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Industry News

The InFOCUS Podcast: Steve Newberry

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 4 months ago

CES 2022 is one of the largest events in the world. And, radio industry leaders will be there — including QUU CEO Steve Newberry. 

In this InFOCUS Podcast, presented by dot.FM, Newberry plans to network, meet with auto industry and technology industry leaders, to build relationships and perhaps collaborate with others to improve radio’s visibility. With “future solutions” top of mind, Newberry shares with RBR+TVBR Editor-in-Chief Adam R Jacobson what he expects to gain from attending CES this year — and what QUU has in store for its users across 2022.

Listen to “The InFOCUS Podcast: Steve Newberry” on Spreaker.

Adam Jacobson

Radio At 100: ‘KDKA: The Morning After’

Radio World
3 years 4 months ago
The election was over, the motor generators had spun down, and the tubes had cooled; the big question at KDKA as Nov. 3, 2021 dawned was certainly “what do we do now?” (Getty Images)

The evening of Tuesday, Nov. 2, 1920, had come and gone. KDKA, 8MK, and perhaps others had taken to the airwaves that evening to report returns in the election that put Warren G. Harding in the White House. A few hundred, perhaps a few thousand people — there were no rating services then — managed to gain proximity to a primitive radio receiver of some sort and listened as the results were tallied and read into equally primitive microphones.

In retrospect, one can’t help but wonder what went through the minds of those individuals who stayed up late to present election results via “radiophone.” A radio broadcast is at best an intangible — something highly ephemeral, perhaps even a bit ethereal.

Had their voices really gone out into space to reach invisible ears? Had anything happened at all? There had to have been at least a slight sense of unreality in those first moments, a feeling perhaps best captured by Garrison Keillor in his description of the inaugural broadcast of mythical station WLT in St. Paul, Minn.

“Roy Jr. switched off the transmitter. It sighed, expelling a faint breath that smelled of vacuum tubes and electrodes. Ray leaned against the doorway, feeling faint. His speech had exhausted him.

‘Did anybody hear it, do you think?’

‘Guess so.’

‘Anybody ring up and say so?’

‘Nope. Maybe they were too busy listening.”

(WLT: A Radio Romance, 1992)

What now?

KDKA’s seminal broadcast way back in 1920, is now viewed as a great day — a truly historical one; something that changed the landscape forever. However, as with any event important enough to make its way into the history books, there’s always the dawning of the next day — the interval after the initial exuberance has passed and cold reality begins to set in. It is then that those who have been cheering in celebration are forced to stop and ponder “what happens next?”

KDKA’s hometown paper highlighted Harding’s win on Nov. 3, but nothing about the station’s historic broadcast.

This thought most certainly was on the minds of those at Westinghouse the morning of Wednesday, Nov.3, 1920.

Newspaper headlines that day said virtually nothing about radio. Instead, they screamed “HARDING BY MILLIONS,” “G.O.P.’s GREATEST VICTORY,” “HARDING WINS,” or whatever similar messages regarding election outcomes that could be fitted across the page in the largest type fonts available.

The words “radio” or “wireless” were hard to find, even down in the “noise” of the 6-point type reserved for classifieds and obituaries. Was there really a future in radio, or was the broadcast destined to be just another “flash in the pan?

Where are the cards and letters?

Judging from initial reaction by the public — other than some amount of well-wishing by those tuning in the KDKA broadcast — nothing had really changed. An examination of post-election night periodicals seems to indicate there was little direct impact — no uptick in business at the few sources for radio receivers and parts, no immediate backlog of applications for new stations at the Department of Commerce.

The public continued to read their newspapers and magazines, exchange gossip at card games and in barber shops, and seek out sources of illicit alcohol as Prohibition set in. The print media for the most part ignored radio as 1920 flowed on into 1921.

This would not be unexpected, as there is generally a “wait and see” attitude following the launch of new technology. A commercial aviation industry did not spring up immediately after the Wright brothers’ inaugural flight, and more than 100 years passed between the issuance of a patent for the first dishwasher and its widespread appearance in homes.

As for “radio gripping the hearts and imagination of Americans everywhere” following KDKA’s big broadcast, there’s little evidence to indicate that it initially made much difference one way or the other.

There were even non-believers and scoffers. One 1921 account describes an early demonstration of broadcasting with music transmissions demonstrated via a “mobile” receiver constructed in a baby carriage. Some “ear witnesses” were in denial of the wireless nature of what they were hearing, insisting that there must be a record player concealed in the carriage.

Pittsburgh push continues

Westinghouse still convinced it was riding a winning horse, continued to plow money into fledgling KDKA in 1921, boosting its power from 100 watts to 500, and then a full kilowatt and creating a broadcast studio.

Program offerings were also expanded with the addition of live musical performances, agricultural and weather reports, church services, and more

As 1921 progressed, Westinghouse, convinced that there was a future in radio broadcasting, continued to enhance the facilities of its fledgling station KDKA. One of the additions was the construction of the first real studio seen in the photo at left.; Westinghouse management also budgeted a higher power replacement for KDKA’s original 100-Watt transmitter. It was installed just a few months after the November 1920 election eve broadcast (center). Another indication radio for the masses was here to stay was the January 1921 KDKA hire of the world’s first full-time radio announcer, Harold Arlin (right). He is credited with handling the first radio play-by-play descriptions of both baseball and football games. (photos courtesy National Museum of Broadcasting)

Westinghouse’s PR branch stayed busy, issuing frequent press releases about KDKA to any and all print publications that might help to further the cause.

An example of such Westinghouse puffery appears the April 1921 issue of the trade publication, Radio News:

THEATRE MUSIC SENT BY RADIOFONE

The latest thing in providing entertainment by radiofone in Pittsburgh is the sending out of portions of the program given at a downtown theater. This is accomplisht in the same manner as the church services at the Calvary Church in the East End. Telefone transmitters placed in the theater collect and transmit the sound over a special telefone wire to the radio station of the Westinghouse company in East Pittsburgh (Radio KDKA), where it is then sent out by radiofone.

 

Promotions big and small Futurist Hugo Gernsback was an early supporter of democratizing radio, and used his monthly Radio News publication to further the cause whenever possible as seen in this January 1921 cover art.

Hugo Gernsback, editor of Radio News, and something of a visionary and prophet, was also a believer in radio broadcasting’s future, going so far as to drop the word “Amateur” from the title of his radio magazine in mid-1920 and welcoming such press releases.

Throughout 1921 Gernsbeck advocated “radio for everyone” in his magazine’s pages, with sometimes lengthy articles on new “radiophone” stations, demonstrations of speech and music transmissions, and simplified and less expensive access to radio for the public.

Perhaps the biggest boost received by radio broadcasting during its first year was the July 2 “fight of the century” featuring Georges Carpentier and Jack Dempsey.

While radio coverage was not the prime objective of this heavily-promoted event, others, outside of Westinghouse (most-notably RCA’s David Sarnoff), apparently saw some dollar signs in the new medium and added it to the mix.

The fight coverage station, WJY, was licensed as a temporary entity, and equipped with a General Electric transmitter that had been sidelined from delivery to another customer. (The “borrowed” nature of the gear may explain why WJY operated at 1,600 meters (187 kHz.) Another twist was the recruiting of licensed radio amateurs to assist in disseminating the broadcast, as radio sets were not really household items in 1921.

Radio broadcasting received a really big boost in 1921 from the broadcast of the July 2 Dempsey–Carpentier fight. The 3 kW transmitter used by the Hoboken, N.J. temporary station, WJY, is seen here. Reports were relayed from ringside and read by an announcer. The radio coverage of the championship fight was heavily promoted as evidenced in this photo (right) of a New Jersey boardwalk rolling chair.

The “ham” community set up receiving apparatus in performance halls and other venues, and ensured that everything worked properly. Even though reception of a 187 kHz signal and amplification to room-filling volume presented a challenge to the amateur radio ranks, many were able to deliver the goods to their captive and somewhat astonished audiences.

That collective audience was substantial, estimated at some 300,000, and most-assuredly exceeded “tuners-in” to KDKA’s election night event.

While the intent of July broadcast was to attract attention to the fight, it also did much to arouse public interest in radio, perhaps even more so than what Westinghouse was trying to accomplish with KDKA.

 

Priming the pump

1921 also saw other, less flamboyant, demonstrations of broadcasting.

Perhaps the best documented of these took place on Nov. 15, 1921 in Pine Bluff, Ark., where the president of the Arkansas Power and Light Company, Harvey Couch, had arranged for a broadcast of live and recorded music from Couch’s home to a meeting of the city’s Rotary Club. (AP&L was a Westinghouse customer, with Couch touring the KDKA operation during a buying trip to Pittsburgh and becoming a convert.)

Harvey Couch (Butler Center for Arkansas Studies, Central Arkansas Library System)

Couch, the Rotarians, and others were so impressed with this latest miracle of science that shortly after the pre-Thanksgiving demo, Couch applied for a license for Arkansas’s first broadcast station.

This, and similar efforts around the country had the effect of priming the pump. The public was definitely becoming interested in radio and Westinghouse extended its broadcasting reach to other population centers, breaking ground on stations in Massachusetts (WBZ), Chicago (KYW) and New Jersey (WJZ).

Gernsback also kept up with his promotions in print, ending 1921 with this editorial:

“To the careful observer, during the past six months it has become apparent that we are finally headed in the right direction as far as popularizing radio is concerned. We may say that we are now right in the midst of a revolution, as far as radio and the great public are concerned. We see the weather marks everywhere. The newspapers are becoming enthusiastic about radio, and devote more and more space to it. The man in the street is beginning to take a lively interest in all things radio. The editor’s desk is beginning to become flooded with letters, not from radio bugs alone, but from the layman, who does not know the difference between a detector and a telephone receiver—all of which is a healthy sign, and we may say that radio is entering into its last and final stage, as far as the public at large is concerned.”

From all appearances, 1922 was shaping up to be a very big year for radio broadcasting.

The author wishes to express thanks to the National Museum of Broadcasting’s Rick Harris; radio collector and conservator, Gary Alley; and to Guy Lancaster and Brian Robertson at the Encyclopedia of Arkansas for their assistance in the preparation of this article.

 

Further reading
  • Ray Poindexter, Arkansas Airwaves, Cassville, Mo.: Litho Printers, 1974
  • Thomas H. White, “Battle of the Century” The WJY Story, 2000
  • First Broadcast Dempsey–Carpentier Fight July 2, 1921, RCA internal memo, 1921

The post Radio At 100: ‘KDKA: The Morning After’ appeared first on Radio World.

James E. O'Neal

A Radiant TV Deal Closes In South Dakota

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 4 months ago

In February, an agreement was struck that would see the sale of a pair of South Dakota TV stations to a broadcast ministry. It was a deal brokered by Kalil & Co. that fully transitions a property (and its full-time satellite partner) that had been one of the original FOX network affiliates.

Now, the sale — greatly influenced by Gray Television‘s 2020 acquisition of the intellectual property associated with that 33-year-old broadcast station — has just been completed.

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Adam Jacobson

In Defense of Public Service Media News

Radio World
3 years 4 months ago

The author is senior news editor and head of the Eurovision News Exchange at the European Broadcasting Union.

Let’s face it — there are too many podcasts for any of us to listen to in our combined lifetimes. This wasn’t always the case — far from it — but it is true now. And there are podcasts for every taste and style. So, the first thing anyone wanting to start a new podcast has to do is consider who their target audience might be and what they want to talk about.

My colleague Laurent Frat who came up with the idea for the Eurovision News Podcast felt he knew the answer to the first question.

“As an avid podcast listener, I could see the enormous potential for community building among our dozens of member news organizations and I really thought it was the right time to delve into the most pressing issues facing journalism and more specifically public service media like the European Broadcasting Union and its Members in the 21st century,” Laurent said.

I arrived at the EBU in March 2021, having worked as one of the presenters of the highly popular Global News Podcast at the BBC World Service. So, it’s no surprise I was, of course, thrilled when Laurent asked me to work alongside him and the podcast editor, Cathy Milner, to develop his idea. I jumped at the opportunity.

We immediately decided we’d make the first episode entirely about the issue of media freedom and the challenges faced by journalists coming up against autocratic rulers determined to silence them and conspiracy theorists who see the news media as part of everything that’s wrong with society. This was at the time when journalists in the U.S. and Europe were coming under attack on their own streets by demonstrators protesting against new COVID restrictions or the results of the 2020 U.S. elections.

[Read More Guest Commentaries Here]

So, we had cleared that first hurdle of what we wanted to talk about, but who would our target audience be?

From the start, we agreed this fledgling podcast of ours would be primarily directed at the wider EBU community and more specifically the dozens of member networks in Europe and elsewhere that are connected to the Eurovision News Exchange — a network of public-service newsrooms operating in over 50 countries and providing tens of thousands of news stories per year.

If you’ve watched the news in Europe this week or news about Europe either on TV or on your favorite news website — chances are that you will have come across at least one if not five or ten of our news items.

Yes, we are the people who gather and share the images that you see on the news from the tensions at the border between Belarus and Poland to the harrowing scenes of the Kabul airport after the Taliban takeover of Afghanistan to the proceedings at the COP26 climate summit in Glasgow, Scotland.

And, unlike traditional news agencies, we don’t usually commission and record that footage. Instead, we rely heavily on the news gathered and recorded by our member news organizations from ZDF in Germany to RAI in Italy to NOS in the Netherlands, RTVE in Spain, the BBC in the U.K. and France Televisions.

For 60 years now, they’ve been sending in their news items and in return they get the latest news — both live and recorded from the other members. It’s a genuine community of the largest newsrooms in Europe and the Mediterranean working together through us.

According to Laurent Frat, “In this challenging period for journalism it’s more critical than ever to build on and develop our already tight-knit EBU community, and it’s why we have made a point of featuring journalists and senior editorial figures from our member news organizations in every one of our episodes to date. As far as we are concerned The Eurovision News Podcast is just as much about them as it is about us.”

So far, we have produced four episodes of our new podcast and we are busy working on another two to conclude our first of what we hope will be many more seasons to come.

In this era of fake news and rising distrust in the news media we are determined to raise the curtain and go beyond the news stories to show our listeners the serious thinking, editorial rigor and determination that goes into producing and delivering the public service media news that we are proud to stand behind and call our own.

Radio World invites industry-oriented commentaries and responses. Send to Radio World.

The post In Defense of Public Service Media News appeared first on Radio World.

Emilio San Pedro

Radio, TV Leaders Confirmed for Matrix Media Ad Sales Summit

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 4 months ago

Hearst Television’s President, Gray Television’s Co-CEO and President and Cox Media Group’s Executive Chairman are confirmed participants in a Matrix Solutions Media Ad Sales Summit “Executive Keynote Session” during which the three high-profile industry leaders will share their perceptions of the media marketplace transformation and what they believe lies ahead for the broadcast industry.

Jordan Wertlieb, Pat LaPlatney and Steven J. Pruett are just some of the attendees set to appear January 19-21 at the Summit, an in-person event akin to Forecast 2022, with limited capacity at the Nobu Eden Roc in Miami Beach. The Summit is tied to coincide with the much-bigger NATPE MIAMI event, which is held at the Fontainebleau Resort in adjacent space and concludes January 19.

The annual Media Ad Sales Summit, now in its fifth year, brings together executives from across the media advertising ecosystem to discuss and advance the development of a prosperous marketplace that promotes industry-wide automation, data consistency, and transparency. Additionally, the sessions will delve into reducing the friction between the buy and sell sides when delivering advertising inventory across multiple delivery paths.

“We are extremely excited and honored to have Jordan, Pat, and Steve joining us for the opening conversation at this year’s Summit,” said Matrix CEO Mark Gorman. “Our Summit has proven to be a significantly impactful event and is known for its candid and collaborative conversations. We are eager to be back-in-person with an incredible line-up of speakers and sessions that I know will provide valuable content in advancing our industry.”

In addition to the Opening Keynote, the Summit will include a 4pm panel devoted to NEXTGEN TV and advertising moderated by RBR+TVBR Editor-in-Chief Adam R Jacobson. Panelists include TEGNA Chief Technology Officer Kurt Rao, Marketron SVP of Product Jimshade Chaudhari, and Fincons Group Exec. Director of Strategic Marketing and Innovation Oliver Botti.

For more information on the Matrix Ad Sales Summit, please click here.

RBR-TVBR

NAB, Others Say ‘Stay’ Again in Foreign Sponsorship ID Fight

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 4 months ago

On December 8, the FCC’s Media Bureau, led by Michelle Carey, issued an Order denying a stay petition filed by the NAB; Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council (MMTC); and the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters (NABOB) that sought to thwart a Commission order mandating disclosures for foreign government-sponsored programming.

Now, the groups are asking the D.C. Federal Appeals Court to grant a stay of the new rule.

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Adam Jacobson

Broadcasters Ask Court to Block Disclosure Mandate

Radio World
3 years 4 months ago

Several prominent U.S. broadcast associations are asking a federal court to block an FCC order that mandates disclosures for foreign government-sponsored programming.

The request was filed Wednesday by the National Association of Broadcasters, the Multicultural Media, Telecom and Internet Council and the National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters with the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit.

They previously filed a lawsuit with the court challenging the FCC order. They’ve argued that the commission lacks the authority to “impose the investigatory requirements mandated by the order,” lacked justification for the rules and failed to address problems with undisclosed foreign governmental programming on cable systems and the Internet, “which is where the issue primarily exists.” They call the action unnecessary and overly burdensome, and in violation of the Communications Act, the Administrative Procedure Act and the First Amendment.

[Related: “FCC Denies NAB Stay Petition on Foreign Sponsorship ID Rules”]

The FCC adopted amended foreign-sponsorship identification rules in April to target situations where a station broadcasts material sponsored by a foreign governmental entity. The new rules require disclosure of leased programming sponsored by foreign governmental entities.

The commission said its modified regulations further the critical goal of transparency and it applies them to foreign governments, political parties and their agents.

The post Broadcasters Ask Court to Block Disclosure Mandate appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

FCC Grants iHeart Petition on GMEI Foreign Investment

Radio World
3 years 4 months ago

The FCC Media Bureau has okayed a petition from iHeartMedia regarding foreign investors that hold its stock.

iHeart had asked the bureau to approve foreign interests held by Global Media & Entertainment Investments Ltd. and related entities totaling 6.8% equity and 8% voting interests in iHeart. It also asked for advance approval for GMEI and its entities to increase those interests up to 14.99%.

In an earlier 2020 ruling, the bureau had authorized up to 100% overall foreign investment in iHeart; at the time it approved two groups to hold more than the usual limit of 5%. The PIMCO Group could hold up to 32.99% of equity and 19.99% of voting interests while the Invesco Group could hold up to 19.99% of equity and voting. In making those rulings the FCC said iHeart would need its approval for any further foreign investment above 5%.

But then iHeart said it learned last February that GMEI — formerly called Honeycomb Investments Ltd. and based in the Bahamas — had independently acquired about 9.6 million shares of its stock on the NASDAQ exchange, about 6.6% of equity and 8.7% of voting interests.

iHeart notified the FCC and sought approval for those percentages, plus advance approval for GMEI to go up to 14.99%. (GMEI itself asked for approval to go up to 49.99% but later withdrew that request and fell back to the 14.99% figure.) iHeart said this ruling would incentivize foreign investment and benefit U.S. trade policy by encouraging reciprocal investment opportunities for U.S. companies abroad. It also said GMEI represents no national security or law enforcement concerns.

[See Our Business and Law Page]

So in short the latest FCC ruling grants approval for GMEI and its related entities to hold more than 5% of iHeart’s equity and/or voting interest as well as advance approval to increase its interests up to 14.99%. The previous approvals also remain in place: aggregate direct and/or indirect foreign ownership of iHeart above the usual 25% benchmark is allowed up to 100%; (2) approval for the PIMCO Group to hold up to 32.99% of equity and 19.99% of voting interests in the company; and (3) approval for the Invesco Group to hold up to 19.99% of the equity and voting interests.

The Media Bureau took input from a federal advisory committee on foreign participation, which found no concerns. iHeart will still have to obtain approval for additional foreign investors to hold more than 5% (or 10% for certain institutional investors).

iHeart estimated that following the FCC’s approval, direct and indirect foreign ownership of its capital stock would be “at a minimum, approximately 30% as to voting and 40% as to equity.” But that would not be an issue given the FCC’s previous ruling permitting iHeart aggregate foreign ownership up to 100%.

Read the ruling and the commission’s in-depth explanation of the case.

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

The post FCC Grants iHeart Petition on GMEI Foreign Investment appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

FCC OKs Smaller Pre-Approval Percentage Of Global’s iHeart Stake

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 4 months ago

An effort by iHeartMedia to cap the FCC’s advance approval of any investment in the audio content and distribution giant by Michael Tabor-controlled Global Media & Entertainment at just under 15% has proven successful.

As such, GMEI, which bankrolls some of Great Britain’s biggest radio brands, will not get pre-approval from the Media Bureau to hold up to 49.99% nonvoting interest in iHeart.

But, GMEI withdrew that request in some six weeks ago.

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Adam Jacobson

Public Media-focused Station Resource Group Names New Leader

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 4 months ago

SANTA CLARITA, CALIF. — The Station Resource Group (SRG) has announced that a 37-year veteran of public radio will succeed long-term co-CEOs Tom Thomas and Terry Clifford, who have led the organization since its inception.

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