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Industry News

The Podcast Listener: Young, and Willing To Spend

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

Westwood One executive Pierre Bouvard has written a blog post that offers a rosy picture of just who listens to podcast, and what their disposable income portrait shows.

The median age of the podcast listener? It is 34, compared to 48 for AM and FM radio.

Bouvard also says the podcast audience is pretty upscale.

As first reported by Streamline Publishing’s Podcast Business Journal, Bouvard’s assessment of podcast listeners offers some robust findings.

Bouvard notes that not only are your listeners making decent money, they are educated.

“[Some] 53% of persons 18+ who have listened to an audio podcast in the past 30 days are employed in a white-collar occupation,” Bouvard says. He also notes that 39% hold management positions and 55% have a household income of $75,000+, making this group an audience advertisers want to reach.

Read Bouvard’s entire post HERE.

Adam Jacobson

NoVa AM Agrees To Consent Decree For Public File Flub

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

A Northern Virginia AM some 45 minutes from the Nation’s Capital has entered into a Consent Decree with the FCC to resolve a Public File violation.

It’s another learning lesson for other licensees about the importance of avoiding procrastination.

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Adam Jacobson

Here’s Your 2021 Fall Product Planner

Radio World
3 years 8 months ago

Product manufacturers have not been idle during this past year and a half of business disruption.

Radio World’s new ebook provides a look at more than 50 new or pending products of interest to radio broadcasting and audio professionals, from leading manufacturers.

Listings include large product photos, feature descriptions and website information to learn more.

Whether you’re shopping for a microphone or looking to outfit a planned new facility with AoIP gear, you won’t want to miss the 2021 Fall Product Planner.

Read it for free.

 

The post Here’s Your 2021 Fall Product Planner appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Riviera Broadcasting Is Now Desert Valley Media

Radio World
3 years 8 months ago

Riviera Broadcasting has changed its name to Desert Valley Media Group. The announcement was made by CEO Jeff Trumper.

“This name change represents a more localized name and now includes the many assets of the company,” it announced. Those assets include three formats on six FM frequencies, DVMG Digital Marketing, esports platform Chosen Rival Gaming and a video production division.

In the announcement, Trumper emphasized that the company serves only the greater Phoenix area.

“We are a local media company in a sea of corporate radio companies … all our efforts are directly tied to serving this community and we believe that local businesses prefer to work with local companies.”

The post Riviera Broadcasting Is Now Desert Valley Media appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Deal Details Emerge For Entravision Spin

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

Until now, it has been a Spanish Adult Hits station under the branding “La Suavecita” and an affiliate of ESPN Deportes Radio.

As RBR+TVBR first reported Monday, that’s about to change, with a different multicultural group the new target audience.

Now, details regarding the deal price and specifics are known, thanks to a Form 314 filing with the FCC.

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Adam Jacobson

How To Launch Your Digital Game Plan Now

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

If your radio or TV broadcast station is looking for ways to thrive well into the future, you need to be selling diverse advertising solutions, says Christian Kligora, the SVP of Client Success at Marketron.

“With digital ad spending in the U.S. projected to hit $278.53 billion in 2024, up from $152.25 in 2020, the writing is on the wall: digital is a must,” he says in a thought piece provided exclusively to RBR+TVBR.

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Adam Jacobson

A Hearst CBS Affiliate Adds A 9am Newscast

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

LOUISVILLE, KY. — Viewers of the local CBS affiliate, owned by Hearst Television, now have the option of watching an additional hour of local news in the morning.

As of September 7, a 60-minute 9am newscast will air on the station.

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RBR-TVBR

Burn and Churn: The Not-So-Secret OTT Woe

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

Every day, public relations professionals and hired research professionals seemingly release a new report that gushes over the continued growth of Connected TV, OTT platforms and “FAST” channels.

Here’s some sobering news for that camp, which may be a good bit of info for broadcast TV: the churn rate for four top OTT services in April was big.

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Adam Jacobson

ATSC Bestows A Leadership Medal On NAB Head

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

The Advanced Television Systems Committee (ATSC) has presented the Mark Richer Industry Leadership Medal to the former Oregon Senator who will be retiring as President/CEO of the NAB at the end of 2021.

Sen. Gordon Smith earned the honor for his “outstanding leadership” of the National Association of Broadcasters, where he has served as a “steady advocate for the broadcasting industry who has taken every available opportunity to promote ATSC 3.0 since we first started this important work on next-generation broadcast standards,” ATSC President Madeleine Noland said.

Named for the former ATSC president who led the organization for two decades spanning both ATSC 1.0 and ATSC 3.0, the Mark Richer Industry Leadership Medal recognizes an individual or team “that demonstrates exemplary leadership in advancing the mission of ATSC and epitomizes the vision, tenacity and leadership qualities that were the hallmark of his leadership.”

Richer, who retired two years ago, presented the award on August 26. However, Smith was in Wisconsin, meeting with broadcasters at the state broadcasters association’s annual conference. As such, his appointed successor, NAB Chief Operating Officer Curtis LeGeyt, accepted the honor for Smith.

Smith became the NAB’s leader in 2009, “just before the technology we later termed ATSC 3.0 became a major focus of our organization,” Noland said. “Smith understood the value that next-generation television could bring to the broadcasting industry and he was instrumental in promoting the potential to NAB’s board and membership.”

The ATSC on Thursday also awarded its highest technical honor, the 2021 Bernard J. Lechner Outstanding Contributor Award, to Alan Stein, Vice President of Technology at InterDigital.

Stein currently heads InterDigital’s Visual Standards Team, where he manages a global team of senior technology experts who participate in major video standards organizations.

Adam Jacobson

CP Navigates Event RF Coordination as Available Frequencies Shrink

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 8 months ago

By Brian Galante

The recent FCC spectrum repack moved nearly 1,200 U.S. TV stations to new UHF and VHF frequencies, freeing spectrum for wireless broadband while leaving less for broadcasters to share.

Despite limited transmission resources — and new challenges that come with these changes —  CP Communications continues to successfully deliver RF coordination for major sporting events and other live programming.

It was business as usual this summer for ABC’s coverage of the NBA Finals in Milwaukee and Phoenix, but the MLB All-Star Game in Denver was more challenging because there were multiple events and networks. “Every time you add a network, you add more RF,” said Loren Sherman, a RF coordinator and field technician. “That made the All-Star Game a little more difficult to coordinate.”

When tasked with RF coordination of wireless transmission of video and audio for an event, CP assigns various entities to specific frequencies within the spectrum for the duration of an event. The purpose is to avoid interference with established spectrum users in the area, such as broadcast stations, as well as other temporary spectrum users that cover the event.

“I think what makes us unique, unlike most frequency coordinators, is that we also operate the gear,” Sherman explained. “We’re not just passing out a number and giving it to people. We understand how the gear operates, so we provide frequencies where the gear can work harmoniously with other pieces of gear. We’re one of the few that do both and we do both well.”

CP technicians coordinate RF frequencies with specialized software while working closely with venue and local SBE coordinators. CP’s biggest challenge is finding enough spectrum for everyone when there’s simply less spectrum available. To accommodate all media clients during high-profile events, CP relies on receiving special temporary authority, or STA, from the FCC to use parts of the spectrum that are not normally available.

“If we’re going to use STAs, then we need time,” Sherman said. “We might start planning for something like the Super Bowl a month or two in advance, depending on how many two-way radios we need to coordinate everything.”

While RF coordination is similar for indoor and outdoor events, Sherman said he can usually get more frequency options in an indoor venue. “The venue will often provide protection from digital television stations,” he said. “Maybe they’ll attenuate that signal enough that it becomes a usable piece of spectrum inside that building. But outside, it is what it is.”

Different outdoor locations yield different results. Denver was “fairly difficult” to coordinate, Sherman said, based on the amount of DTV signals in the region. In contrast, Milwaukee has fewer DTV stations and limited interference with signals from nearby cities. However, CP’s message is that they have the experience, crew and technology to handle even the most challenging RF coordination jobs.

“We were nowhere near the amount of frequencies we coordinated in the 2019 NBA Finals, though some of that goes to the cities you’re in,” Sherman recalled. “Phoenix and Milwaukee are not the same as Toronto and Oakland. It depends on the area. Go to New York City – there is a lot of DTV filling the spectrum, and New Jersey’s right there, too. So now you have two large communities with DTV, and that’s going to fill the spectrum more.”

Adam Jacobson

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