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Industry News

Urban One, With Its Stock Stabilizing, Sets Q3 Earnings Date

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

Add another third quarter earnings call for a broadcast media company to an already crowded November 4 slate.

At 10am, company representatives from Urban One will share details of the multimedia operation’s three-month period ending September 30.

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Adam Jacobson

This Is London: No FM Switchoff Mandated For U.K.

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

With RAJAR ratings due Wednesday for the first time since the arrival of COVID-19 in Great Britain some 19 months ago, many across the U.K. are biting their nails and praying that listening levels haven’t fallen for the nation’s privately operated radio brands or those under the BBC’s control.

At the same time, they’re perusing new rules “needed to protect British radio output on smart speakers” — regulations that do not put a mandatory switch-off date in place for analog FM transmissions.

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Adam Jacobson

R.I.P. Cliff Freeman: A Creative Master Of Broadcast Advertising

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

There’s a good chance you are not familiar with the name Cliff Freeman. But, you should be. Why? He was a branding master. “Pizza, Pizza?” He’s responsible for it. “Where’s The Beef?” Yup, that, too.

Freeman passed away of pneumonia at the age of 80, and news of his passing started to trickle out in early October — first on a Sunday TODAY “A Life Well Lived” segment and on October 25 in the Tampa Bay Times, his hometown newspaper.

Broadcast media owes a debt of gratitude to Freeman.

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Adam Jacobson

A ‘Totally Amped’ Deal in North Dakota

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

It’s a city of roughly 26,000 residents that bills itself as a “first choice for families” and a “great choice for opportunity.” This municipality, which is part of a DMA that includes Bismarck and Minot, N.D., is four hours to the west of Fargo and five hours to the south of Regina, Saskatchewan.

Here, a 100kw Hot Adult Contemporary FM is being sold. It’s a “totally amped” transaction, thanks to the station’s seller.

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Adam Jacobson

What is MRC Accreditation? This Webinar Will Explain All

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

As the Media Rating Council sees it, its accreditation is “the primary mechanism for transparency and accountability in advertising and media measurement.”

But, what exactly is “accreditation,” and how does the process work? A webinar scheduled for Wednesday aims to explain all.

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Adam Jacobson

Cyber Security Starts at the Top. Is Your C-Suite On It?

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

Every day we hear of another ransomware attack or data breach, and it seems that the cyber adversaries are taking over companies, catching them off-guard and ill-prepared.

Cyber security expert Steve Morgan, founder of Cybersecurity Ventures and Editor-in-Chief at Cybercrime Magazine, has some great advice on how to prevent a potentially crippling incident from thwarting day-to-day operations at your radio and/or television stations.

He’ll be sharing his thoughts exclusively at Forecast 2022 on November 16 in New York — a “no press” event you need to be at.

 

 

At Forecast 2022, Morgan sits down with WABC Radio’s Juliet Huddy for what is shaping up to be a provocative interview that will cover — in non-technobabble — how the cyber adversaries are doing it, why people and companies are in the dark when it comes to cybercrime, and what they can and should do to protect their organizations.

STEVE MORGAN and JULIET HUDDY ONLY AT FORECAST 2022, presented by RBR+TVBR and Radio Ink

 

“The value of a business depends largely on how well it guards its data, the strength of its cybersecurity, and its level of cyber resilience,” Morgan says.

Seating is limited. Register today for Forecast 2022and take advantage of early bird pricing. Registration include admittance into the Broadcast Leadership Reception honoring the 2021 Top Radio and Television Leaders. Always a great networking event, this may be a one-of-a-kind opportunity this year!

RBR-TVBR

Gray Goes Forward With Senior Note Offering

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

On October 20, RBR+TVBR reported that Gray Television is amending and restating its senior credit facility while concurrently seeking an additional incremental term loan valued at $1.5 billion.

The broadcast TV station owner plans to use the funds to help pay for its merger with Meredith Local Media.  On Monday, Gray had more to say regarding how it will handle the final bill for those Meredith television properties, with its formal announcement of a new senior note offering.

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Adam Jacobson

Radio’s On-The-Spot Brand Lovers

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 6 months ago

What are the top advertisers using spot radio to connect with AM and FM radio listeners?

For the week ending October 24, some intriguing brands are on the latest Media Monitors Spot Ten Report. One new entrant is a Procter & Gamble Co. brand not necessarily known for its audio creative.

That would be Swiffer, the all-in-one mop and floor cleanser that P&G has made a common kitchen and household tool. In a new campaign, Swiffer spots enjoyed 33,311 spot plays at the radio stations tracked by Media Monitors.

Among paid advertisers using spot radio, Indeed is the big No. 1.

For auto insurers, Jake from State Farm is there — and no other auto insurance brands can be found this week.

Rounding out the Spot Ten is top QSR McDonald’s.

 

Adam Jacobson

NATE Calls for Public Comment Period on Proposed Federal Vaccine Mandate

Radio World
3 years 6 months ago

As different organizations work to implement the latest federal COVID-19 vaccine mandate, the tower organization NATE is requesting that its members have the right to publicly comment on the issue.

On Oct. 20 NATE: The Communications Infrastructure Contractors Association sent a letter to Pres. Joe Biden requesting the organization be able to make comments on the vaccine rule implementation being proposed by the Occupational Safety and Health Administration.

[Read: NATE Sets Membership Record]

The move comes after Pres. Biden signed an executive order in September requiring employers with more than 100 employees to either mandate their employees be vaccinated or conduct weekly testing of unvaccinated employees. The president also ordered that all federal contractors working on federal property be vaccinated (with no testing option).

But NATE expressed concern that the temporary emergency standard that OSHA is expected to follow as a result of the federal mandate does not allow for public comment. The organization said that 85% of NATE members believe that some staff would resign if they are required to be vaccinated against COVID-19 and a full 30% indicated they would lose more than half of their workers.

Photo: Alissa Eckert, MS; Dan Higgins, MAM

“Like many other industries involved in the skilled trades, NATE members have struggled to recruit skilled workers,” the organization said in its letter to the White House. “The possibility of losing a significant number of tower technicians is a serious concern for NATE members, and the potential of losing workers could come at a time when America is investing billions of dollars in broadband projects.”

“Simply put,” the letter said, “NATE members fear that if we do not implement federal vaccination goals in a responsible manner, then they could lose a significant number of workers who are vital to building and deploying broadband services to rural, unserved, and underserved communities.”

[Read: COVID Doesn’t Care About Trade Shows]

Instead, a public comment period would allow for OSHA staff to hear directly from NATE members so they could get a clearer understanding of how a vaccine mandate could impact workers.

“We urge President Biden and OSHA to open a public comment period so the administration can hear directly from NATE’s small business members and gain a better understanding of how vaccine mandates would impact their workforce and the country’s ambitious 5G and broadband deployment goals,” it said.

 

The post NATE Calls for Public Comment Period on Proposed Federal Vaccine Mandate appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

NAB: “FCC Fee Methodology Requires Reform to Conform to the Law”

Radio World
3 years 6 months ago

The National Association of Broadcasters is making a big push to end Big Tech’s free ride when it comes to paying FCC spectrum regulatory fees, it said.

In response to a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking asking if the FCC should adopt new regulatory fee categories to collect fees from unlicensed spectrum users, NAB seeks changes to the FCC regulatory fee structure so that fees more fairly and lawfully reflect the work performed by the commission and the benefits received by various industries, the association said.

[Read: Broadcasters Get a Win on Regulatory Fees]

“The commission’s current approach is unlawful and unconstitutional because, among other things, it forces broadcasters and others to subsidize commission activities with substantially benefit other regulatory fee payors and other entities that currently contribute nothing to the commission’s funding,” NAB wrote in its most recent comment.

In fact, NAB previously has claimed the FCC is using a “pin-the-tail-on-the-donkey approach to assessing fees.” The FCC expects to collect $374 million this year from all the industries it regulates, including broadcasters, cable and phone companies, internet providers and satellite operators.

The FCC’s fee schedule collects the total amount appropriated in a given year and is guided by statutory requirements that the “fees reflect the full-time equivalent number of employees within the bureaus and offices of the commission, adjusted to take into account factors that are reasonably related to the benefits provided to the payor of the fee by the commission’s activities.”

Getty Images – Rubberball, Mike Kemp

NAB claims the FCC routinely violates that statutory requirement. “NAB focuses on current FCC methodology based solely on the number of direct full-time equivalent employees (FTEs) in the four core bureaus of the commission, which results in a fee schedule that reflects on the work performed, and the benefits provided, by a mere quarter of the commission’s operations,” NAB commented.

The broadcast industry group urges the commission take several steps to bring its fee structure into compliance with its statutory mandates, including reassessing its proportional allocations of indirect commission costs to determine whether such allocations align with the actual amount of work performed by noncore bureaus and offices on behalf of regulatory fee payors.

“Secondly, the FCC should perform the analysis necessary to add a fee category for broadband service providers or exempt broadcasters from paying for any broadband costs,” the NAB wrote in comments.

And NAB insists the FCC can no longer turn a blind eye to the fact that Big Tech — companies such as Facebook, Google, Microsoft and Amazon — take up significant commission resources under the banner of unlicensed spectrum, yet pay no associate regulatory fees as a result.

[Read: CTA Loathes Idea of FCC Collecting Fees From Unlicensed Spectrum Users]

“For example, over the last few years Big Tech helped lead a massive and expensive push to use 6 GHz spectrum for their benefit (and to the detriment of many licensed operators, including broadcasters). Big Tech companies drained significant commission resources, and yet remarkably, broadcasters and others footed the bill,” NAB commented.

NAB says it believes the FCC already has the authority to require unlicensed spectrum users to pay for commission activities that benefit their businesses.

And NAB says it is not singling out “small appliance and other home good equipment manufacturers” whose devices make use of unlicensed spectrum, which is a concern shared by the Consumer Technology Association. In fact, the broadcast industry group believes there are ways to avoid capturing small entities in the fee category. “However, it makes little sense to delay imposing regulatory fees on Big Tech companies that actively participate in commission proceedings, benefit economically from the commission’s activities (often at the expense of other regulates), and actively compete with broadcasters and other regulatory fee payors for advertising revenue,” NAB wrote the FCC.

Reply comments on the NPRM (MD Docket No. 21-190) are due Nov. 5.

 

The post NAB: “FCC Fee Methodology Requires Reform to Conform to the Law” appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

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