spots in monitored markets on radio, broadcast TV and cable in 2020. That compares to 18,913,975 during the prior year, based on iHeartMedia-owned Media Monitors’ rankings of the top 100 advertisers for the year.

The data combines specific brands under the P&G family, including laundry brands Tide, Gain and Downy; Bounty paper towels; Febreze fabric softener; and, of course, Charmin bath tissue.

By specific brand, GEICO was again the nation’s No. 1, airing 6,984,053 instances – also an increase over 2019 – across local cable, broadcast TV and radio when combined.

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When looking solely at radio, Progressive doubled its number of instances, airing 2,694,039 spots in 2020, up from 1,307,010 instances in 2019, Media Monitors data show.

P&G, when combined, was No. 2 at radio — suggesting that some 20 million of the company’s spots were in visual media.

Don’t be misled by the disparity. “The company increased advertising of its brands in all channels, but particularly in radio, where it increased the number of instances by 44%,” Media Monitors President/CEO Philippe Generali said of P&G’s activity in 2020.

Meanwhile, as the pandemic upended normal routines, an opportunity was created for some advertisers. Language learning app Babbel rode a wave of increased interest in online education, Generali noted. The company advertised more on radio, where it entered the top 10 at No. 5.

Interestingly, Allstate jumped to No. 6 from number 57, while Quicken Loans entered at No. 8, up from number 18. Allstate of late has largely been outside of the Spot Ten Radio weekly reports produced by Media Monitors.

RADIO

“There are many reasons for advertisers to be optimistic about 2021,” Generali said. “With the presidential election behind us, advertising inventory will increase. And now that vaccine distribution is underway, people should  soon be able to move about safely, creating more new opportunities for advertisers’ products and services.”

Adam Jacobson

Kojo Nnamdi Show to End in April

Radio World
4 years 4 months ago

“The Kojo Nnamdi Show” will end production on April 1, WAMU announced.

The magazine-style radio program is a Washington and regionally focused program well regarded in public radio circles. Nnamdi is a native of Guyana who immigrated to the United States in 1968. He joined WAMU in 1998 and hosted “Public Interest.” The show was renamed for its host in 2002.

Prior to WAMU Nnamdi had worked as a news editor and director, and hosted a TV public affairs show.

He’ll continue to host “The Politics Hour” on Fridays and “continue to serve as an ambassador for the station through his revamped ‘Kojo In Our Community’ event series,” the station announced.

Nnamdi thanked his producers and also mentioned colleagues Diane Rehm, Mark Plotkin and Steve Martin for helping him along the way.

He said his role “owed a great deal to WAMU’s commitments to understanding the Washington region across racial lines — the lines which too often divide us. That commitment continues.”

WAMU plans a new regionally focused show that is yet to be announced.

 

The post Kojo Nnamdi Show to End in April appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Maintain Equipment for Long Life Spans  

Radio World
4 years 4 months ago
Fig. 1: This genset recently kept WNIS running for 38 hours.

David Morgan, CBRE, is the director of engineering for Sinclair TeleCable-Norfolk in Virginia. He enjoys the generator tips we share.

Inspect not only radiator hoses but also the belts on the engine pulleys.

He sent pictures of the emergency generator at WNIS(AM) 790 in Norfolk. It is a G.M. Diesel (from Detroit) Model 4-71. The gray electrical generator portion was replaced in 2003 after the old one self-destructed during Hurricane Isabel.

David reminds us of the importance of checking radiator hoses, seen at the upper end of Fig. 2, and to inspect the belts that interconnect the engine pulleys.

First disable the generator so it won’t start while you are inspecting it. Then gently squeeze the hoses. They should flex, and there should be no visible cracks in the rubber during flexing.

Before turning the generator back on, conduct a visual inspection of the belts. (A strong trouble light will help in this inspection.)

Locate the longest unsupported section of belt and inspect it for abnormal wear, such as glazing on the side of the belt or missing chunks of the belt. The latter can be caused by high temperatures from the heat of the engine or friction due to belt slippage.

Next, start the generator up and listen. Noise is the first indication of belt (and possibly pulley) problems. Belt squeal during start-up signifies slippage. Check for glazed sides of the belt. Also listen for squeals during a load test as the station’s electrical load is transferred to the generator. Under normal conditions, changes in RPM should not cause the belt to slip.

As the engine runs, watch for erratic movement or flutter in the belt as it turns. Either warrants further inspection by a generator technician.

As with a car tire, friction between the belt and pulleys will wear the belt away. The most common area of wear is on the tops and walls of the belt ribs. Eventually, this friction causes the grooves of the pulleys to bottom out on the grooves of the belt, with belt slippage as the result.

Poor alignment with the belt and pulleys is the biggest cause of noise. This condition can also cause belt fraying and premature wear.

The best way to inspect for this condition is to sight down the side of the belt to make sure the belt edge doesn’t make any bends away or toward the engine. Any deviation you can spot with your eye is excessive.

One other maintenance tip concerns care when adding oil or coolant to the generator engine. If either comes in contact with the belt, slippage can increase, and the slippage can cause even higher friction temperatures, resulting in more belt damage. Also inspect the seals around the water pump and the engine oil seals; leaks can contaminate the belt surface.

These tips about squealing belts also apply to air conditioning air handlers. If you hear a squeal, investigate!

Slow-leak finder

David wraps up his comments by noting that this generator recently powered the station for about 38 hours after Tropical Storm Isaias blew through the Norfolk area. Even older generators, when properly maintained, can provide long and reliable service.

David adds a comment about using soapy water to detect leaks in transmission lines and the associated manifolds and nitrogen tank fittings.

To spot difficult or very slow leaks, he has found it easier to use blue leak detector spray, such as Cal-Blue Plus brand from Nu-Calgon (www.nucalgon.com), which was developed for HVAC technicians to spot refrigerant leaks.

Fig. 3: Cal-Blue Plus stays really gooey for some time after spraying. This makes it easier to spot difficult or very slow leaks.

Unlike soapy bubble water, this spray stays really gooey for some time after spraying; the adhesion allows time for slow leaking nitrogen to bubble out. And because of its high viscosity, the bubbles are last a long time. The viscosity also enables the product to remain in contact with the applied surface for an extended period, making slow leaks easier to spot.

Cal-Blue Plus is non-corrosive to metal, meaning fittings and copper tubing will not be damaged by the compound.You can find it at places like Grainger and Home Depot, or via Amazon.

John Bisset has spent more than 50 years in the broadcasting industry and is in his 31st year writing Workbench. He handles western U.S. radio sales for the Telos Alliance. He holds CPBE certification with the Society of Broadcast Engineers and is a past recipient of the SBE’s Educator of the Year Award. Workbench submissions are encouraged, qualify for SBE Recertification, and can be emailed to johnpbisset@gmail.com.

The post Maintain Equipment for Long Life Spans   appeared first on Radio World.

John Bisset

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