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Industry News

NAB Show Cancellation Not Unprecedented

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago
No photographs are available of the reconvening of the NAB Show in 1946, but this surviving 1947 exhibits floor shot shows what things looked like at its second post-war meeting in September in Atlantic City, N.J.
Courtesy: James O’Neal

While the March 12 cancellation of this year’s NAB Show was not unexpected in light of the global Coronavirus pandemic status, broadcasting and content production communities have become so accustomed to making their annual April trek to Las Vegas the interruption seems almost unimaginable.

However, cancellation of this major trade show is not without precedent. The show, which convened for the first time in 1923 (slightly less than three years after the radio  broadcasting era began), managed to continue unscathed during the 1930s “Great Depression” years, and even continued well after the United States entered World War II.

(In examining the history of the NAB Show at that point in its existence, there was little regularity in its meeting dates [as early as February and as late as November], and its locale meandered quite a bit also, convening in such locales as Cincinnati, San Francisco, St. Louis, Cleveland and Chicago.)

By 1944, wartime contingencies were taking their toll on most industries, including broadcasting, as the manufacturing focus was on items needed for the war effort. Other markets were definitely “second fiddle.”

Engineers who formerly designed transmitters and studio gear found themselves working on radar and military communications—if they hadn’t already been drafted into military service. Electronic components such as vacuum tubes and transformers became increasingly difficult to obtain as manufacturers redirected their outputs for defense purposes. Even broadcast stations found themselves seriously understaffed in engineering and other departments due to the universal draft, which basically exempted individuals too old or deemed physically unfit for military service.

So, by the end of the third full year of U.S. involvement in the war, it’s easy to speculate that NAB Show attendance was declining, with more and more of those involved in broadcasting being drawn into the war effort in one way or another, and also the dearth of new technologies or products to exhibit.

NO MEETINGS OF MORE THAN 50 PERSONS!

The death blow to the show, however, came from the U.S. government in the form of a nationwide ban on meetings or other events that involved more than 50 persons from outside the community where the meeting or event was held.

This ban was intended to free up hotel rooms, along with seats on trains and buses that were badly needed for military and defense industry personnel. It was issued by the head of the Office of War Mobilization, James F. Byrnes, and as reported by Broadcasting (now Broadcasting & Cable) magazine in its Feb. 5, 1945, lead story, had become effective four days earlier. According to the story, the ban was not really unexpected, and had come during an NAB regional conference in Salt Lake City involving some 68 people. The NAB’s then president, J. Harold Ryan, responded immediately with this statement:

“In compliance with the expressed wishes of the Government to limit the amount of travel, and to avoid any conventions or meetings which would bring together from outside the city in which the meeting is scheduled more than 50 persons, the National Association of Broadcasters has cancelled its annual convention, which would normally be held in the late spring. The NAB convention usually has an attendance of more than 1,000.”

As explained in the article, the 1945 ban applied to all “trade shows, exhibits, conferences, assemblies and conventions, including those of industrial, commercial, labor, fraternal, social, professional, religious, civic, [and] governmental organizations.”

The final word on the ban came from Colonel J. Monroe Johnson, director of the government’s Office of Defense Transportation, and also chairman of the War Committee on Conventions.

[Want more of this kind of story? Sign up for the Radio World NewsBytes e-newsletter.] 

“The yardstick used to measure the essentiality of any meeting is how the winning of the two wars we are now fighting will be impeded if the meeting in question were held to an attendance of 50 or canceled outright.”

The NAB’s annual show did resume in full vigor in October of 1946 with an attendance of 2,000, and this time—in addition to AM radio broadcasting, which had been the staple of the show for many years—attendees began to hear a lot about their post-war futures in FM and television.

The post NAB Show Cancellation Not Unprecedented appeared first on Radio World.

James E. O'Neal

Pakistan Begins Digitization Process

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

On Friday March 13 Pakistan Broadcasting Corp. completed a five-day training course on digital radio migration.

The PBC organized the event at the Pakistan Broadcasting Academy in Islamabad for 30 engineering professionals. The broadcaster described the students as “torch bearers for implementation of the digitization project.”

Radio Pakistan’s Director of Engineering Kamran Saeed addressed attendees during the inaugural ceremony. He said PBC has “taken effective initiatives to digitize its transmission.”

In addition, he added that the government’s digital radio migration policy, which PBC board of directors has approved, recommends use of the Digital Radio Mondiale standard.

The technology, he pointed out, is suitable for Pakistan’s topology and also because it offers “audio quality and energy efficiency.”

[Are you receiving the free daily Radio World NewsBytes newsletter? Sign up here.]

Saeed said the the digitization plan would cost an estimated Rs4,129.882 million and take place over the next five to seven years.

The post Pakistan Begins Digitization Process appeared first on Radio World.

Marguerite Clark

Tieline Drives Ratings for Southern Cross Austereo

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

The author is engineering manager for Southern Cross Austereo, Melbourne

MELBOURNE, Victoria — At SCA in Melbourne I lead a team of very talented engineers in one of the head-end markets that service the HIT, Triple M and PodcastOne networks around Australia.

The engineering team in Melbourne is part of the wider Technology Services division and is responsible for ensuring reliable broadcast of local and networked programs, design and layout of studios, IT equipment servicing, outside broadcasts, maintenance and testing.

Kate’s Remote Studio in Bologna, Italy.

The “Hughesy and Kate Show” has been on-air for 17 years and is one of the flagship national shows for the Hit Network. It is broadcast over 48 stations in metro and regional markets, with a reach of more than 2.6 million listeners. Based in Melbourne, since 2017 the program has consistently been one of the top rated shows in the drive time slot. The longevity of the show, the chemistry between Hughesy and Kate, and the quality of the content produced, makes it very important to the Hit Network.

BROADCASTING FROM ITALY

Co-host Kate Langbroek had always planned to have a year away in Italy with her family. Kate and her husband decided that if they were to make the move it would need to be in 2019. After making the decision, management at Southern Cross Austereo put forward the idea of Kate broadcasting remotely from Italy, rather than losing her from the show.

The Team Visiting Kate in Italy; Executive Producer Sacha French (rear), announcers Kate Langbroek and Dave Hughes, with Jack Lawrence, anchor of the show (front).

Initially we expected to be hiring a studio at a local radio station in Bologna. However, it soon became apparent that Italian stations operated very differently. There were very different standards to what we were used to, plus a huge language barrier between our team and their management. Therefore, we decided to set up a studio ourselves.

Whenever we approach outside broadcasts, particularly for large shows, reliability is at the forefront of our decision-making. For the Hughesy and Kate Show we needed to implement IP streaming technology that was compact and simple to use, with the flexibility of redundant IP streaming, remote access and uninterrupted power.

SCA owns versions of almost every Tieline codec available and in Melbourne we primarily use the Tieline Merlin and ViA codecs. After using the ViA for multiple projects in the lead up to the Italy project, we knew without any doubt that it was the right fit for the application.

Andrea Cole from our engineering team went to Italy to set up the studio in an office space. We hired an office space from an American-Italian documentary filmmaker. Room acoustics were a challenge, however Andrea worked with the owner to build acoustic panels and make the broadcast area more useable. We decided that Ethernet LAN connections would be the most reliable option, so our world-class networking team designed a solution allowing Hughesy and Kate to feel as if they were in the same room.

SOFTWARE-DEFINDED NETWORKING

To get the remote studio onto our WAN, we installed an SD-WAN appliance attached to the fiber-connected internet router. This allowed all the devices in the room to be visible on our network and accessible like a studio in our building. Once everything was set up, we could easily access the codec remotely. Software defined networking has come a long way in recent years, and we are using it more than ever to connect our facilities over long distances. In this case it proved an absolute winner.

[Are you receiving the free Radio World International NewsBytes newsletter? Sign up here.]

Our primary fiber connection was paired with a Netgear Nighthawk LTE modem using the TIM network in Italy to provide SmartStream Plus redundant streaming over Ethernet to the ViA.

Our studios can combine multiple return mixes with talkback and IFB functionality on a single mono audio source. Each day the team would do a combined segment with the “Carrie & Tommy Show.” One day we had Kate in Italy, Dave Hughes in Maroochydore, Carrie at her home studio and Tommy in Darwin.

Four locations, four ViA codecs, and all sounding like they were in the same room. Days like this are pretty normal for our drive shows. We love the challenge and without the ViA or Merlin, we couldn’t deliver such flexibility.

We used the Toolbox web-GUI for 90% of our configuration, which gives us great control. We can remotely adjust Kate’s send/return mix, mic and headphone levels. With the ViA’s built in audio processing we can deliver a clear-sounding broadcast-quality line paired with a Neumann KMS 105 microphone, which is the same mic we use in our studios. In my opinion no other mic matches its sound and with the ViA it ensured Kate’s audio quality matched that of our studio.

The show has been on air seamlessly for nearly a year now. From the start Kate felt at home with the setup and was extremely happy with the result. She would continuously praise the reliability of the technology. Dave Hughes back in Melbourne said it was: “Incredible! The technology worked better than when we’re in different studios around Australia.”

In terms of the codec itself, there were no issues. The ViA is portable, simple to use, robust, flexible (with its multiple ways of connecting), sounds great, and has everything built into it that you need to make OBs reliable. We have used them in cars, busses, bikes, boats, beaches, bars. Doesn’t matter where you are, it does the job.

There has been discussion now that we use so many ViAs in the field as to whether we even need to build studios anymore! I’m sure that would never eventuate, but we often laugh about where the future is headed with such great technology becoming available.

For information, contact Charlie Gawley at Tieline in Australia at +61-8-9413-2000 or visit www.tieline.com.

The post Tieline Drives Ratings for Southern Cross Austereo appeared first on Radio World.

Gino Canzano

Steinberg Launches UR24C Audio Interface

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

Steinberg has introduced its new UR24C, the latest model in its line of UR-C USB 3.0 interfaces.

The interface itself sports two balanced Neutrik combo inputs, D-PRE microphone preamps, two TRS main outputs, four RCA line outputs, MIDI in and out, and USB Type-C (USB 3.1 Gen 1 SuperSpeed) connectivity, making it compatible with PCs, Macs and iOS devices. It features 32-bit/192 kHz audio resolution, MIDI and numerous DSP effects that can reportedly be used when monitoring audio without latency.

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

Onboard DSP effects, e.g. REV-X reverb, Channel Strip and Guitar Amp Classics, are accessed by the unit’s dspMixFx mixer. Those looking for more effects can pore through the software bundle that comes with the UR24C; the bundle includes Cubase AI music production software; Basic FX Suite, consisting of effects and sound processing tools; native versions of the DSP effects (both VST 3 and AU compatible); and the Cubasis LE music production app for the iPad.

Intended for use by musicians, producers and DJs, the UR24C provides switchable monitor modes for headphones: DAW mode is used for producing music with a DAW, where the signal from Output 1 or Output 2 is chosen as the headphone source while allowing the user to adjust the balance of the signals from the DAW and from the UR24C’s inputs. Meanwhile, DJ mode is expected to be used for performances with DJ software and backing tracks, where the signal is split so the mono master sound is output to the right side of the headphones and the mono cue sound to the left, also letting the user adjust the balance of both signals.

Steinberg’s Senior Marketing Manager Stefan Schreiber commented: “With its build quality, first-class components and 32-bit/192 kHz resolution, the whole UR-C range of interfaces sets a very high standard. The UR24C includes all these competitive advantages, but also comes with a unique and flexible concept of monitoring that works both in the studio and on stage.”

Currently shipping and available, the UR24C runs $319.

Info: www.steinberg.net

 

The post Steinberg Launches UR24C Audio Interface appeared first on Radio World.

ProSoundNetwork Editorial Staff

Lectrosonics Launches MTCR Recorder

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

Lectrosonics has introduced its new MTCR — Miniature Time Code Recorder. Small enough to be hidden in garments, the MTCR can be placed on a subject to capture audio, synchronized with timecode, when using a wireless mic is not practical.

The MTCR, sized at 2.3 × 2.1 x 0.7 inches and weighing 2.5 oz., with battery, records in 24-bit/48 kHz digital onto a microSD card (HC type, Class 10) in the industry-standard BWAV (Broadcast Wave File) format. The unit can be jammed to external time code via the standard 5-pin Lemo connector. A headphone output jack allows for monitoring the signal input or listening to previously recorded files, but cannot be used to send live audio to another device while recording.

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

The input connector is a TA5M jack that accepts any mic or line level signal and provides bias voltage to power electret lavaliere microphones. The input connection and wiring are compatible with microphones prewired for use with Lectrosonics wireless transmitters with servo bias type inputs.

Setup and adjustment are made through an interface provided by the keypad and LCD. The housing is manufactured from aluminum alloy, then hard anodized. The MTCR runs for more than six hours on a single lithium AAA battery.

The MTCR, shipping now with an MSRP of $990, comes with an M152/5P low-noise omnidirectional lavalier microphone, microSD memory card, belt clip, and AAA lithium battery.

Info: www.lectrosonics.com

 

The post Lectrosonics Launches MTCR Recorder appeared first on Radio World.

ProSoundNetwork Editorial Staff

Tape Manufacturer Launches Mystik Cassette Player

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

Cassette tapes sales are back in fashion, with sales reportedly at their highest in more than 15 years, with annual growth outpacing even vinyl’s resurgence. To celebrate, tape manufacturer RecordingTheMasters is launching a Kickstarter campaign for a new portable cassette player, Mystik.

As all analog music formats continue to rise in popularity, cassette tapes now outpace all other formats — including vinyl — in consumer-market growth, more than quadrupling since 2011. Artists including Billie Eilish, Ariana Grande, Justin Bieber, Eminem, Jack White, Taylor Swift, Jay-Z and others have all released recent albums on cassette. This year’s recent Cassette Store Day saw RecordingTheMasters partner with New York-based Dala Records for a limited-edition mixtape.

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

With the rise in demand for analog music cassettes, RecordingTheMasters states its new compact analog cassette tape is the first newly produced cassette on the market to offer high-quality audio in analog format. The cassette tape is manufactured using legendary chemical formulas from AGFA and BASF at the Mulann facility in Normandy, France.

RecordingTheMasters’ new Mystik portable cassette player will feature a revamped electronic board designed with former Thomson/RCA audio engineers with an emphasis on audio playback, Bluetooth 5.0 connectivity and a rechargeable battery. It will also feature a built-in microphone for quick start recording, a 3.5 mm-1/8-inch line jack for higher fidelity recording, a 3.5 mm-1/8-inch headphone jack and a transparent window showing the spinning wheels of the listener’s favorite cassette tape.

Expected to retail at $110 when brought to market, the Mystik portable cassette player is now available to a limited number of early backers for $78, bundled with a blank FOX C-60 high-quality audio cassette tape, during the Kickstarter fundraising period.

Info: www.recordingthemasters.com

 

The post Tape Manufacturer Launches Mystik Cassette Player appeared first on Radio World.

ProSoundNetwork Editorial Staff

Røde Rolls Out NT-USB Mini Microphone

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

Røde’s new NT-USB Mini is a compact USB microphone intended for recording directly to a computer or tablet; the new offering is intended for podcasters, musicians, streamers, gamers and others.

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

Built around a condenser capsule with RF shielding, the NT-USB Mini — which is 89 mm wide and 141 mm high —sports a directional cardioid pickup pattern to reduce room sound and other extraneous noise. A built-in pop filter aids reducing plosives and the mic also comes with a magnetic desk stand that attaches to an integrated 360-degree swing mount within the mic.

Besides the NT-USB Mini’s USB output, it also has an internal headphone amplifier with precision level control and switchable zero-latency monitoring via a 3.5 mm-1/8-inch headphone output, all encased in steel and reinforced nylon resin construction, finished in matte black.

It ships with a USB cable.

Info: www.rode.com

 

The post Røde Rolls Out NT-USB Mini Microphone appeared first on Radio World.

ProSoundNetwork Editorial Staff

Coronavirus Cancellations Announced by Broadcasters

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

In response to concerns surrounding COVID-19, as well as recommendations from health organizations, radio groups and broadcast organizations have begun to cancel and postpone events. We will update this article as we learn about changes.

Please refer to our events calendar for information about other events, and email radioworld@futurenet.com if you have any announcements of your own.

March 13: Minnesota Public Radio has canceled all events March 14 through April 24. MPR says it will offer refunds and exchanges and will contact ticketholders about changes.

The Oklahoma Association of Broadcasters has cancelled its annual convention. The association says they will announce 2021 dates for the OAB Convention.

March 12: Spanish Broadcasting System Puerto Rico says it’s cancelled upcoming concerts and special events.

March 11: The National Association of Broadcasters called off its April NAB Show plans and announced it is considering its options. Colocated events, including the SBE Ennes workshop and the Association of Public Radio Engineer’s PREC 2020 have also been cancelled.

March 9: The 2020 edition of Radiodays Europe has been indefinitely postponed, according to an emailed statement from General Manager Peter Niegel.

Also, CABSAT has been rescheduled for Oct. 26–28.

 

 

 

The post Coronavirus Cancellations Announced by Broadcasters appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Community Broadcaster: COVID-19 Concerns

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

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

Coronavirus, or COVID-19, has become a focal point of the nation. Travel, education, sports and public events have all been impacted by fears of the virus’ spread. And with the World Health Organization declaring COVID-19 a global pandemic, one can guess this situation is prompting a great deal of caution.

What is a radio station to do in the midst of a coronavirus outbreak?

For many outlets, automation and federal policy changes on studios have meant business as usual continues. For many others that welcome and interact with the community, the spread of coronavirus has prompted deeper questions about safety, service and trust.

The National Federation of Community Broadcasters issued a directive this week on COVID-19 response for radio stations. We address some of the key decisions before community radio stations in particular. The biggest issues boil down to relevance, engagement and your internal base.

[Read: Community Broadcaster: Four Top Fund Drive Fumbles]

What is a community radio station without trust? How can we say we are community oriented if we are not relevant to the lives of the listeners, donors and wider region to which we broadcast? As much as we at community radio stations may worry about our canceled events and hand sanitizer supplies, these questions are the major ones, because they speak to who we are and why we do this work.

While I have written many columns on this subject, the emergence of COVID-19 should push every community radio station to be in touch with and actively involved with local first responders. Every state, county and city has an emergency preparedness team, often composed of area leadership, police, firefighters and media. These teams want broadcasters at the table. In addition, they have the most accurate and up to date information available to share with audiences.

Being connected with your station’s state and county first responders will help you cut through the misinformation and outright falsehoods that circulate on social media and elsewhere. If you are a mixed-format, news, or music station, you’ll have to decide how you distribute information with your audience. If you don’t do a lot of news, perhaps this is a time to test fly, or maybe you will want to stick with public service announcements and website updates. The choices you make will be determined by your resources and availability of support to pull it off. Be realistic with what you can do, and don’t be afraid to rely on whatever emergency response infrastructure may be available to you locally.

Last but surely not least, your station will have to take a thorough but measured approach to your obligations related to staff and volunteers. Proper care for staff and volunteers includes all the stuff we have heard about: having hygiene and cleaning protocols in place; educating volunteers about not coming in sick or if they’ve been exposed to sick people; and being able to respond if and when absences come up. However, stations will also have to contend with more complex matters like sick leave, remote delivery of programming and having a team in place to help your station address an emergency as needed. You may also have to shift culture. Community radio tends to attract people who want to help and to be there in a pinch, but safety is paramount.

For community radio stations that have eschewed automation systems, COVID-19 may impress upon you to have contingencies. The reality is people will get ill or feel unsafe to come in, and finding a live substitute DJ may prove challenging. While there are free and open source packages like Rivendell, at the moment they may be out of the question given their learning curve as well as the immediate need a station has. How you handle this at your station is a priority.

Despite the wave of universities closing up, most college and community radio stations are doing their best to stay open. If your station has not been seriously impacted by COVID-19, today is the day to act.

The post Community Broadcaster: COVID-19 Concerns appeared first on Radio World.

Ernesto Aguilar

Hubbard Radio Backs Push for All-Digital Option on AM

Radio World
5 years 1 month ago

One in a series of articles reporting on what the radio industry is telling the FCC about all-digital on the AM band.

Hubbard Radio has been test driving all-digital AM broadcasting on its WWFD(AM) just outside Washington, D.C., since July 2018. According to the broadcaster, the ride has been mostly a smooth one.

The company told the FCC it is fully supportive of a proposal to permit AM licensees — on a voluntary individual basis  — to operate in an all-digital format 24/7.

Hubbard says the MA3 signal of WWFD, which operates in full-time all-digital under special temporary authority from the FCC, has proven to be much more robust than the hybrid mode of HD AM broadcasting, and with improved signal coverage. The company says it has received positive feedback from listeners about the fidelity and reliability of their all-digital signal.

“In Hubbard’s experience, the data conclusively confirm that all-digital MA3 operation provides an improved, consistently high-quality listener experience, in terms of audio fidelity and signal robustness,” according to the group’s filing.

[Hear directly from Hubbard’s Joel Oxley in the recent RW webinar “Digital Sunrise for AM.”]

The station, which broadcasts at 820 kHz and is licensed to Frederick, Md., has seen ratings gains since launching the all-digital signal, according to Hubbard.

“WWFD broadcasts an adult album alternative music format. The station had no ratings in its home market of Frederick, Md., for the five years it was an analog station with that format, but now that it is operating in MA3, the station is ranked by Nielsen in the market,” it wrote.

Hubbard is using the MA3 technology to transmit auxiliary data and metadata to listeners of WWFD, it says. “The secondary and tertiary carriers of WWFD can provide stereo audio information, data services such as station logo, album artwork, and other artist experience information, as well as multicast channels.”

[Read: NPR Supports All-Digital on AM, With Caveats]

In addition, earlier reliability issues with the secondary and tertiary carriers on WWFD have since been resolved, Hubbard said. The station fixed the issues by “installing a replacement transmitter, a Nautel NX5, with a pulse duration modulator that runs at a sufficiently high rate to pass the secondary and tertiary carriers, allowing the full MA3 waveform to be transmitted.”

Hubbard says their solutions to the issue will be documented in detail in a forthcoming technical paper.

WWFD in December tested an HD2 multicast channel, according to Hubbard, transmitting musical track data and a station logo image as well. Future versions of enhanced EAS alerting will use the secondary and tertiary carriers to supplement the data transmitted on the Primary IBOC Data Service Logical Channel (“PIDS”) carriers.

“Hubbard believes that these continued improvements in the MA3 delivery system will mitigate any concerns about secondary and tertiary carrier issues, and that these technologies will continue to be expanded to better serve listeners,” it stated.

[Related: NPR Supports All-Digital on AM, With Caveats]

Hubbard also believes all-digital AM technology will help WWFD compete in the dashboard of the connected car.

It commented: “Trends in vehicle entertainment system receiver designs are converging on ‘tuning by visual metadata,’ where listeners select an audio program by pressing a thumbnail image of the desired program. MA3 allows AM broadcasters to have both aural and visual parity with other broadcast services in the automobile dashboard.”

In conclusion, Hubbard told the FCC the MA3 mode of HD Radio provides “far more manageable solutions” to any unintended interference with neighboring analog AM stations in the band when compared to the MA1 mode. In fact, WWFD “has never received any interference complaints from co-channel or adjacent channel stations,” it reported.

 

The post Hubbard Radio Backs Push for All-Digital Option on AM appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

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