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Radio World

CPB Announces Federal Grant Amounts

Radio World
4 years ago
Hands-on legislation: Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi and Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer hold the signed American Rescue Plan Act in March. (Photo OLIVIER DOULIERY/AFP via Getty Images)

Almost 400 public radio stations in the United States now know how much federal grant money they will receive related to the pandemic.

The majority of the radio grants are in the $100,000 to $300,000 range, though there are larger ones, like (for example) KVOD(FM) in Centennial, Colo., which will receive $548,000, and WBEZ(FM) in Chicago will get $740,400.

And three biggies will get between $1 million and $1.4 million each; they are WNYC(FM) in New York, KSJN(FM) in St. Paul and KQED(FM) in San Francisco.

This is part of $175 million in emergency stabilization funds for public media provided by Congress in the American Rescue Plan Act.

The money is “fiscal stabilization grants to public telecommunications entities … to maintain programming and services and preserve small and rural stations threatened by declines in non-federal revenues.”

The Corporation for Public Broadcasting has the job of deciding how to distribute it, and CPB announced Thursday that its board had unanimously approved a distribution plan.

Its allocations were decided by an advisory group of public radio and TV representatives. They decided to split the $175 million pool equally between television and radio.

The amount awarded to each station was calculated by adding the sums of two formulas.

Of the $175 million, $100 million was calculated using the CARES Act formula developed earlier to prioritize small, rural and/or minority stations. The rest was calculated according to Community Service Grant formulas, which take into account various factors including service to rural communities, number of transmitters to cover large areas and the amount raised in non-federal support.

These funds are not intended to cover costs of new technology initiatives, though certain urgent replacement of equipment is provided for.

Pat Harrison, president/CEO of CPB, said in an announcement, “The stabilization funding from Congress will support essential public media services and sustain the broad reach and access that keeps public media resources available online, over-the-air and in communities across the country.” Harrison thanked Congress “for their strong, bipartisan support of public media.”

A list of grantees and their amounts is on the CPB website and at the link below.

American Rescue Act Award Recipients (PDF)

The post CPB Announces Federal Grant Amounts appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Community Broadcaster: Hidden Figures

Radio World
4 years ago

The author is executive director of the National Federation of Community Broadcasters. NFCB commentaries are featured regularly at www.radioworld.com.

More than ever, media organizations and other businesses are being open about salary ranges. For a previous generation, this kind of public posting about salaries was unheard of. Yet leaders are seeing there are advantages to this approach.

[Read: Community Broadcaster: How Stations Fight the Virus]

Many of us have seen generic wording before in listings. “Salary commensurate with experience” or variations thereof. For years, this obfuscation around pay was the norm. it benefits the employer to keep pay quiet, so the boss has room come negotiation time. However, big pushes for salary transparency in media have emerged the last three years, with some fields sharing what a baseline could and should be. These tendencies have rattled the fashion we’re accustomed to seeing salaries.

How does your station handle salary and wages in its employment searches? And how can this change be a win?

Almost as common in the generic language are situations where a promising candidate withdraws from a search. In the worst cases, they may drop out after they’ve gotten the offer. Why? In many instances, it is because the employer was cagey about the bottom line until the very last minute. That’s unacceptable for the candidate, who walks away with the impression your station may be cheap and is apt to hide it; and for the station, which just expended hours of paid staff time for a process they’ll now have to restart, all because they avoided a discussion that could have been cleared up by the very first posting.

Some may think that, by posting a salary range, you’ll limit the number of candidates. But really, what’s better: a small pool of candidates who know what they’re walking into, or a large pool of candidates in the dark and needing to either be persuaded by other perks or lied to by omission until the offer comes? And which candidate has higher morale coming in to the job?

There’s also an argument for fairness and diversity in hiring by being open. Last year, the National Federation of Community Broadcasters started collecting anonymously reported salary and wage data. “Chances are you are not facing pressure on pay fairness at the moment. That does not mean your community radio station can’t work on equity and your mission,” the page notes. And it’s true. More organizations want to build trust with candidates, and transparency is a means to uphold this value.

Pay transparency represents a cultural change for radio. But such a change needn’t be difficult. In fact, such change can meet our missions.

The post Community Broadcaster: Hidden Figures appeared first on Radio World.

Ernesto Aguilar

Smith Goes to the Hill to Talk Vaccines

Radio World
4 years ago
Gordon Smith, NAB president/CEO and a former U.S. senator, appeared Thursday before the Senate Commerce Committee.

Broadcasters are well placed to help the public feel more confident about vaccinations, said NAB President/CEO Gordon Smith.

He said that includes reaching communities of color, multilingual ethnic minorities and rural areas where vaccine hesitancy is highest.

Smith appeared Thursday before the Senate Commerce Committee on Capitol Hill at a hearing on the topic of communicating “trusted vaccine information.”

“Our research showed that everyone simply wants the facts — news stories that make recommendations based on factual reporting,” Smith told the senators. “Fortunately, that is what broadcasters do best — they dig deep to provide accurate information to their communities — not spin, not rumors and without political theater.”

Smith described NAB’s partnership with the Reynolds Journalism Institute on a research project to identify effective vaccine education messaging. Generally, he said, the public is eager for the vaccine, but there is greater hesitancy among demographics such as African Americans, Hispanics, conservative-leaning Whites and women aged 18 to 34.

He said the NAB/Reynolds research “made it clear that a local and regional approach would be more effective than a one-size-fits-all national message,” and said NAB was “gratified that the Department of Health and Human Services has identified local broadcast stations as effective advertising partners.”

And he noted that the NAB is a founding member of the administration’s recently announced Community Corps, that seeks to develop “trusted messengers in local communities to encourage people to get vaccinated.”

He said radio and TV stations “are anxious to serve again as critical partners to government agencies and the public health and medical communities, to arm listeners and viewers with timely, accurate information about vaccines.”

 

The post Smith Goes to the Hill to Talk Vaccines appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

User Report: SEPsoniX Brings Big Sound to Small Station

Radio World
4 years ago

The author is owner/operator of WZPH(LP).

ZEPHYRHILLS, Fla. — WZPH(LP) is a unique radio station in many ways. We hold the world record for 3 million songs in a row, nonstop oldies rock’n roll since March 24, 2005, commercial-free. We are locally owned and have been serving the community without the request of on-air donations.

Being close to the Tampa, Fla., market is challenging, we get crushed in the ratings, as well as coverage area.

For many years, our audio lacked the luster of the powerhouse stations, and it just didn’t seem to shine on the radio dial. The content of our material was good in quality, but by the time the audio was heard on a table radio, it just didn’t sound the same. Our audio chain consisted of an Aphex Compellor, followed by an Aphex Dominator passed into a stereo generator with peak limiter.

No matter what we did with hours of setting changes, the audio either sounded either squashed, or annoyingly raspy to the ear. We needed something different, but with the price tag of the processing of today, we weren’t able to afford the big-ticket processors any time soon.

Our station engineer advised us that there was a product recently released on the market, the JT Communications SEPsoniX processor. It featured simple installation and an affordable cost ($1,100). He said that it contained features such as split-band compressors (so that the low and high frequencies would be processed independently), AGC to maintain gain along with a stereo generator with peak composite limiter (to protect overshoots).

Being located “down the road” from Zephyrhills in Ocala, we contacted Jim Trapani of JT Communications, and he was very accommodating, explaining the simple operation and setup to our engineer. Since he was local, and with the new introduction of the product, he was willing to deliver the SEPsoniX personally and assist our engineer with the installation and settings.

After Jim’s arrival, the installation was rather quick. In the words of our engineer, “I have never had such a simple processor setup until now.”

The processor contains all the necessary adjustments from the front panel, including sufficient LED indicators to let you know how the unit is operating at a glance. Once the input levels were set, the unit performed nicely, and the audio quality seemed to be less squashed yet loudly competitive.

Increasing the audio input did not increase the typical fatiguing audio sound we were experiencing with our earlier processing combo; rather it sounded open and cleaner. The high-frequency limiter that precedes the stereo generator did a good job on the high frequencies, and we did not hear the smearing and “spitting” of the highs that our previous processing failed to resolve.

The composite clipper could be adjusted, from mildly functional to aggressively loud.

The stereo generator produced good separation at multiple frequencies, but we decided to keep the signal mono, as the increased noise that occurs when operating stereo was not beneficial to our already FCC-limited signal.

We spent the next few hours jumping around the dial, listening and comparing our audio to our competitors. Although we did not “jump off” the dial as some stations do, we were quite competitive to the audio quality, and longtime listening did not sound fatiguing to our ears. We wrote a check to seal the deal.

WZPH is in a small metallic building, directly underneath the antenna tower. Lightning is typical during the summer months, and we have added a good amount of grounding to our equipment to avoid casualties.

This past winter we took a hit. Although the transmitter survived, all audio wires that crossed paths were fused. Our engineer was able to replace the damage within a few hours and we were back on the air.

The SEPsoniX contains some lightning protection on the BNC output, and the only damage was the output IC (which is socketed). It is a common part which the engineer had some in his parts bin.

Overall, our investment into the SEPsoniX  has resulted in a great-sounding, competitive station without the emptying of the pocketbook. For startup and small-budget stations, this is an excellent choice, and it appears that the SEPsoniX will provide years of great results.

Radio World User Reports are testimonial articles intended to help readers understand why a colleague chose a particular product to solve a technical situation.

For information, contact Jim Trapani at JT Communications in Florida at 1-352-236-0744  or visit www.jtcomms.com.

The post User Report: SEPsoniX Brings Big Sound to Small Station appeared first on Radio World.

Doc Thayer

Wheatstone Rolls Out the Blade 4

Radio World
4 years ago

Wheatstone said the Blade 4, its newest WheatNet-IP Blade, “clears out the rack room.”

The company highlights its integrated audio routing, control, codecs, processing, mixing, operating system and NMOS/AES67 interoperability that are all provided in a single rack unit.

Wheatstone said the new model offers interoperability with other manufacturers and network environments through SMPTE ST 2110 audio support and AES67 compliance. “Blade 4 supports NMOS [Networked Medio Open Specifications] device discovery, AES67 multichannel support and packet timing adaptability,” it said in the announcement.

[Read: Processing for Streaming vs. On-Air]

Each Blade 4 has its own OS. “No tablet, laptop or desktop PC needed. Run select broadcast applications and scripting routines direct from the network I/O interface, including IP meter, PC XY routing control, Screenbuilder, Navigator and LIO viewer.”

Opus, MP3 and AAC codecs are added to the AoIP network for remotes and home studios. Codecs are routable in native AoIP, with no additional hardware required.

Other features include easy resource sharing. Integrate audio codecs, processing, mixing and operating system into one native AoIP environment. It also has features found on other Blades including two 8×2 stereo utility mixers, routable stereo processor with parametric EQ/compressor/limiter, 12 physical universal logic ports and 128 programmable software LIO ports.

Dual Ethernet ports are provided and dual power supplies are available.

Wheatstone says that because this unit includes codecs, software apps, mixing and audio processing, plus AoIP networking, control and interoperability, users will save on rack room space, cooling and cabling.

The Blade 4 can be integrated into new or existing WheatNet-IP networks.

Wheatstone’s Director of Sales Jay Tyler introduced the Blade 4 in a recent Radio World webcast.

 

The post Wheatstone Rolls Out the Blade 4 appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

NAB Radio Board Gets New Members

Radio World
4 years ago

Radio members of the National Association of Broadcasters have elected new board members.

They include Chris Ornelas, who was NAB’s chief operating officer until early last year.

Odd-numbered districts voted this year.

[Read: NAB Announces Crystal Radio Winners]

An asterisk below indicates a new board member or one who served prior but is not currently active. Others were re-elected:

Allen Power* of Salem Media Group; Mike Tarter of Forcht Broadcasting; Nick Martin* of Big River Broadcasting; Chris Ornelas* of Beasley Media Group; Dana Withers* of Withers Broadcasting and Dana Communications; Carolyn Becker of Riverfront Broadcasting; Collin Jones of Cumulus Media; station owner David Hoxent; Matt Mnich* of North American Broadcasting; Bradford Caldwell of Caldwell Media; Roger Harris of Chickasaw Nation; and Trila Bumstead of Ohana Media Group.

Their two-year terms begin in June.

Ornelas brings a great deal of NAB experience to his board role. After a decade with the association he left in 2020 to become executive vice president and general counsel at Beasley. (His successor in his NAB COO role, Curtis LeGeyt, will become NAB’s president/CEO at the end of this year.)

NAB also announced that David Bevins, COO of Connoisseur Media, was appointed to a designated seat on the radio board.

 

The post NAB Radio Board Gets New Members appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Inside the April 14 Issue of Radio World

Radio World
4 years ago

Changes ahead for emergency alerting … drone inspections can save you trouble … remembering a radio tower on a little rock island …

Also, audio processors from Inovonics, Orban, Ross Video, SEPsoniX, Telos Alliance, Wheatstone and WorldCast Systems; and a useful resource for FCC rules.

These stories are in the latest issue.

Read the April 14 issue.

The post Inside the April 14 Issue of Radio World appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Saturday Is Vinylthon, to Celebrate Records

Radio World
4 years ago

Vinyl lovers, here’s a needle drop for you: This Saturday, April 17, is Vinylthon.

The celebration of “the magic and warmth of vinyl” is put on by the College Radio Foundation, which says the event is open “to all radio stations, commercial and noncommercial.”

“Vinylthon is the radio industry’s response to the remarkable vinyl renaissance that continues around the world,” the organizers say in their announcement. Approximately 100 stations in 12 countries plan to recognize the day; for example WMSC(FM) at Montclair State University in New Jersey will celebrate its 54th anniversary with 54 hours of playing vinyl records.

The sixth annual event benefits efforts of the foundation to help keep college stations on the air. Participation is free for noncom stations. “There is a small registration fee for commercial radio stations to benefit the foundation.”

Founder Rob Quicke is general manager of WPSC(FM) at William Paterson University of New Jersey. “Playing vinyl on the air is an amazing, hands-on experience for many of today’s radio broadcasters, and a trip down memory lane for the listeners,” he said in the announcement.

Numerous artists including Andrew Farriss of INXS, Ritchie Kotzen of Poison and Gordy Marshall of The Moody Blues are supportive.

The post Saturday Is Vinylthon, to Celebrate Records appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

EBU’s New Head of Radio Sees Opportunity, Peril

Radio World
4 years ago
Edita Kudláčová (Photo by Khalil Baalbaki)

In March, Edita Kudláčová started her new job as the European Broadcasting Union’s head of radio.

In a presentation tomorrow, she will discuss her vision for the medium at the EBU’s online Radio Assembly.

She’ll tell Europe’s largest gathering of senior public radio officials that public radio is faced with a one-in-a-lifetime opportunity as well as extreme competition in the audio market, and discuss her ideas for approaching those challenges.

Radio World spoke to Kudláčová prior to the event and was allowed a preview of her comments.

Prior to assuming her new role, Kudláčová spent more than 12 years working for Czech Radio, rising from senior international relations specialist to chief creative producer. She has won many award including first prize for Best European Online Project and the Journalism Award at the 2019 Prix Europa for “1968 Project.”

Kudláčová has been a member of the EBU’s New Radio Group and, prior to that, the International Relations Radio Group.

COVID-19 and public radio

Kudláčová said that, confronted with a global pandemic, the world’s citizens have been eager for information to get them through this difficult time. In Europe, a large number have turned to public broadcasters for help.

“As a result, we have seen an increase in listeners to many public radio stations/networks during the past 12 to 13 months,” she said.

“The first increase occurred during the first lockdown in March and April last year. The second increase took place last autumn due to a second wave of lockdowns in European countries.”

According to the EBU’s audience research, listeners tuned to European public radio for a variety of reasons during the pandemic. The first area of audience growth was news.

“People choose radio because it is able to deliver trustworthy information quite quickly,” Kudláčová said. “The second increase that we saw was in entertainment content, which was for music streaming and music listening on air and FM.”

Radio also gained listenership among young people, in part because “lots of parents were looking for some sort of ‘visual detox’ to keep their children from staring at screens all the time,” she told Radio World.

All told, up to 26% of young people in Europe have been tuning into radio during the pandemic. This is a high level of listenership “which we have not seen in previous years, driven by public radio’s formats for these age groups.”

Opportunity and peril

Pandemic-driven growth in public radio listenership comes at a time when the medium is facing an increasing number of fierce competitors, both on air and particularly streaming on the web. Public radio is faced with a “one-in-a-lifetime opportunity as well as extreme competition in the audio market,” said Kudláčová. This is why European public radio has to act now to retain and grow its percentage of listeners in the multi-platform universe.

Achieving this means applying EBU members’ considerable expertise in producing high-quality audio content to create compelling content in music, sports, the arts and children’s programming, she said. Moreover, this content has to grab the attention of 21st century listeners who now enjoy an unprecedented degree of content choice.

“A lot of our member countries are already faced with increased competition in the audio market, because many digital platforms that previously only distributed audio content are now producing it as well,” Kudláčová noted.

“The degree of extreme competition that is emerging for listeners will force us to innovate quite quickly in order to survive.”

Edita Kudláčová plans to make this kind of innovation a priority for the EBU’s members and working groups, “to see where we can cooperate and progress with all of this together.”

Since her duties extend to the EBU’s Music Unit, Kudláčová is also working closely with musicians and music producers to survive COVID-caused concert cancellations.

“The EBU is already running a series of seminars together with the music creation industry on how best we can support the whole music scene and what needs to be done when the pandemic is over.”

Advancing digital and hybrid radio

The continuing progress of digital radio, specifically DAB+, and the deployment of hybrid radio within cars/trucks to retain radio’s share of the vital mobile market are priorities for Kudláčová.

“My division will continue to support the growth of DAB+ broadcasting across EBU member countries and to secure the position of public service radio in the digital market,” she said.

“The world needs independent, trustworthy public service radio now more than ever.”

As well, the EBU’s radio division will continue to work with EBU Technology & Innovation and the EBU’s Connected Cars and Devices working group to innovate the radio experience in cars and trucks.

“We’ll need to be looking at this year so that public radio stays relevant on ‘connected dashboards,’” Kudláčová said.

“I think this is a very big priority for public radio, because we need to cooperate on the international level in order to succeed — both in terms of the technology being used and the content being produced. We have to ensure that the content we distribute online makes sense for the online environment. We can do only if the EBU has an international strategy that is shared and endorsed by our members.”

Kudláčová has an ambitious agenda to fulfill as the EBU’s Head of Radio. This said, she considers herself a team player.

“It’s important that our EBU members are involved in this process, so that we really do this together,” she said. “I take it as a top priority to make sure that everyone involved in our radio efforts are well-connected and well-informed about what is going on, and that our agenda is clear and open to input from all of them.”

The post EBU’s New Head of Radio Sees Opportunity, Peril appeared first on Radio World.

James Careless

Radio Rules! (A Helpful Resource From NAB)

Radio World
4 years ago
An image from “Radio Rules: A Guide to FCC Regulations for Radio Stations”

Do you know precisely what information needs to be included in your station log? Are you current with the rules governing gaming ads? Do you know the legal definitions of obscenity and plugola?

A short new training course from the National Association of Broadcasters can help you or your employees with these questions.

The association is offering the scenario-based training to help people in U.S. radio have a better understanding of regulations from the Federal Communications Commission.

The course includes a lesson and four “learning activities” that take less than an hour to work through.

You also get an online PDF of the NAB’s longstanding guidebook that summarizes relevant FCC rules and policies about programming and station operation. 

The guide has been updated for 2021. Its material is divided into four sections. 

The Content section explains rules about the broadcast of phone conversations, contests and promotions, defamation and privacy, hoax broadcasts, obscenity, payola and similar topics. Your air talent and promotions folks definitely need to be current on this material.

The Advertising section covers alcohol, lotteries and gaming, political advertising, tobacco and marijuana issues and donor acknowledgements, among other things. Some of these topics are sensitive and fast-changing and may vary by your locale. This is obviously an important section for your sales team.

Station Operation & Management digs into topics like the EAS rules, EEO, elimination of the main studio rule, RF radiation, station logs and tower lighting.

And there’s a whole section on Public Files & Reporting. I think most broadcasters forgot to review those rules in recent years, given the rash of consent decrees that the FCC has recently announced; the settlements don’t involve financial penalties, but sooner or later I suspect the commission will decide that broadcasters have now had fair warning to get their online public files in order.

“Radio Rules: A Guide to FCC Regulations for Radio Stations” is written so that anyone working in radio can understand it. While the course and guidebook don’t replace your station attorney, they might save you from having to make an uncomfortable call to that same lawyer down the road.

The course with PDF costs $89.99 unless you are an NAB member, then the price drops to $29.99. Info is at https://education.nab.org/courses/28060.

 

The post Radio Rules! (A Helpful Resource From NAB) appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Dallow Takes Helm for Cox in Tulsa

Radio World
4 years ago

Cox Media Group has named Kim Dallow to head its Tulsa, Okla., radio cluster.

She was named director of radio operations, reporting to Regional VP Cathy Gunther. The cluster has five FM stations.

[Read: CMG Puts Long in Charge in Atlanta]

“Dallow brings to this role 26 years of experience in radio, including 14 years with CMG in the Tulsa market,” the company wrote in the announcement. Gunther said Dallow has been “serving unofficially as our operations manager for about a year now and our cluster has only improved with her at the helm.” She succeeds Nate Reed, who transferred to Florida last year.

She has been marketing and promotions director for the cluster for 11 years and the director of branding & programming for 103.3 The Eagle KJSR(FM) for five years. She will continue to program that station.

Send your people news to radioworld@futurenet.com.

 

The post Dallow Takes Helm for Cox in Tulsa appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Sinclair, Fraunhofer Will Integrate DRM in ATSC 3.0

Radio World
4 years ago
Sinclair’s MarkONE mobile phone receives an ATSC 3.0 transmission with full-featured DRM radio services. (Photo: Sinclair)

Mark Aitken, senior vice president of advanced technology at the Sinclair Broadcast Group, flipped the switch on a 100 W transmitter to begin broadcasting ATSC 3.0 TV from atop the station group’s corporate headquarters in Hunt Valley, Md.

It is with the express purpose of testing reception on small devices like its MarkONE 3.0-enabled smartphone and, in particular, integration of Digital Radio Mondiale in its broadcast app.

The launch comes on the same day Sinclair and German technology research institute Fraunhofer IIS jointly announced they are working together to bring audio services using the DRM standard to ATSC 3.0. (Earlier this year, Sinclair rolled out 3.0 simulcasts of its Seattle radio stations with its DRM-based broadcast app.)

“We are actually building the DRM radio service into the [3.0] broadcast app environment,” Aitken said. “That means those [DRM] services will be carried in band and transported just like HEVC [high-efficiency video coding] and [Dolby] AC-4.”

While DRM relies on Fraunhofer’s xHE-ACC codec and the specified audio codec for the U.S. deployment of ATSC 3.0 is Dolby AC-4, the unsupported audio codec can be integrated into the 3.0 ecosystem via Sinclair’s ATSC 3.0 broadcast app, says Aitken.

“Even television sets through the [ATSC] A/344 interactive environment will be able to grab that app, consume the [DRM] player and bring that [xHE-AAC-based] player into the operational environment of the TV set,” says Aitken.

However, Aiken emphasizes that Sinclair’s NextGen TV programming will use the Dolby AC-4 codec. Only its audio services, such as the STIRR Radio simulcasts in Seattle, will leverage xHE-AAC coding through the DRM player in its broadcast app.

The strategy behind bringing DRM to the ATSC 3.0 ecosystem is multifaceted, says Aitken.

Uniting DRM with ATSC 3.0 offers benefits internationally. For instance, in India some 200 languages and dialects are spoken and the most prevalent means of receiving content is the mobile phone. Bringing 3.0 and DRM into harmony could offer broadcasters a way to build out a single broadcast infrastructure to deliver both TV and radio stations while offering a bandwidth-efficient way to reach radio listeners regionally in their own tongue, says Aiken.

“Bringing the rich digital radio experience of DRM to the innovative ATSC TV platform is a perfect win-win situation for users and broadcasters alike,” says Alexander Zink, senior business development manager for broadcast applications at Fraunhofer.

Sinclair, too, plans to leverage the bandwidth efficiency of xHE-AAC in the U.S. to deliver stereo audio services at as little as 26 kbps per channel over the air via its 3.0 broadcast app. It also is looking at how other DRM-based services might serve the public, such as Fraunhofer’s Journaline interactive information service.

One of the primary goals of the 3.0 rollout in Maryland, operating under a special temporary authority (STA) license from the FCC, will focus on the use of these DRM services and other broadcast app features on small receivers, says Aitken.

Further, Aitken is hopeful that combining 3.0 and DRM in mobile devices, such as Sinclair’s Mark One smartphone, will advance the station group’s effort to get 3.0 receivers into vehicles as an affordable alternative to delivering data to cars and trucks via LTE wireless service, he says.

“Being able to demonstrate these services to the automotive world [with a Mark One-type mobile phone in a vehicle] allows them to begin to think about ATSC 3.0 for data delivery,” says Aitken. “By the end of the year, there will be upwards of 70% or more of the U.S. public served [with 3.0] by at least one broadcast facility, and the aspiration of companies like BitPath is to have multiple channels with bandwidth available over the next two to three years.”

 

The post Sinclair, Fraunhofer Will Integrate DRM in ATSC 3.0 appeared first on Radio World.

Phil Kurz

Mediahuis Selects OmniPlayer

Radio World
4 years ago

Benelux broadcaster Mediahuis is installing the OmniPlayer 3 radio automation software platform for its Flanders-located stations in Belgium. That includes its NRJ- and Nostalgie-branded stations along with individual stations of other formats.

Mediahuis Technical Manager Luc de Groote pointed to OmniPlayer’s ability to create separate brand-oriented versions of a program for each station. He explained, “The stations NRJ and Nostalgie, each with six regional editions, will use the edition function. With this, broadcasters can add advertisement blocks regionally and broadcast them simultaneously.”

[Read: OmniPlayer Chosen by RTL Belgium]

De Groote also noted that the company was familiar with OmniPlayer and “it is a stable and robust system.”

In addition to standard automation features, OmniPlayer 3 is bringing along a news editing and playout system.

According to a release the rollout will start with the singular format stations and then move to the larger NRJ and Nostalgie groups.

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

 

The post Mediahuis Selects OmniPlayer appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Ohio LPFM Won’t Have to Pay Fine

Radio World
4 years ago

The Federal Communications Commission has canceled a $3,500 penalty against a low-power radio station in Ohio.

The FCC’s Media Bureau had issued the notice of apparent liability for forfeiture to Lighthouse Ministries of Northwest Ohio, licensee of WKJH(LP) in Bryan, Ohio for failing to file a license renewal application and “willfully and repeatedly” violating the Communications Act by staying on the air after the license had expired.

An application should have been filed by June 1, 2020, to avoid expiration on Oct. 1. The station did not file a renewal application, so the bureau issued a public notice announcing the station’s license had expired.

Not until late October did the station file its application and ask for reconsideration, and the FCC then set a $3,500 penalty. But the station replied that it did not have the resources to pay, and it submitted financial documentation to that effect.

“We accept licensee’s showing — based on its financial statements — that payment of the proposed forfeiture would create a financial hardship,” the FCC wrote. “Accordingly, we will cancel the proposed forfeiture.” But it admonished the station for its “willful violation.”

The post Ohio LPFM Won’t Have to Pay Fine appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

NAB Announces Crystal Radio Winners

Radio World
4 years ago

The National Association of Broadcasters announced the winners of the annual NAB Crystal Radio Awards.

They are:

KSL(FM) Salt Lake City

KRSP(FM) Salt Lake City

KSTP(FM) St. Paul

WBAP(AM) Dallas

WDRV(FM) Chicago

WFXE(FM) Columbus, Ga.

WJJY(FM), Brainerd, Minn.

WMMR(FM), Philadelphia

WSB(FM), Atlanta

WWRM(FM), Tampa

The NAB Crystal Radio Awards recognize U.S. radio stations for their year-round commitment to community service.

Howard University’s WHUR(FM) in Washington received the Crystal Heritage Award. This recognizes stations that have won five Crystal Radio Awards for exceptional year-round community service efforts. Nine others have received the Heritage award.

The post NAB Announces Crystal Radio Winners appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Audacy Extends Its Contract With Veritone

Radio World
4 years ago

Veritone said it has extended its analytics service agreement with Audacy, the former Entercom Communications.

The supplier said Entercom was one of the first adopters of its Veritone Discovery product, a content search and analysis program that uses artificial intelligence to organize and analyze its “unstructured media.”

[Read: AI Is the Next Step in Redefining Radio Ad Sales ROI]

Veritone said it is processing over 2 million hours of Audacy content annually.

“With Veritone Discovery, Audacy is also able to rapidly visualize and correlate advertising efficacy for over 230 stations in 47 markets nationwide,” the supplier stated in a press release.

Veritone said its Discovery system has recent updates including new Earned Media monitoring features, expanded audience data analytics and updated reporting customization features.

The announcement was made by Veritone SVP Drew Hilles and Audacy Chief Revenue Officer Bob Phillips.

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

 

The post Audacy Extends Its Contract With Veritone appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

ABA Will Send 20 People to NAB Events

Radio World
4 years ago

The Alabama Broadcasters Association will pay for 20 broadcasters to attend the NAB Show or associated events this October, and it plans a drawing to choose them.

The association has allotted up to $2,500 per person to cover airfare to Las Vegas, meeting registration and hotel; it will conduct the drawing on April 30.

Radio World asked ABA President Sharon Tinsley about the program.

Radio World: What prompted this effort?

Sharon Tinsley: It has been a tough year for broadcasters and budgets are tight. This is a way the ABA can help broadcasters attend the trade shows and have the continuing education opportunities they need at a time when they might not have the funds to do so on their own.

RW: What are the general guidelines?

Tinsley: We’re requiring that persons who submit their names be employees of member stations; they must have worked in the state in the business for at least three years; they have to include a narrative about how they hope to benefit from the experience; and a manager must also submit the employee’s name to be included in the drawing.

RW: Has ABA done this before?

Tinsley: We’ve done this on a much smaller scale in the past. We’ve offered to pay registration fees to the NAB’s Sales and Management Television Exchange and the fall Radio Show for several years, for up to five people to attend each. This year, we’re offering to cover the majority of the cost and for many more people.

RW: What is your general sense of the willingness of broadcasters to get back to physical trade shows and other in-person events?

Tinsley: I sense that people are eager to attend meetings in person again. We’re getting a great response to announcements like this one about the NAB meetings and our plans to host the ABA conference in person later this year.

Our vaccination rollout is going well in Alabama. In half our counties, over 30% of the population has had at least one dose. At this point, all persons over age 16 are eligible. We are ahead of the national average for vaccinations.

RW: What else should we know?

Tinsley: We’re hosting an in-person gathering of about 35 broadcasters at a Birmingham area hotel ballroom to view the National Association of Broadcasters’ State Leadership Conference together in May. We are taking measures to ensure everyone’s safety with only one or two people each at large dining table. We’re doing everything we can to bring people together, but keep them far enough apart!

Also, we are awarding $25,000 in Education Debt Retirement Grants this year, through which we will pay off $5,000 of student debt for five broadcasters. This is our second year to do this. And we are endowing a $50,000 scholarship fund at another Alabama college or university this spring. It will be our third year to do so.

Alabama broadcasters interested in the program should contact Sharon Tinsley. The deadline is April 30 at 4 p.m. Central time.

The NAB Show is scheduled for Oct. 9–13 in Las Vegas. The fall Radio Show is collocated with it on Oct. 13 and 14. Registrants to SMTE and the Radio Show can access to NAB Show exhibit floor at no additional cost.

The post ABA Will Send 20 People to NAB Events appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Automotive Audio Workshops Organized by RadioDNS and WorldDAB

Radio World
4 years ago

The author is project director of RadioDNS. His commentaries appear regularly in Radio World.

Fig. 1 — What happens when functionality implementation is misaligned.

Consider two organizations, both well established, commercially successful and global in reach. One makes products that the other distributes to consumers, each equally reliant on the other.

It would be pointless to make a product that couldn’t be distributed to consumers, or to create a distribution network for a product that doesn’t exist. And yet that happens when radio stations create services that car radios can’t use, and car radios implement functionality that radio stations don’t support. It’s a waste of time (and money) that we don’t have a lot of. When auto manufacturers work with companies like Spotify or Sirius XM, they get a clear brief, consistently implemented.

[Read: SurferNetwork Partners With RadioDNS]

Part of the challenge is the diversity and scale of the radio industry. Radio isn’t one single organization, but a myriad of different owners, brands, products and technical capabilities. On the relatively egalitarian radio dial, a huge media organization with big production budgets can be side-by-side with a small community broadcaster that works hard to stay on-air. Both have a presence that needs to be available to consumers. When you’re an automotive manufacturer, you can hear from a cacophony of radio stations, and working out if they’re all asking for the same things but in different ways is impossibly time-consuming.

The radio industry is getting better at focusing its requirements and communicating them clearly, and the automotive industry is getting better at realizing that communication with broadcasters avoids costly misunderstandings. Organizations like the NAB, WorldDAB and RadioDNS create opportunities for both sides to talk through the detail of how to implement the best possible radio experience in the car.

WorldDAB and RadioDNS jointly organize Automotive Workshops three times a year, specifically to address things that aren’t working as well as could be expected. These roundtable meetings discuss a mixture of current implementation issues, and identify gaps in functionality that could be easily closed. This focus on here, now and addressable problems is very different from the longer term horizon of groups like the WorldDAB Technical Committee or the RadioDNS Technical Group.

At the latest workshop, held in February 2021, we discussed current issues where we can see that the alignment between broadcasters and manufacturers isn’t right, and is causing problems.

Fig. 2 — Examples of DL+ rendering (Photo: Ford)

On the subject of providing real-time metadata, we looked at the big divergence between the relatively widespread support in cars for DL+ (and RT+), which allows specific identification of artist, title and other key pieces of metadata, and the fairly poor support of it by broadcasters. It was an opportunity for auto manufacturers to show how that function is displayed to drivers and why they value it, which was new information for many broadcasters. It’s a function that’s implemented and broadcasters haven’t been utilizing because they didn’t understand why they should.

We also discussed driver distraction, which is influencing so many decisions in the automotive industry about what drivers can see and can do. We talked about how broadcasters could reduce the risks of creating distractions by considering issues such as the repetition speed of text information and tailoring visual content to consider design elements like text size, text density, colors and brightness, particularly the potential for distracting glare from bright images during night time. It’s an effective way for manufacturers to educate broadcasters on how to create content and support functionality that manufacturers want and can include in vehicles.

Fig. 3 — Examples of visuals in the eye line of the driver

RadioDNS and WorldDAB run a help desk facility for broadcasters and manufacturers, recognizing that often the problem with solving a problem is getting hold of the right person. By acting as an information exchange, they can route problems to the people who can solve them, and look out for trends and issues that should be addressed by the whole community.

At the workshop RadioDNS and WorldDAB also announced they will be carrying out an extensive and detailed survey of manufacturers’ and broadcasters’ capabilities, to identify and close as many implementation gaps as possible. The first results will be presented to the next workshop, and comprehensive results available later in the year. It’s an opportunity to create a step change in the experience of radio in cars on the road today for the least effort on behalf of both broadcasters and manufacturers.

The automotive workshops are unique in structure, encouraging interaction and discussion about implementation and problem solving. With over 70 people attending the last workshop, they’re also very well attended with people with knowledge and ability.

The next WorldDAB and RadioDNS Automotive Workshop will be on June 8. Information about registration will be made available close to the time, on both the WorldDAB and RadioDNS websites.

 

The post Automotive Audio Workshops Organized by RadioDNS and WorldDAB appeared first on Radio World.

Nick Piggott

Radio+TV: ATSC 3.0 to Incorporate DRM Support

Radio World
4 years ago
Sinclair’s MarkONE mobile phone is shown in a promotional image receiving an ATSC3.0 transmission with DRM radio services.

Fraunhofer and Sinclair will work together to integrate Digital Radio Mondiale into the ATSC 3.0 digital TV platform.

Their agreement will help advance Sinclair’s goal of incorporating audio services into ATSC 3.0 and its MarkONE mobile phone. The organizations said their ultimate aim is “the adoption of both standards worldwide for the benefit of broadcasters and listeners alike.”

Fraunhofer IIS is familiar in radio circles as developer of audio codecs including xHE-AAC. Sinclair Broadcast Group is a media company and major proponent of ATSC 3.0. The organizations said they are “joining forces to bring the best possible digital radio experience based on DRM to users of the ATSC 3.0 digital TV platform.”

Using digital TV to disseminate radio in new ways is an idea that Sinclair is already exploring in Seattle, promoting it as a new way to combine internet and over-the-air audio.

This week’s announcement was made by Alexander Zink, senior business development manager for broadcast applications at Fraunhofer IIS, and Mark Aitken, SVP of Sinclair Broadcast Group and the president of ONE Media 3.0.

Zink pointed to the rollout of ATSC 3.0 in South Korea and the United States as evidence of its success, and said DRM “is adopted in a steadily growing number of countries all over the world.” DRM is used for medium-wave digital broadcasting in India and is competing to provide FM services there.

[Related: “Digital Radio Mondiale in Focus in India”]

Sinclair and Fraunhofer IIS plan a demonstration of transmission of DRM-based services over ATSC 3.0. “This joint project is expected to open the door to close collaboration between the respective standard bodies, the ultimate goal being the adoption of both standards worldwide for the benefit of broadcasters and listeners alike.”

Digital Radio Mondiale is a digital radio platform that uses the xHE-AAC codec and Journaline on-demand information service.

The collaboration of Sinclair and Fraunhofer IIS aims at establishing the seamless transport of DRM-based services with all their advanced digital radio features on the ATSC 3.0 TV platform,” Fraunhofer and Sinclair said in a press release.

“This allows established DRM broadcasters to create the DRM content once and then distribute it simultaneously via dedicated digital AM/FM transmissions and on the digital TV platform.” It said listeners get a “seamless and full-featured digital radio experience across all broadcast platforms” using any reception device such as radio and TV sets, mobile phones and car receivers.

[Related: “Why Should Radio Care About ATSC 3.0?”]

 

The post Radio+TV: ATSC 3.0 to Incorporate DRM Support appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Stanberry Joins NAB Lobbying Team

Radio World
4 years ago

Charlyn Stanberry has been hired on to join the lobbying team at the National Association of Broadcasters.

She will be vice president of government relations and report to Shawn Donilon, executive vice president of government relations.

Stanberry is former chief of staff for Rep. Yvette Clarke, a Democratic congresswoman from New York, for whom she also worked as legislative director and counsel.

[Read: LeGeyt Is Experienced D.C. Lobbyist]

Past roles also include VP of external affairs for Net Communications; counsel for the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council; and professional staff member for the Congressional Black Caucus. She was a regional voter protection director in Florida for the Hillary Clinton campaign in 2016.

She also is an adjunct professor at the University of the District of Columbia where she teaches Foundation Civics and Ethics & Values.

In the announcement, NAB President/CEO Gordon Smith said Stanberry “has excelled on Capitol Hill, in the private sector and in the legal community, and commands expert knowledge of the legislative process.”

Last week, NAB announced that Smith plans to retire from the association at the end of this year, to be succeeded by Curtis LeGeyt, a veteran of that same lobbying department.

The post Stanberry Joins NAB Lobbying Team appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

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