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Radio Broadcasting Services; Hamilton, Goldthwaite, and San Saba, Texas

Federal Register: FCC (Broadcasting)
3 years 3 months ago
This Notice of Proposed Rulemaking and Order to Show Cause seeks comment on a proposal requested by B Plus Broadcasting, LLC (B Plus), to create a new FM allotment for a Class A station on Channel 263 at Hamilton, Texas. It also orders S Content Marketing, LLC (S Content), to show why the license of KNUZ(FM), San Saba, Texas, should not be modified to specify operation on Channel 291A in lieu of Channel 224A at San Saba, Texas.
Federal Communications Commission

Television Broadcasting Services Albany, New York

Federal Register: FCC (Broadcasting)
3 years 3 months ago
The Commission has before it a petition for rulemaking filed by WNYT-TV, LLC (Petitioner), the licensee of WNYT, channel 12, Albany, New York. The Petitioner requests the substitution of channel 21 for channel 12 at in the Table of Allotments.
Federal Communications Commission

Applications

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
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Broadcast Actions

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
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Actions

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
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Univision Holdings II, Inc. Petition for Declaratory Ruling Under Section 310(b)(4) of the Communications Act

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
Grants Petition for Declaratory Ruling Filed by Univision Holdings II, Inc.

TV Broadcaster Relocation Fund Invoice Filing Deadline Approaches In Sixty Days

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
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Broadcast Applications

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
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Pleadings

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
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Unified Pentecostal Local Churches, Inc., Consent Decree

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 3 months ago
The Media Bureau enters into a Consent Decree with Unified Pentecostal Local Churches, Inc.

FCC Shares Cyber Warnings About Russia

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

The Federal Communications Commission is encouraging communications companies to read a federal security advisory about cyber threats from Russia, and act on it.

“The commission urges all communications companies to take the recommended actions to protect their networks from cyber threats, to detect and notify CISA of cyber threats impacting communications services and infrastructure, and to share threat information with CISA and other industry stakeholders, as appropriate,” it said in an announcement.

CISA is the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.

On Jan. 11, CISA, the FBI and the National Security Agency issued a joint cybersecurity advisory called “Understanding and Mitigating Russian State-Sponsored Cyber Threats to U.S. Critical Infrastructure.”

[Read More About Cybersecurity and Radio]

The document states, “Historically, Russian state-sponsored advanced persistent threat actors have used common but effective tactics — including spearphishing, brute force and exploiting known vulnerabilities against accounts and networks with weak security — to gain initial access to target networks.” The advisory listed vulnerabilities known to be exploited by Russian state-sponsored actors, and goes into details that your head of IT will appreciate.

According to the advisory, critical infrastructure organizations in particular should take certain immediate steps including patching all systems, prioritizing known exploited vulnerabilities; implement multi-factor authentication; use antivirus software; and develop internal contact lists and support.

If you think you aren’t “critical infrastructure,” remember the role of broadcasters in local and national alerting and in disseminating information about national events. Media companies are juicy targets for the black hat crowd in general, as numerous experts have told Radio World over the years.

Companies can report cyber incidents to CISA via https://www.cisa.gov/uscert/report or to the FBI via a local FBI field office via phone at (855) 292-3937, or via email at CyWatch@fbi.gov.

The post FCC Shares Cyber Warnings About Russia appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

For iHeart Shares, A 42-Week Low Is Seen

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

Until late September, all seemed particularly strong for iHeartMedia‘s stock price. A year-long increase was underway, with shares moving from just over $14 per share in late February to nearly $27.50 just four months later.

By October, however, worries about the Delta, and Omicron, variants of the COVID-19 virus accelerated, creating new concerns about ad dollar weakness at radio. Ups and downs for IHRT were seen, and the shares still managed to start 2022 at $21.57.

Since then, it has been a bumpy ride on the Nasdaq GlobalSelect market for iHeart.

The latest dip for the company’s shares was seen on Friday, as IHRT fell 2.7% from Thursday to land at $18.67.

That’s the second-lowest closing price of the last six months, with a December 1 finish of $18.37 the only other time IHRT finished at this level.

While IHRT is still above where it was a year ago, it still marks a frustration for the company led by CEO Bob Pittman and COO/CFO Rich Bressler (pictured, top left). The current 1-year target price for IHRT is $32.78 per share.

The company has yet to see its shares climb above the $30 mark.

Adam Jacobson

GBS Says iHeart Is Being Hypocritical on Geo-Targeting

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

GeoBroadcast Solutions is calling out iHeartMedia for comments made in an FCC rulemaking proceeding that would allow FM broadcasters to geo-target content to specific zones of their coverage area for limited periods of time.

In fact, GBS says iHeart “today offers a service available to only iHeart’s stations that enables advertisers to do exactly the same thing, namely, offer advertisers the ability to geo-target their ads including in larger markets.”

iHeartMedia in a series of filings on Docket MB20-401 vigorously argued against adoption of the geo-target technology, citing unresolved technical concerns as well as a fear that it could completely upend the radio industry’s business model.

“While GBS attempts to convince the commission that its proposal will help smaller and minority-owned broadcasters, the reality is quite the opposite. Instead, the station groups least able to handle increased competition and a downward pressure on advertising rates are small and less-well-resourced ones,” iHeart wrote in comments filed in 2021.

GeoBroadcast says iHeart is being disingenuous with its allegations and said the broadcaster’s business practices prove it.

[Previously: FCC Receives New ZoneCasting Data]

The GBS technology, which it brands as ZoneCasting, uses FM boosters to allow for hyperlocal advertising and content independent of the signals of the primary station within different portions of the primary’s protected service contour. GBS claims any resulting co-channel interference or self-interference is manageable and not detrimental to listeners.

Radio World reported earlier NAB and the Small Radio Broadcaster Coalition were among the groups who questioned the technical soundness of geo-targeting and asked for further vetting of the system.

However, iHeart has voiced a more economics-based argument against the technology. The broadcasters claim radio stations already face a challenging advertising environment due to the twin pressures of new competitors and an extended pandemic, and worry the FCC proposal could potentially exert even more downward pressure on the advertising revenue and fundamentally alter the radio industry’s business model.

Geo-targeting and specifically the GBS ZoneCasting technology run the “risk splintering the local advertising market and crippling local radio stations at the worst possible moment for the industry.”

Other large radio broadcast groups, including Beasley Media Group, Cumulus Media, Audacy and Urban One, also have urged the FCC to be cautious in possible adoption of the technology.

Now GBS, in a letter to the FCC, throws shade at iHeart and accuses the broadcaster of leading a campaign of “unsubstantiated opposition” even as it offers geo-targeting to clients.

The company points to iHeart’s AdBuilder website, which lets ad buyers purchase ads on iHeart stations. “One core feature of iHeart AdBuilder is that it prompts new and existing advertisers to select communities, on a map, where they would like to target their ads as one of the first steps in the process of creating an ad,” GBS states in the letter.

GBS writes further in its correspondence to the FCC: “In light of this current offering, the commission should view skeptically claims from iHeart and its allies that geo-targeting content could create negative economic consequences for broadcasters. The disconnect between the iHeart AdBuilder website and the rhetoric from iHeart and its allies simply reveals the thinly veiled goal of the largest radio group owners reinforcing and seeking to maintain their dominant position in the market by denying smaller broadcasters an opportunity to use technology to level the playing field.”

GBS acknowledges that the geo-targeting of the iHeart AdBuilder platform differs from the use of geo-targeting at the zone level achieved by using FM boosters. “iHeart’s solution offers different content within a radio market defined by an iHeart station’s footprint whereas FM booster targeting offers different content within a radio market as defined by where the booster is installed. Both solutions imply more targeted ad spend by allowing advertisers to address their targeted audience while increasing overall revenue to the broadcaster.”

The GBS letter, prepared by Covington & Burling LLP, concludes: “We hope that this information is helpful to the commission in considering how the current industry landscape could be impacted by the proposed rule, and the potential economic opportunities that it may unlock for broadcasters and small and minority businesses alike.”

Furthermore, as GeoBroadcast has pointed out throughout the proceeding, “if the proposed rules are adopted, any change in a broadcaster’s operations would be voluntary. Broadcasters can decide for themselves if providing geo-targeted content is economically beneficial.”

GeoBroadcast Solutions has conducted field testing of its ZoneCasting system at several radio stations in the United States and is implementing the technology at KSJO(FM) in San Jose, Calif. The station began participating in an FCC experimental operation of the FM booster system in October and will continue broadcasting localized weather, sponsored traffic, and news during short parts of the broadcast hour through February 2022.

The tech company’s FM booster geo-targeting system also is slated to be implemented at WRBJ(FM) in Jackson, Miss., which has also been granted experimental authority, possibly as soon as late January.

Comment on this or any article. Email radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post GBS Says iHeart Is Being Hypocritical on Geo-Targeting appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

The All-New Winter RBR+TVBR Special Report is Here!

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

As a premium subscriber to the Radio+Television Business Report, you are on the VIP list to receive our Winter 2022 Special Report via instant download.

What awaits you?

  • The Future of Broadcasting & OTT for OTA TV – Agora Director of Business Development for Media and Entertainment Brad Altfest is interviewed.
  • Broadcast Media’s Top Tech Leaders – This first annual list salutes the best tech minds in radio and television – and it’s a reader-generated honor roll.
  • Technology: Empowering Broadcast Radio and TV – The cancellation of the NAB Show and the delay of IBC Amsterdam didn’t put a hard stop to product rollouts and big plans for 2022.
  • RBR+TVBR’s Products to Watch List – An opportunity to learn more about other companies of note to radio and TV companies.

The RBR+TVBR Winter 2022 Special Edition is available now to all subscribers!

LOCK IN YOUR COPY BY BECOMING A RBR+TVBR MEMBER TODAY.

RBR-TVBR

Milwaukee’s ’88Nine’ Loses Its Exec. Director

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

It’s a tastemaker Adult Alternative noncommercial FM that since 2007 has done what stations such as KCRW in Santa Monica, Calif., and WXPN in Philadelphia have brought to local radio listeners.

Now, ’88Nine’ is seeking a new Executive Director, as Kevin Sucher has stepped down “to pursue other opportunities.”

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Adam Jacobson

Univision Gets Its FCC Foreign Ownership Ruling

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

In the final days of 2020, the FCC approved a request by Univision to accept foreign investment in excess of the 25% benchmark set forth in its regulations. Then, in summer 2021, the company that is today majority controlled by Searchlight III UTD and ForgeLight and led by CEO Wade Davis requested the Commission’s OK for two specific non-U.S. based entities to grab a share of Univision ownership.

A Declaratory Ruling was released by the Commission on Friday.

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Adam Jacobson

Family Stations Closes On Its NYC Bargain Buy

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

Que pena … The end is near for “Qué Buena” listeners across the New York Tri-State Area.

For those who have wanted WFME back on a FM signal heard in Gotham, it is almost time to rejoice.

Family Stations has closed on its acquisition of what will soon be the former WQBU-FM 92.7, licensed to the Nassau County municipality of Garden City, N.Y.

According to the asset purchase agreement, finalized on December 2, 2021 and subsequently filed with the FCC, Univision is selling WQBU and its two boosters, giving it coverage in Manhattan and Queens, for $9 million.

A 10% escrow deposit was placed with Kalil & Co., as escrow agent. Kalil & Co. represented Univision in the transaction, as the exclusive broker. As previously reported, Univision months ago retained the Tucson-based brokerage to help it spin non-essential radio stations.

With the deal’s completion, after 18 years Family Stations will regain much of its lost FM signal coverage from the sale of the original WFME-FM (today WXBK-FM 94.7) to Cumulus Media in late 2012. At the time, WFME “moved” to 106.3 MHz, a facility from 1964-1993 known as WVIP-FM. As locals can attest to, it is hardly a New York-market facility, with a 980-watt Class A signal covering northern Westchester and Fairfield County, Conn.

Even with WQBU, WFME still will lack a Northern New Jersey FM signal. However, there is an AM option. WFME-AM 1560 uses a two-tower daytime signal and three-tower nighttime signal pushing out 50kw watts of Christian talk and teaching fare; it sold its Maspeth, Queens, tower site and uses a new site based in New Jersey.

In the 18 years since Univision purchased what is today WQBU, it is being sold for $51 million less.

The deal value crossed what Hoffman Schutz Media Capital’s David Schutz in December told RBR+TVBR is a “psychologically significant valuation metric” — one dollar.

Based on the new 2020 Census, the 60 dbu “service area” contour of WQBU reaches 9,396,000 people. “At a $9 million announced selling price, that represents a population metric of $0.96 per person,” Schutz concludes, adding that the twin synchronous on-channel boosters in Manhattan and Brooklyn didn’t exist when Univision bought the facility.

Representing Family Stations, best known for its association with the late Harold Camping, as its FCC legal counsel is Matthew McCormick with Fletcher Heald & Hildreth.

Adam Jacobson

A Big Gray Investor Takes Majority Stake In Michigan LPTVs

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

Eric Wotila has gained notice across the U.S. for his role as President of digital multicast network NewsNet.

Now, he’s in the news as Wotila has agreed to an asset purchase agreement that will adjust the ownership in the station branded as “NewsNet Michigan.”

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Adam Jacobson

Altitude Sports Added To NextGen Pay-TV Service

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 3 months ago

For fans of Denver-based pro and collegiate sports teams that have rights agreements with Altitude Sports, watching play-by-play while at home has been a frustration for those who are Comcast subscribers for more than two years. The two parties have been sparring over a carriage agreement, and on December 17 mediation was agreed to. Meanwhile, DISH has also been unable to secure a new rights agreement with Altitude.

As such, DirecTV is today the lone home in the Denver DMA for Altitude Sports, as Charter’s Spectrum service, which Altitude has a deal with, is not available.

A “revolutionary” NextGen television service could bring Altitude for those who don’t wish to wait for a possible deal with Comcast.

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Adam Jacobson

APRE Offers Scholarships for ’22 PREC

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

The Association of Public Radio Engineers Board of Directors is making available scholarships to help new public radio engineers attend the 2022 Public Radio Engineering Conference (PREC). The scholarship program is also open to public radio engineering and operations personnel who haven’t attended PREC in five years.

The 2022 conference will be held at the Tuscany Suites in Las Vegas, April 21–22, immediately preceding the annual NAB Show.

Dan Houg, past president of the APRE Board of Directors, says “years ago I was a brand-new radio station engineer and a recipient of the APRE scholarship. I can attest to the impact attending the Public Radio Engineering Conference has on my ability to build and move our station forward. It opens contacts within the industry and provides connections with peers that persist as I go about my daily work.”

The scholarship includes a one-year APRE membership, the PREC registration fee, an Awards Dinner ticket, and three night’s lodging at the conference hotel.

Full details of the application process are available on the APRE website.

The post APRE Offers Scholarships for ’22 PREC appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

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