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Aggregator

COLA Will Affect Some Public Broadcasters

Radio World
3 years 5 months ago

A cost of living adjustment is pending to the compulsory license royalty rate paid by some public broadcasters in the United States.

The judges of the Copyright Royalty Board announced a cost of living adjustment to the rate that some noncommercial radio stations must pay for the use of published nondramatic musical compositions starting in 2022.

[See Our Business and Law Page]

The COLA affects certain colleges, universities and other educational institutions not affiliated with National Public Radio. The change affects the compositions in the SESAC repertory (the performance right organization) as it relates to the Copyright Act for noncommercial broadcasting.

The rates become effective starting Dec. 23, 2021. More information can be found in the Nov. 23, 2021 version of the Federal Register.

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

The post COLA Will Affect Some Public Broadcasters appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

Advocado Acquires VEIL Patents

Radio World
3 years 5 months ago

A long-time licensee of VEIL technology, Advocado has acquired that technology and 46 other patents from VEIL Interactive Technologies, an affiliate of Koplar Interactive Systems International (KISI).

The company will integrate VEIL watermarking capabilities into its data-management platform for broadcast TV and radio, while also adding detection and attribution for interactive TV and gaming. This will enable advertisers, networks and media partners to measure more accurately ad effectiveness and consumer engagement across channels.

“For decades, VEIL has been the industry standard to verify billions of dollars’ worth of media spend,” stated Jeff Linihan, co-founder and COO of Advocado, in a release announcing the deal. “We can now offer the industry a non-biased, real-time attribution and campaign-coordination platform that’s capable of measuring next-generation media experiences, at scale.”

Following the acquisition, Advocado customers will gain expanded monitoring capabilities on cable and over-the-air television, with piloting on radio and streaming audio starting soon thereafter.

The post Advocado Acquires VEIL Patents appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Audacy, iHeart, Emmis, SiriusXM Sued Over Syndie Show Content

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

LOS ANGELES — Every Saturday at 10am, listeners to iHeartMedia-owned conservative Talker KEIB-AM 1150 “The Patriot” can gain a greater sense of investment opportunities in the energy sector by tuning to “The Smart Oil & Gas Radio Show.”

The program has also been heard on iHeart’s KTRH-AM 740 in Houston, on radio stations owned by iHeartMedia, Emmis Communications, and on SiriusXM Satellite Radio. The central figure behind the show happens to be barred by FINRA, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority, from acting as a broker or otherwise associating with a broker-dealer firm.

This explains why a group of plaintiffs have sued the four audio media companies in a Dallas Federal District Court, arguing that they should be held liable, in some way, for airing programming tied to “a known fraud recidivist.”

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Adam Jacobson

Additional Details on Section 230 Legislative Hearing Revealed

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

WASHINGTON, D.C. — House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Frank Pallone Jr. (D-N.J.) and Communications and Technology Subcommittee Chairman Mike Doyle (D-Pa.) are providing additional details on a “Section 230” legislative hearing.

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RBR-TVBR

Applications

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 5 months ago
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Pleadings

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 5 months ago
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Event Reminder: FCC to Host Video Programming Accessibility Forum on Dec. 2

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 5 months ago
Forum will explore the state of closed captioning availability for online video programming and discuss ways to enhance accessibility.

Actions

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 5 months ago
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Broadcast Applications

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 5 months ago
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Broadcast Actions

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 5 months ago
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David Field Snaps Up More Audacy Stock

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

With Audacy Inc. shares just five cents higher than where they sat on January 4, the company’s Chairman and President/CEO has acted by acquiring nearly 120,000 shares of stock in the audio content and distribution company he leads.

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Adam Jacobson

A Telemundo Spin, With No Changes To Viewers

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

A digital low-power TV station licensed to Logan, Utah, is poised to leave the NBC Universal family.

An agreement, submitted Tuesday with the FCC, shows that its Telemundo O&O arm is agreeing to part ways with the facility. The buyer? A local governmental entity.

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Adam Jacobson

Forecast 2022: Sasso’s Thankful Return To An In-Person Conference

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago
The last time Colorado Broadcasters Association President/CEO Justin Sasso attended an in-person broadcast conference was in February 2020. Travel back home to Denver was hectic, but with a cash reward for ample flexibility. Sasso’s next event wouldn’t be until one week ago, as he participated at Forecast 2022. Here’s what Sasso had to say about the February 16 gathering in New York, compared to his last non-virtual affair.

 

 

Look who attended Forecast 2022! Among those in New York are some of Broadcast TV’s Best Leaders, including (l-r) Pat LaPlatney, co-CEO of Gray Television; Brian Lawlor, president of local media for The E.W. Scripps Company; and Circle City Broadcasting owner DuJuan McCoy. To view more photos from Forecast 2022, click here!

 

By Justin Sasso

February 2020. Washington, D.C. I had a late-afternoon flight out of Reagan Washington National and was cajoled by a gate agent to give up my seat on an overbooked flight to Denver. Instead, I was to take a connecting flight through Houston. There would be a short layover, and I would be home an hour later than my original flight. The incentive was an $800 flight voucher to anywhere my heart desired.

Fifteen minutes later, I was paged back up to the gate agent’s desk, where I learned that my connecting flight from Houston to Denver was cancelled. My original flight home was long gone from the jet wing. However, the agent, wrapping up what seemed to be an intense call of airline agent jargon, slammed down his phone and informed me that one final option existed. It was a direct flight to Denver, leaving in 45 minutes. All I had to do was get from Reagan to Dulles International at 4:30 on a Wednesday afternoon. With the speed of an auctioneer, I negotiated an additional $300 flight voucher, cab fees and meal tickets, snapped them from the gate agent’s hand and bolted for the taxi stand.

Did I make it? That comes later, but first I want to tell you about my first broadcast conference since that hectic day in February of 2020: Forecast 2022, a lengthy twenty-one months later. Instead of slowly putting my big toe back into the pool of conferences, I went to the one nestled in mid-Manhattan, “The Big Apple,” “The City That Never Sleeps,” but does require proof of vaccination. Five weeks earlier, when [Fletcher Heald & Hildreth attorney] Frank Montero called me and asked me to participate in his panel, I had come to two conclusions. One, I was never going to fit in any of my suits again, as I had “gained the COVID-19,” and two, conferences were a thing of the past. The weight I could lose, but having witnessed the postponement of two NAB Shows made it seem that broadcasters might never gather in-person again.

This was my first invite to Forecast and I was excitedly anxious to attend. After all, this is the legendary gathering of industry giants, envisioning the future of our industry. In reality, it’s a manageable gathering of people who love our industry and want to keep it healthy and strong.

There were great takeaways during the back-to-back panels, featuring many of our industry’s best and brightest. Several panels made it clear that broadcasters need to continue embracing digital and use it for growth and outreach. Broadcasting and digital both provide platforms for unlimited creativity and when combined, the outcome can be advantageous for both the audience and the broadcaster.

First and foremost, as an advocate for broadcasters, I was delighted to hear the detailed blueprint laid out by FCC Commissioner Nathan Simington. The Commissioner cherishes the service broadcasters provide to their communities. It was clear that broadcasters have a friend at the Commission and an ally for any battles ahead. During the panel I participated on, I was given the opportunity to share my experiences with the soon-to-be-confirmed Chair of the FCC, Jessica Rosenworcel. In short, I think she will be fair to broadcasters, providing us with the opportunity to make our case on almost every broadcast decision that comes before the commission.

Aside from the abundance of data points, developing technologies, and thoughtful panel discussion, Senator Gordon Smith’s Lifetime Leadership Award acceptance speech was a significant highlight for me. The Senator never misses an opportunity to share a timely story that gently blends into a meaningful lesson. Using an account of a trip he took to Sao Paulo, Smith expressed the joy he received from supporting an industry that always places its community before itself. His speech concluded with a heartfelt standing ovation.

Thank you Frank Montero and Deborah Parenti for the opportunity to attend Forecast 2022 and jump back into the conference waters with both feet. I can declare that this is a conference not to be missed and I sincerely hope to participate next year.

By the way, I made that flight out of Dulles, panting slightly as I took my seat, but with $1,100 tucked in my wallet and relieved that I was heading home. I felt a similar relief as the wheels of the airplane left LaGuardia’s runway. I was leaving with a head full of knowledge, a swarm of new ideas and the feeling that everything is going to be okay.

 

Adam Jacobson

The InFOCUS Podcast: Clark Smidt and WATX

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

WATX-AM 1220 is hardly a legendary radio station. Serving New Haven, Conn., and its surrounding communities, the Class B with 1kw of daytime power was all but left for dead by Quinnipiac University in May 2019. Some 17 months later, a veteran New England radio programming figure stepped in and rescued WATX — a facility he worked at in 1967 under its original WDEE calls.

Today, Clark Smidt is selling spots, playing the hits of yesteryear and just launched a direct mail campaign to 7 “hot ZIPs” within the WATX listening area. Is it a hobby, or an incubator designed to demonstrate why a licensee should never give up, and avoid turning in the license of a forlorn AM property?

We get the answer in this fresh InFOCUS Podcast, presented by dot.FM.

Listen to “Clark Smidt and WATX” on Spreaker.

Adam Jacobson

Washington Mourns TV Meteorologist Doug Hill

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

For a generation of local TV news viewers across the National Capital Region, Doug Hill was a household name — a trusted source of local weather reports and a friendly face to those tuned to WJLA-7, the ABC station once owned by the Allbritton family that’s been owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group since 2014.

Now, thousands of viewers, as well as media industry figures across Washington, are stopping to remember Hill, who has died.

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Adam Jacobson

Drive Time Metrics Earns Its Fifth U.S. Patent

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

Drive Time Metrics is celebrating the expansion of its patent portfolio with the issuance on November 9 of its fifth patent.

The company is now in possession of US Patent Number 11,171,792: METHOD AND SYSTEM FOR MEDIA, ADVERTISING AND/OR IN VEHICLE CONTENT MONITORING — covering what consumers are listening to or viewing in their vehicles.

DTM’s patent family allows for data collection of the media (audio, video, etc.) actually being consumed in a vehicle for the duration of a trip, analyzed and reported on.

Today there are over 70 million “connected” vehicles in the U.S. (25% penetration), and this is anticipated to more than double by 2030. Almost all new vehicles now sold are “connected” with an embedded cellular modem. In 2021, 60.3% of licensed drivers in the US (total 229 million licensed drivers in U.S.) will drive a connected vehicle, expanding to 70.1% by 2025, according to eMarketer.

More audio is consumed in vehicles than any other listening location. The sheer scale of this data is of critical importance to the audio industry, especially for broadcasting which still represents the majority of in car listening. “The resulting large-scale census data, rather than small-scale audio panels or meters, represents the future of audio measurement,” stated Bob Maccini, one of DTM’s founders. “This is similar to what’s happening with video measurement moving to data from set top boxes and smart TVs.”

With the progression towards autonomous vehicles, measuring video in the vehicle, and time spent on other applications of any sort, becomes critical.

The DTM patent family allows for the collection and analysis of near real time data from a vehicle relating to data elements important to creating audio and video analytics. Some of these include; unique ID, time stamp, key on/off, channel, volume, location, etc. Whether a consumer is listening to AM/FM, SiriusXM Satellite Radio, Spotify, Pandora, iHeart or other streaming services, including video, anything going through the vehicles infotainment system can be measured, analyzed and reported. The applications for this cross channel data are numerous and include; audience measurement (AQH, Cume, TSL, etc.), ad impressions, ad verification (confirming ad play), ad attribution (consumer heard an ad and drove to advertisers store or went to website), ad/song/video engagement (tune in/tune out) as well as outcome based metrics. Macro content consumption trends can also be analyzed, e.g. Terrestrial audio listening share, peak listening time, shared audio channels, etc.

Today there exists the technical ability to capture audio/video data from vehicles, as well as the infrastructure to collect and manage the data from millions of vehicles, in the USA and other major global markets.

— From news distribution services

RBR-TVBR

EAS Alert Improvements Teed Up For Next FCC Open Meeting

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

WASHINGTON, D.C. — “It’s Thanksgiving week, and the FCC is heading into the holidays on a high note,” says acting Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel.

Come December 14, Rosenworcel hopes to hit a high note with a proposal intended to improve the clarity and accessibility of Emergency Alert System visual messages and tests, especially for persons who are deaf or hard of hearing or are otherwise unable to access the audio message.

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RBR-TVBR

Who Are Broadcast Media’s Top Tech Leaders?

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago
Who Are Radio and Television’s IT and engineering leaders? It’s Your Decision

 

From Chief Technology Officers to Chief Information Officers, these broadcast media leaders are more essential than ever.

 

From cybersecurity to essential systems operations and tech innovations, these individuals are often overlooked for their triumphs and accomplishments. RBR+TVBR now recognizes these leaders for the first time, with input from you — industry leaders and peers who fully understand the leadership these tech-savvy executives bring to the entire organization. Please take a moment to select the first-ever honor roll saluting Broadcast Media’s Top Tech Leaders. You may select from among our honorees, or offer your own nominee. This is a reader-generated ranked honor roll — the voting is in your hands. Broadcast Media’s Top Tech Leaders will be honored for their achievements and overall contributions to the U.S. broadcast media business. Who’s made the list, and where they rank, will be revealed in RBR+TVBR’s Winter 2021/2022 Special Edition. It’s an all-new technology-focused report, distributed January 24, 2022. Make your nomination today for Broadcast Media’s Top Tech Leaders! To make your nomination, please follow RBR+TVBR’s guidelines: 1. The persons you nominate must be presently active in the areas of broadcast radio or TV station IT, technology, or engineering serving the U.S. marketplace.
2. DON’T WAIT! You may make up to three nominations by our deadline of Friday, December 10, 2021, at 5pm Eastern Time Please fill out only one ballot. Duplicate ballots associated with the same individual will be disqualified.
RBR-TVBR

Non-NPR Noncomm SESAC Royalties Get COLA Rise

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The Copyright Royalty Judges have made a cost of living adjustment to the royalty rate that non-NPR Member noncommercial radio stations “at certain colleges, universities, and other educational institutions” must pay for the use in 2022 of published nondramatic musical compositions in the SESAC repertory — pursuant to the statutory license under the Copyright Act for noncommercial broadcasting.

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RBR-TVBR

Gray Selects Bush’s Successor at ‘FOX 19’

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 5 months ago

For nearly seven years, she served as GM of WXIX-19, the FOX affiliate in Cincinnati owned by Gray Television. On December 1, she will return to Arizona, where she once headed KOLD-13 in Tucson under Raycom Media, to serve as the new GM of KPHO-5, the CBS affiliate, and “Arizona’s Family,” KTVK-3 in Phoenix once Gray closes on its acquisition of Meredith Corporation.

With Debbie Bush leaving “FOX 19,” a need for a replacement arose. Gray has now stated who will succeed Bush when she starts her new role in Arizona on or about December 1.

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Adam Jacobson

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