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Radio World

SBE Names Its New Regulatory Counsel

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago
Stephen Hartzell (left) and Coe W. Ramsey

The law firm of Brooks, Pierce, McLendon, Humphrey & Leonard LLP will take on the duties of regulatory counsel to the Society of Broadcast Engineers.

As we previously reported, SBE General Counsel Chris Imlay announced last year he was stepping down, having worked with the SBE since 1980 and as its general counsel since 1993.

Former President Wayne Pecena led a search committee and considered several candidates before making its recommendation to the SBE board in December.

[Read our profile story: “Imlay Prepares His Next Chapter”]

Two partners at Brooks Pierce, Stephen Hartzell and Coe W. Ramsey, will work with the society on its regulatory needs. “They both are experienced with broadcast technical regulatory issues, and Broadcast Auxiliary Services in particular, and they have worked with state broadcast associations,” SBE said in its announcement.

Imlay expressed support for the choice.

“In my experience, these able lawyers are well-positioned to work with the SBE Board to advocate for our members at the FCC, the NTIA and on Capitol Hill, especially in the area of spectrum protection,” said Imlay. “I have promised to be available to consult with them on current open issues and going forward to the extent they would like, and I will help [Executive Director] Jim Ragsdale and the SBE’s Indiana counsel with non-FCC legal issues going forward, as a volunteer.”

As we reported earlier, the society has split Imlay’s duties, planning also to hire an attorney for business matters based near its headquarters in Indianapolis.

The post SBE Names Its New Regulatory Counsel appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

AudioScience Notes “End of Life” for CobraNet

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

AudioScience has a heads-up for customers that use CobraNet: It’s time to say goodbye.

The company wrote in an email to clients, “We have been notified of the end-of-life date of the Cirrus Logic chip, the main component needed for CobraNet, with the option to make a last-time purchase. AudioScience is asking all CobraNet customers to place a last-time purchase. We ask for your assistance to ensure we are able to cover the quantities your company requires.”

The company said affected users should send purchase orders covering outstanding quotes, including spares for the rest of this year. “If you have longer-term contract commitments for CobraNet product support, these quantities should also be added/included in this purchase.”

CobraNet is a technology from Cirrus Logic that provides distribution of isochronous digital audio, control and monitoring data over Ethernet. It operates at the Data Link Layer, also referred to as OSI Layer 2 or MAC layer.

According to its website, AudioScience developed a variety of CobraNet sound cards and standalone CobraNet interfaces.

The post AudioScience Notes “End of Life” for CobraNet appeared first on Radio World.

T. Carter Ross

Genelec Personalizes Headphone Monitoring

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Genelec’s Aural ID software is now available as a DAW plug-in, which the company says delivers a more reliable and headphone-listening experience, providing audio professionals the confidence to switch between monitors and headphones freely.

Using video footage supplied by the user via the free Aural ID Creator mobile app, Genelec will analyze the way the user’s head, external ear and upper body affect and color audio arriving from all directions. Unique to the individual, this effect is called the head-related transfer function (HRTF).

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

ID’s cloud-based calculation engine then models the user’s head and upper torso to calculate their personal HRTF, and then renders audio in any direction within the Aural ID plug-in. The plug-in is available in VST, AAX and AU formats for integration into DAWs.

The Aural ID plug-in also allows users of Genelec Smart Active Monitors to import calibration files directly from Genelec GLM loudspeaker manager software.

Suitable for audio professionals, including those working remotely, according to the company, the Aural ID plug-in compensates for the sound coloration headphones can introduce.

The Aural ID plug-in is available directly from the Genelec Cloud platform via a cloud-based subscription service. For more information, visit www.genelec.com/aural-ID.

Send your new equipment news to radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post Genelec Personalizes Headphone Monitoring appeared first on Radio World.

Terry Scutt

Caller One Goes for the Glory

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

This article is part of our Buyer’s Guide feature on telco and talk show products for radio.

Glory Communications has been using the Broadcast Bionics Caller One talk show system since 2020 at urban inspirational station WFMV(AM) in Cayce, S.C., and the Worship and Word Network, which serves a large portion of South Carolina.

Caller One is a software talk show system that runs on a PC, webRTC and SIP Voice over IP technology to route calls to air without dedicated hardware. It was designed with smaller studios in mind.

Tony “Gee” Green, program director of WFMV and vice president of programming for Glory Communications, said installation and integration was easy. “It’s also a telephone interface that is very easy to learn and use.”

For WFMV, Caller One is used in a variety of ways, he said. “Since it’s a digital application, it has a superior sound for on-site remote broadcast. It’s also used, now more than ever due to COVID-19, as a platform for advertisers both for recording commercial content as well as live programs.”

It’s used to provide audio for artist interviews and for daily interactions with the station’s listening audience.

“As for the Worship and Word Network, its primary use is for talk show interviews and listener interactions. It’s an excellent application for the talk format because it offers you the opportunity to use more than one line at a time. Callers can not only call in to the host but they can hold conversations with each other or a remote host.” Broadcasters General Store is the U.S. dealer for the product.

Info: www.bionics.co.uk, www.bgs.cc

The post Caller One Goes for the Glory appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

FCC Issues Reminder on Filing Process

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

The FCC’s Media Bureau is reminding everyone that applications and submissions that can be submitted using its Licensing and Management System must be submitted that way.

This may seem obvious; however, as we’ve reported, the bureau recently announced that it will no longer accept any filings in its old Consolidated Database System (CDBS), and it set up procedures for the public to submit certain types of filings by email pending final transition of all filings to LMS.

This apparently caused some confusion, so now comes a reminder that the Media Bureau will not accept applications that are required to be filed using LMS but that are submitted using those new email filing procedures. The latter procedures just apply to those types that until recently would have been submitted via CDBS. (Here’s that earlier announcement, if you’re not sure which types are involved.)

“As of Jan. 12, 2022, all Media Bureau filings that cannot be submitted using LMS must be submitted by email to audiofilings@fcc.gov.”

It also reminded filers that emailed submissions must include the required Anti-Drug Abuse Act Certification. It also addressed other required information and fees. For those details and guidance about sending questions to the FCC, see the bureau’s latest announcement.

The post FCC Issues Reminder on Filing Process appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

CMG Taps Moore for Ohio

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Cox Media Group has appointed Darren Moore as VP/GM of CMG Ohio effective immediately. He will oversee CMG Ohio operations, including news, programming, sales, digital, engineering, production and community affairs for WHIO-TV, 95.3 and 101.1 The Eagle (WZLR), 1290 and 95.7 WHIO, and K99.1 New Country (WHKO-FM), in Dayton, Ohio.

Moore joined CMG 26 year ago as an intern for WPXI(TV) in Pittsburgh, launching a career built on his early childhood memories of visiting the station with his father, a former CMG employee. After finishing his internship, he relocated to Charlotte to work as an account executive for the newly launched WAXN-TV, before returning to Pittsburgh where he eventually became director of sales at WPXI.

“Darren’s passion for people, the broadcasting industry and CMG is infectious and inspiring,” said Paul Curran, EVP of Television at CMG.

The post CMG Taps Moore for Ohio appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Vinylthon 2022 Honors Warmth, Vitality of Vinyl

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Calling all vinyl aficionados: Apr. 23, 2022, will be the day to celebrate the unique, much-loved and resurging medium known as vinyl. Vinylthon 2022 will feature a full day of vinyl-only broadcasts from stations across the U.S. and around the world.

The nonprofit College Radio Foundation, which is organizing the event, described Vinylthon as the radio industry’s response to the “remarkable vinyl renaissance” that continues around the world. The event is open to all stations both commercial and noncommercial and will raise scholarship funds for students interested in a career in the radio industry.

“This event is a hugely fun day for both listeners and broadcasters alike,” said Vinylthon Founder Rob Quicke, a faculty advisor at WPSC(FM) at William Paterson University in Wayne, N.J. “People are still very passionate about the magic and warmth of vinyl.”

Over the past 15 years, sales of vinyl have seen steady growth, reaching a “post-Napster high” of $467 million in the first half of 2021, according to the Recording Industry Association of America, despite supply chain shortfalls affecting production. In 2020, vinyl sales overtook CD sales for the first time since the 1980s.

2022 marks the seventh Vinylthon event, with more than 150 radio stations participating in 2021. The event has been supported in the past by music artists such as Andrew Farriss from INXS, Edie Brickell & New Bohemians, Ritchie Kotzen from Mr. Big and Poison, and Mike Peters from The Alarm.

The event is free for noncommercial radio stations to register; there is a small fee for commercial stations to participate, said Quicke. “Commercial radio stations that participate are paying it forward to the next generation of professional broadcasters, who really need the financial support,” he said.

Stations that air more than 12 hours of vinyl-only recordings during the event will earn the Golden Slipmat Award — a pair of golden slipmats that can be used on turntables or displayed on a studio wall.

“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,” Quicke said.

The organization has released additional information on the event, including information on registering and a list of participating stations. As of press time, nearly 100 U.S. stations and a dozen international stations had registered.

The post Vinylthon 2022 Honors Warmth, Vitality of Vinyl appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

Futuri Names Gilliam, Storch to New Roles

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago
Tracy Gilliam (left) and Todd Storch

From our People News page: Futuri has created two new positions. Tracy Gilliam was named chief strategy officer, and Todd Storch becomes chief revenue officer.

Futuri offers audience engagement and sales intelligence services for broadcasters and digital publishers, using artificial intelligence and the cloud. Daniel Anstandig is its CEO.

“Gilliam will focus on M&A and strategic growth, as well as further developing Futuri’s client solutions and best-in-class Customer Experience team,” the company wrote.

Futuri in 2015 acquired TopLine Matters, a sales intelligence system Gilliam launched. She also is a former general sales manager for CBS Radio in Los Angeles and VP/market manager for Clear Channel, now iHeartMedia.

“Storch will be responsible for driving Futuri’s continued revenue growth through aligned sales and marketing go-to-market strategies and operational plans for profitable growth,” Futuri wrote.

He is former CEO of Kindrid and Five Star Global, and was SVP, Strategic Initiatives at Ministry Brands. He’s a former VP/senior consultant at The Center for Sales Strategy and co-founder of Taylor’s Gift Foundation.

Send your people news to radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post Futuri Names Gilliam, Storch to New Roles appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Lawo Ends Production of Sapphire

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Lawo has announced the end of production of its sapphire mixing console.

In an email notice to clients, it said existing users have a window to buy modules and boards through June.

The sapphire was introduced in 2010. “We always aim to maintain availability of our products for as long as possible; however, the discontinuation of key components and other factors inevitably leads to the end of a product’s life,” the company stated.

“Sapphire and Nova17 technology have been at the heart of many of the largest broadcast productions over the last decade. The product family supports many different application scenarios and various types of audio formats, with the introduction of Ravenna connectivity as early as 2012,” it wrote.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

“With the introduction of the new diamond surface in late 2021, sapphire and its related components approached the end of its life as a mixing console.”

For existing installations that use sapphire modules, Nova17 core and DALLIS Master boards, Lawo is offering a final purchase window until June 30.

“Lawo’s service team will continue to support all sapphire installations based on the final software release for each sapphire module,” it continued.

“Support will be offered according to our terms and conditions of sale; however, due to increasing complexity in supply chain, Lawo’s support team will only be able to service sapphire with components still in stock; supplies of replacement components will be limited to stock on hand. Limited numbers of products for replacement may also be available until end of stock.”

As a product alternative, Lawo suggests its diamond console and Power Core.

The post Lawo Ends Production of Sapphire appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Xperi Files Data on HD Radio Alerting

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago
Example of an HD Radio visual alert on a Harman receiver.

Xperi believes its HD Radio technology is an efficient methodology for wirelessly broadcasting alert messages in the United States. Now it has submitted a report to the FCC in support of that argument.

The report includes information about the performance of HD Radio digital emergency alerting during the recent nationwide test of the Emergency Alert System.

“Digital emergency alerts delivered through HD Radio broadcasting offer diversity, reliability and resiliency of public safety messages,” the company told the commission.

[Related: National EAS Test Showed Improvement, FCC Says]

Xperi said it evaluated the reception of test alerts via HD Radio broadcast, ATSC broadcast and Wireless Emergency Alerts cellular service.

“The HD Radio alert system performed as well as the other digital alert services and demonstrated significant market coverage and low-latency delivery,” Xperi wrote.

HD Radio coverage area and test site for KOIT(FM) 96.5 MHz, San Francisco.

It points out that broadcast radio is not subject to network congestion delays and outages imposed by natural disasters associated with cellular standards such as LTE and 5G.

“Furthermore, anecdotal observations indicate that wireless alert latencies can vary across cellular carriers. While HD Radio alerts may have latency in different markets, the message notification to devices is generally consistent within a geographic region. Therefore, it is presumed that HD Radio alerts may, in many cases, be detected before wireless alerts are detected.”

Though acknowledging that the test was not “exhaustive or comprehensive,” Xperi wrote: “The tests confirmed that the latency for alerts to reach an HD Radio receiver was comparable to the latency for WEA alerts. There generally was a 10 to 20 second difference between the receipt of the emergency alert on the HD Radio receiver and on a mobile device — with the HD Radio emergency alert arriving first in some instances and the WEA arriving first in others. In some cases, no WEA alert was received at locations where an alert was received on the HD Radio device.”

It concludes that HD Radio emergency alerts “provide needed redundancy and corroborate messages received from other sources.”

It plans more testing to include “a wider distribution of digital radio markets and a deeper evaluation of digital TV (ATSC and ATSC3.0) message delivery.”

Here’s the Xperi presentation as filed with the FCC, including detailed observation data.

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

The post Xperi Files Data on HD Radio Alerting appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Ammons Is Back With Audacy

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Audacy named JR Ammons as operations manager of KQRC(FM) “98.9 The Rock,” KRBZ(FM) “ALT 96.5,” WDAF(FM) “106.5 The Wolf” and KZPT(FM) “99.7 The Point” in Kansas City.

He’ll also be brand manager of 106.5 The Wolf and 99.7 The Point. He starts Feb. 1.

The announcement was made by Senior Vice President and Market Manager, Audacy Kansas City Roxanne Marati.

[Visit Radio World’s People News Page]

It is a return to Audacy, the former Entercom, for Ammons. For 11 years he has been operations manager for three stations in Indianapolis that were owned by Entercom until their sale to Cumulus three years ago.

Send news of engineering and executive personnel changes to radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post Ammons Is Back With Audacy appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

A Chat With a Commissioner

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

In the latest issue of Radio World we give you a chance to get to know FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington.

He’s been serving for a little more than a year since being nominated by President Trump, and is starting to take a higher profile in our industry, with speaking appearances to broadcast organizations.

In Washington, a town full of political culture warriors, Simington seems the opposite — going out of his way to compliment Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, who is in the opposite party; praising his colleagues for bipartisanship; condemning the violence at the U.S. Capitol last year in one of his first actions as a commissioner; and remarking on his “appreciation for the traditions of vigorous, peaceful engagement that have characterized the nation’s 230 years of constitutional governance.”

I can’t say whether he’ll be a commissioner who always votes along party lines; should we ever get a fifth commissioner again we’ll see how FCC bipartisanship holds up on more contentious issues than the commission has taken up lately.

But I’m grateful for the way he approaches the job. Maybe his particular appreciation of his role comes from the fact that he is a native of Canada who has since become a U.S. citizen. Sometimes people who come to our country from elsewhere have a better grasp of its aspirational values than we do.

The decisions taken by our regulators play a crucial role in our jobs, our careers and the health of our employers. Radio World has sought over the years to air the views of regulators who have shown particular interest or understanding of radio issues, including leaders like Jim Quello, Mignon Clyburn, Ajit Pai, Geoffrey Starks and Michael O’Rielly. We’ve also had an open invitation to Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel and hope she’ll oblige us.

You can access the digital edition here.

The post A Chat With a Commissioner appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Getting to Know Nathan Simington

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Nathan Simington is still wondering how he got that first White House interview.

He was chosen for the Federal Communications Commission after President Trump abruptly pulled the renomination of Commissioner Michael O’Rielly. The latter had openly questioned whether the FCC had legal authority to issue new social media regulations.

Formerly senior advisor at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, Simington was confirmed to the FCC by the Senate in December 2020 on a 49–46 party line vote, with GOP colleagues touting his light-touch regulatory approach.

Simington, 42 and a native of Saskatchewan, Canada, holds one of two current Republican seats on the commission. As 2022 dawned, almost a year after President Biden took office, the FCC still had two Democrats and two Republicans, with the nomination of Democrat Gigi Sohn for the remaining seat held up on Capitol Hill.

The commissioner’s profile with broadcasters grew when he spoke in late autumn to state broadcast association events in Massachusetts and Ohio.

“The reality is: It’s hard out there for broadcasters,” he said at one event, expressing particular empathy for owners with just one or a handful of stations.

“Can we seriously think, at this moment, with the arrows pointing in the directions that they are, that we should be making it harder for these small, regulated entities to operate? You are all already burdened by a raft of regulations designed for a bygone era while your insurgent online competitors have functionally none of the same constraints. Should we now turn the screw?”

He also said the FCC should wait rather than make more changes to media ownership rules just now, recommending a strategy of “purposeful nothingness.”

Radio World interviewed Simington in December.

Radio World: Describe your regulatory philosophy.

Nathan Simington: I did not come up through the Washington regulatory world, I came up through the private capital world. Before joining the NTIA I was at a very large cellphone distributor and services company, and before that I was in private [law] practice.

When I’m looking at regulatory questions I feel like you really can’t divorce them from the questions about the effects on the markets and the capital market. So we need to put more of a premium on the question of regulatory certainty and stability.

Businesses can adapt to about any kind of stable environment, but what they can’t adapt to is an environment they can’t predict. Conveying certainty to the market, instead of constantly fiddling with regulations in order to reach some kind of imagined ideal state, is how we get to the overall public interest, necessity and convenience, and therefore fulfill our mission at the FCC.

This is especially important in broadcast and telecommunications because operators can’t plan for long-range builds when they can’t predict the operating environment they’ll be in. If the degree of uncertainty becomes too much, companies will restrict themselves. If we take that approach we’ll do more harm than good.

If we maintain stability, that will better serve the public.

RW: You’ve talked about challenges facing small radio broadcasters who must compete with mega online platforms. Broadcasters have argued that FCC regulations should acknowledge that radio and TV compete with less-regulated digital competitors.

Simington: There has always been a sense at the commission that broadcasting is special and that broadcasting occupies a different spot in the landscape than online video distribution. If you look at the materials coming out of the 2016 quad [quadrennial review], that was exactly the approach the commission took, saying that as of yet there is real no equivalency of service.

I think that discussion is going to continue to come under scrutiny.

The find of non-equivalence in 2016 was premised on the lack of adaptation that large online companies make to local conditions. I would turn that in its head and ask: “How much of broadcasting really was local prior?” Obviously there are elements of broadcasting that is very local. But a lot of broadcasting was nationally syndicated shows and in that world.

The FCC has always assumed that broadcast and online have been separate markets. But I think that decision grows less and less tenable and has to be justified by better and better fact finding. And if we can’t satisfy the standard, we’ll have to decide what it means when an entity we are regulating is competing with an entity that is almost totally unregulated — in some cases a small mom-and-pop scale versus a large international corporation.

RW: Does this mean less regulation for radio and TV or more regulation for big tech?

Simington: Based on how the younger generation consumes media, the distinction between broadcasters and online video distributors is becoming increasingly hard to [describe as] different markets. At some point, we have to ask how the premise that has been explicit in the law — that broadcasters have a special mission and thus require the FCC to maintain them as viable private commercial enterprises —interacts with the increased presence of big tech in the space and in local advertising dollars.

Fact finding previously has found these are different markets. I would encourage the commission to place that assumption under intense scrutiny, because from my perspective and my interaction with broadcasters, it is becoming farther and farther from the actual state of play.

RW: What is your view about the argument by the National Association of Broadcasters that radio and TV are unfairly burdened with regulatory fees, subsidizing FCC costs for oversight of entities that pay no fees?

Simington: The whole question of regulatory fees as a burden has been something my office has been on ever since I was confirmed. It is important to rethink the entire regulatory fee framework on a regular basis because the commission’s traditional division into broadcasting, wireless and wireline, while still viable today, doesn’t fully capture the reality of how media is consumed today.

As to whether regulatory fees should be accessed to online companies, that raises a bigger question: How are we going to regulate these online companies going forward?

Online companies is a grab-bag term. On the one hand, if Amazon is an online company, that’s different than saying Google is an online business. These are highly diversified businesses, in one case a big delivery and logistics business, in another case a server business, and in yet another a business that primarily runs on data.

[Read More of Our Interviews with News Makers.]

Finding a regulatory response has been difficult, not only for the FCC but for the Federal Trade Commission and Congress. I think a lot will depend on how Congress decides to treat the question of online companies and these new emerging categories in American business.

Whether it is fair to assess fees entirely on the back of broadcasters, when broadcasters are point of fact responsible for a much smaller portion of audio and video delivery, is really a question that answers itself. But the question of how to assess fees might turn on much larger questions before Congress.

RW: Do you support changing or eliminating local “subcaps” on how many radio stations a given entity can own in a market?

Simington: There is some inertia to overcome at the regulatory and at the congressional level of where broadcast stands to the economy as a whole. The broadcast sector is under pressure that it will find difficult to recover from without more thoughtful broadcast regulation in this country.

From my perspective, broadcasters have made a real commitment to build out local news and other local journalism. As such they have decided their market differentiator is localism.

So with that commitment to local content I’m less concerned about back-office function consolidation. Therefore I’d like to see liberalization of the ownership rules.

On the other hand, liberalization is widely perceived by many as allowing a single voice to dominate. But I would ask the obvious question that if we are concerned about a single voice dominating here, why are do we not care in other venues of media distribution?

I’m not sure if there is a coherent answer to that, other than this is just the way we have always done it.

RW: The FM band has become more crowded, most recently thanks to a huge increase in the number of translators. Is the commission concerned?

Simington: I really haven’t heard anything within the commission focusing on this issue right now. That could be a problem since the airwaves in general are coming under further pressure. I think the commission should take this up combined with my concern over receiver standards and the general question of how do we get a more efficient utilization of the bandwidth, which we can’t change. But there is no current item focusing on FM crowding.

RW: Many broadcasters say the commission let them down by cutting deeply into the number of enforcement personnel and field offices, and that the result is even less attention to pirate radio and harmful interference.

Simington: FCC personnel is growing again. It should bring a renewed focus on field enforcement. And one thing I’m working on — though I do not have details yet — is looking at delegating some type of enforcement powers outside the media sphere to local law enforcement, provided we can get across the necessary tech challenges. If that is the case hopefully more Enforcement Bureau resources will be available for this question.

RW: What are your thoughts about the FCC’s AM revitalization efforts?

Simington: It’s been a very valuable effort. I think it is a mistake to assume, as some people do, that other channels of media distribution will supersede the importance of AM radio.

RW: Revitalization was pushed by former Chairman Ajit Pai. What are your thoughts on his accomplishments?

Simington: I wish I’d had the chance to serve with him longer. I think he accomplished a lot.

Getting outside the world of radio for a second, he was massively instrumental in expanding broadband access in the United States. He did a lot of ensure that broadband quality got better. I’m proud of his work on spectrum auctions and COVID relief.

Something that doesn’t get much play in the media are infrastructure initiatives to make it faster and easier to deploy and launch.

Most important for radio might have been winning the Prometheus case, even though that happened after he had left the commission. Winning that paves the way for potential media liberalization on a number of fronts. The FCC now has more freedom of operation in this area than we have had in 17 or 18 years.

RW: The Senate recently confirmed Chairwoman Rosenworcel. What has it been like working with her?

Simington: I think she has done a fantastic job under sometimes trying circumstances throughout 2021. There is no doubt she has delivered successfully on a number of time-sensitive programs that Congress has given us, in some cases without real precedent. She has been bipartisan. We’ve gotten a lot done in the public interest. There have been a lot of 4–0 votes. We have had a wonderful collegial relationship.

Nonetheless, as acting chair there were maybe some items you wouldn’t take up that you would once you are full chair. She and I have been working on a number of long-term in initiatives. So my hope is that in 2022 that — despite the virtual assurance that the commission will emerge with a partisan majority, as it should — I nonetheless expect us to have many forward-looking partisan and non-partisan issues to take up in order to strengthen American competitiveness, improve security, improve efficiency and advance technology.

RW: What is your view on the nomination of Gigi Sohn?

Simington: When I’ve spoken to Gigi Sohn I’ve been very impressed. She is known for being very tough and very smart, and also has this rare quality where she is personally liked by those she has disagreements with. There is no question she knows the issues backwards and forwards. If she is confirmed I’m sure there are any number of issues where we can work in the public interest. I’m sure we’ll disagree on a few things, but that is politics.

RW: What is your personal experience with radio?

Simington: I grew up in rural southern Saskatchewan. My family homesteaded there in the early 1900s. So radio has been a very important part of my grandparent’s lives, my parent’s lives and my life. AM radio was the best mass media we had. We had a few snowy TV channels when I was young but that was it. I grew up with the radio always on.

RW: You recently made some warm remarks about the role of radio. Can you expand on those?

Simington: The historical role of radio in American life cannot be overstated as the first national medium. My background before I became a lawyer was in classical music. For me and a lot of people their first exposure to many kinds of music have been through the radio.

As for radio’s role today, before coming to Washington I spent a number of years in Florida, which has an extremely vibrant local radio culture. I was surprised by the relationship between radio stations and listeners and how loyal those relationships became. Radio was a big part of civic participation.

The thing about radio is that it is not just a technology but its own medium with its own culture and audience. And it has always been defined by being local. People make a conscious decision to tune to radio for critical information.

RW: When the Trump administration put your name forth you expressed some surprise that you’d been nominated. What do you think drew the president or his staff to you at the time?

Simington: Well I think the administration was even surprised by the situation it found itself in. I’m not going to speculate on exactly how my name ended up in the hat. I know the administration made a very broad appeal for potential commissioners. When I went to the White House to speak to the presidential personnel office for the first time I didn’t know what to tell them, so I told them what I had observed in my time in private industry about certain negative effects of capital management practices that I thought might impede the buildout of 5G. Maybe that was just nerdy enough to get it over the line.

But it was a process that involved building credibility. Frankly, it was a lot of learning, but I realized that the mandate of the FCC is so broad it just isn’t possible to know it all from the outside. I’ve had the opportunity to learn from some of the best on my way up so maybe that helped me get across the line.

RW: How does the FCC differ from the NTIA in its culture or inner workings?

Simington: The NTIA is one of the most underappreciated agencies in the federal government, though that is likely to change since it has been given the responsibility of disbursing so many funds during the broadband buildout.

The NTIA is a much smaller agency, about 250 people versus about 1,500 at the FCC, and as an executive branch agency it is not politically independent the way the FCC is. Instead the director reports directly to the president despite the agency being in Commerce.

As far as internal culture, the FCC has a much broader mandate because commercial and private use of spectrum is much greater than at the NTIA. The stakeholders are very different. Accountability is different.

Common qualities include engineering excellence and the commitment to the public mission. At the FCC we always try to be engineering-forward and fact-serving.

RW: How would you characterize your interaction with the Biden administration?

Simington: It’s actually been somewhat limited. Not any of it in a negative way. I tend to face industry more than I tend to face the administration. As far as politicization of the commission, I haven’t seen many signs of it. The administration has expressed views on issues related to the commission’s mission and our long-term activities. It really hasn’t impacted our deliberations or practices.

It’s only natural for an administration to have views on policy that intersect with our mission. External relations with the White House are more the province of Chairwoman Rosenworcel’s office. That’s not to say there isn’t any contact, but I would most likely go through her office to communicate with the White House.

Typically the FCC has had a very strong relationship with Congress. That has been more important for what I have been working on.

RW: The chairwoman has said that the latest data about broadcast ownership makes clear that women and people of color are underrepresented. What if anything should the FCC do? And do you support legislation to revive a tax certificate program for socially disadvantaged individuals?

Simington: The numbers are hard to argue with. As far as what we can do about it though … I would also note that women, people of color, and people who are both have a variety of other instruments [available] to invest their money in; so the question of whether broadcast is where they want to place their money, rather than some other business, is in part a question of how attractive broadcasting is.

I see no shortage of grassroots interest from women or people of color wanting to participate in broadcasting. But there is always a question of making a return.

Anything that conditions licenses on, for example, ownership demographics is “push,” where what we probably need is “pull.” The pull I would like to see is a more stable business environment, greater opportunity for growth and return, and the ability to finance licenses, if we can figure out ways to work around the problems of the past.

RW: She also has reconstituted the Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council. Are you supportive of redirecting its focus?

Simington: The FCC has a pretty clear mandate to work on questions of signal security that bleed into questions of IT security. So I welcome increased involvement in this area.

There has always been a question of the degree to which the commission should involve itself in cybersecurity matters because it does not traditionally have a staff of cybersecurity experts, and it would require big changes to the commission and probably substantial growth to fill out a fully fledged cybersecurity arm.

As I noted in my comments about tech companies, it’s not even clear what our regulatory mandate is when it comes to cybersecurity. I view the chairwoman’s position as a thoughtful balance between prior muted attempts to turn us into a fully fledged cybersecurity agency on the one hand, and the renunciation of jurisdiction in areas where I think we should exercise it on the other.

RW: Any final thoughts as we enter 2022?

Simington: I certainly wish broadcasters the best. I think now is a fine time for us to look back at the developments of the past few years, including both pressure and recovery in the broadcast sector, and continue to recognize the vital importance of broadcast and local journalism in American life.

If there is one thing that has become clear in my discussions with broadcasters, it is their strong sense of mission. And you can’t buy that or teach it. People really feel a passion for broadcasting and their communities, and that is why they work in the field.

“Music was my first love”

Nathan Simington originally pursued a career in classical music and violin performance. He hoped to turn pro as a violinist or pursue a Ph.D. in music theory.

Simington started studying violin seriously at age 11 while growing up in Canada. He moved to the United States to train on the instrument at Lawrence University.

“In music, my three areas of focus were in more effective means of training violinists, including the convertible counterpoint theories of the Russian musicologist Sergei Taneyev and the unpublished works of Romanian composer George Enescu. I received a Presser Foundation grant in 2005 to research Enescu’s manuscripts with experts in Cluj, Romania, and Bucharest,” Hungary, he said.

A native of Saskatchewan, Canada, Simington he received a green card in 2007, allowing him to work in the United States outside his area of training. He became interested in law school while working in pharmaceutical market research.

The commissioner is a graduate of the University of Michigan Law School and also holds degrees from the University of Rochester and Lawrence University. Simington earned a Masters of Music Theory from Eastman School of Music.

Prior to joining the NTIA, he was senior counsel to Brightstar Corp., an international mobile device services company. The Republican commissioner at the time led and negotiated telecommunications equipment and services transactions with leading providers in over twenty countries. Even earlier, prior to joining Brightstar, he worked as an attorney in private practice.

Prior to joining the FCC he was senior advisor at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration, where he worked on various aspects of telecommunications policy, including spectrum allocation and planning, broadband access and the U.S. government’s role in the internet.

Simington is now a U.S. citizen and lives in Virginia with his wife and three children.

The post Getting to Know Nathan Simington appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

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

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

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

Broadcast Partners Adds 2wcom MoIN to SmartRadio

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Broadcast Partners has added 2wcom’s multi-channel cloud capability to SmartRadio, its cloud radio production service. It announced integration of MoIN software in SmartRadio.

“MoIN will enhance SmartRadio’s ‘audio playout as-a-service’ capabilities with encoding and streaming multiple audio channels simultaneously,” the company stated.

The announcement was made by Broadcast Partners CEO Robert-Jan van der Hoeven and 2wcom Systems CTO Leif Cipriani. The companies noted that they have been working together for some 15 years.

MoIN takes its name from “Multimedia over IP Network software.”

Radio World invites both users and suppliers to tell us about recently installed new or notable equipment. Email radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post Broadcast Partners Adds 2wcom MoIN to SmartRadio appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Mackie Rolls Out Portable Streaming Mixer

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Mackie introduced a portable streaming mixer that targets social streamers, gamers and podcasters.

The M•Caster Live Portable Live Streaming Mixer is pitched as a simple way to connect with a streaming platform. It retails for $259.

The mixer connects to the user’s smartphone headphone jack, or via USB to a computer running OBS or similar software. It can be powered with an external battery.

Features include preset-based ContourFX to shape the voice with a knob. The StreamFX voice changer lets the creator disguise their voice or do characters.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

M•Caster Live comes with a software bundle from Accusonus, including a perpetual license of the ERA Voice Leveler and De-Esser plugins, and a three-month All Access Suite subscription that adds audio repair tools such as Noise Remover, Voice Deepener, Mouth De-Clicker and Reverb Remover.

“Users can explore the Voice Changer plugin, adding fun effects to their projects, or search the music libraries of SFX and Music Cellar for high-quality, royalty-free sound effects and background music.”

Radio World invites both users and suppliers to tell us about recently installed new or notable equipment. Email radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post Mackie Rolls Out Portable Streaming Mixer appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

LeGeyt Lays Out General Priorities

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

Member stations of the National Association of Broadcasters got a chance to hear from its new president/CEO on Thursday, Jan. 20, when Curtis LeGeyt spoke in a virtual “town hall.”

He identified three areas he’ll focus on, according to a meeting summary: winning policy fights to help broadcast businesses thrive; engaging in “business-oriented initiatives prioritized by the organization’s membership;” and “restoring NAB Show’s preeminent stature as a destination for the entire broadcast community.”

LeGeyt praised broadcasters for their work during the pandemic and promised to champion tools and resources they need to serve communities.

[Read More Articles about the NAB]

He spoke about his work on the Hill during his decade at NAB and the importance of stations being engaged with legislators and regulators. “You have the compelling story to tell about your stations work in their communities. And it is incumbent on all of us to ensure policymakers recognize the importance of our investigative reporting, emergency alerts and philanthropic efforts that local stations provide to their constituents,” he said.

Executive Vice President of Government Affairs Shawn Donilon talked about NAB’s legislative priorities including support for a law that would help broadcasters and other media in negotiating with “Big Tech” companies about how their content is shared. He also mentioned the Local Radio Freedom Act opposing a performance royalty on broadcast radio stations.

Donilon also gave an update on the Local Journalism Sustainability Act, which would provide news media with a tax credit for hiring and retaining local journalists, and on legislation to reestablish a diversity tax certificate program.

Presentations were also made by Rick Kaplan, NAB’s chief legal officer and EVP of legal and regulatory affairs, and Michelle Duke, chief diversity officer and president of the NAB Leadership Foundation. Duke highlighted a planned Broadcast and Community Organization Summit intended to strengthen relationships between broadcasters and community organizations that target diverse and underrepresented populations, as well as help broadcasters with diversity recruitment.

Comment on this or any article. Write to radioworld@futurenet.com.

The post LeGeyt Lays Out General Priorities appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Comrex Gagl Is a New Remote Contribution Solution

Radio World
3 years 3 months ago

In the fall of 2021 Comrex announced a new service that will deliver conferenced audio from multiple contributors to the company’s hardware codecs in high quality. We asked Chris Crump, senior director of sales and marketing, for details. This story is part of our latest Buyer’s Guide on telco and phone system products for radio.

Radio World: What is Gagl and what is its main application?

Chris Crump: Gagl is a new cloud-based remote contribution service from Comrex. For those familiar with Opal, it works in a similar manner using a common web browser for remote guests to connect. However, it connects to a Comrex ACCESS or BRIC-Link codec in the studio instead of dedicated Opal hardware.

We created Gagl for morning shows, reporters and guest interview situations where high-quality, low-delay audio is required and interaction between up to five participants is needed.

Wherever there is election coverage round-robin reporting, a Friday Night Football live scoreboard roundup, a highly interactive afternoon drive sports show with remote hosts, a charity telethon with presenters at multiple remote locations, podcasts or just simple one-on-one guest interviews, Gagl is a great solution.

To connect, the guest/contributor just needs a computer or smartphone with one of the commonly available web browsers, a decent quality headset and a good Internet connection.

RW: What sets this apart from services someone might currently use for this application?

Crump: There are several free services and some paid that broadcasters and podcasters are using but one thing that stuck out to us was that audio quality tends to be an afterthought with apps like Zoom and Skype where video is the primary focus. As a result, audio tends to suffer. Automatic gain control and echo cancellation make the audio quality even worse.

So we decided to really focus on clean, low-delay, high quality audio. It is something that we’ve been doing for over 60 years now and where we think Gagl will excel.

Customers that already use our ACCESS and BRIC-Link codecs are very familiar with the dependability and superior audio quality these provide. Gagl combines a very simple-to-use guest contributor interface with the broadcast reliable hardware that our customers depend on every day.

RW: Is it available now? What does it cost?

Crump: Gagl will be available about the time this article goes to press. People will be able to sign up for a trial period prior to purchasing a monthly or yearly subscription. Current details on Gagl and a link to the subscription site can be found at https://mailchi.mp/49b8b94b6a97/gagl-updates.

After a free 14-day trial period, Gagl customers will be billed at an introductory rate of $35 USD per month or $350 per year.

RW: Amazon Web Services had some technical issues that may be fresh in people’s minds. Is the cloud-based Gagl safe from problems like that?

Crump: A cloud service is basically an application running on someone else’s computer that uses the public internet. Given the litany of “blackhat” attacks, connectivity issues and power outages suffered by major service providers that we constantly read about, it is clear that no cloud service is immune from service interruptions.

We will certainly do our best to ensure the best results for our customers within the scope of what we can control. We’ve had very good results with our SwitchBoard Traversal Server over the years. As long as the power companies and ISPs hold up their end, we should be in good shape.

RW: What else should we know?

Crump: Comrex customers have overwhelmingly given our support team rave reviews. Technical support is free of charge and available in both English and Spanish. Gagl customers will enjoy access to our world-class support team to help them with hardware and platform-related issues.

More Info: www.comrex.com or +1 (978) 784-1776

The post Comrex Gagl Is a New Remote Contribution Solution appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

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