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BIA Revises Its U.S. Local Ad Forecast Upward

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

BIA Advisory Services has revised upward its 2021 forecasts for U.S. Local Advertising Revenues by 3.9% from its November 2020 estimates.

The projection is split between traditional and digital media. But, it shows that the divide is narrowing, BIA notes.

BIA now expects local ad revenue in 2021 of $142.4 billion, from $137.6 billion.

And, the new data show traditional advertising is just 8% ahead of digital media that include mobile, online, over-the-top, email, and traditional media’s online ventures.

“There’s an acceleration in the market that couldn’t be accounted for last fall,” said Dr. Mark Fratrik, BIA’s SVP and Chief Economists. “The economy is growing and we’re observing
money being spent to reach audiences through various media.”

Fratrik points to OTT as growing 16% this year, surpassing the trajectory of mobile as more
consumers take advantage of various streaming services on their TV screens.

Local television advertising this year will dip to $16.2 billion in 2021.

That’s possibly due to the record political ad dollars seen in 2020. Local TV ad dollars were bounce back next year, reaching $19.3 billion in 2022 — with $1.5 billion and $1.7 billion, respectfully, coming from digital platforms.

Local radio advertising will rebound somewhat, to $11.7 billion in 2021 and $12.3 billion in 2022.

The big takeaway: 2022 will see digital platforms for Radio inch past the $1 billion mark, reaching $1.04 billion.

The revised forecast also sees a 5.6% increase in overall compound annual growth in U.S.
spending in local ad markets and expects the amount to reach $157.1 billion in 2022 and $162.1 billion in 2023. The digital media share will first leapfrog to 51% over traditional media by 2023.

RBR-TVBR

Calrec Has the Vibez in South Africa

Radio World
3 years 9 months ago
The Calrec Type R in use at Vibez.Live.

I’m the co-founder and a host of Vibez.Live in South Africa, an internet radio station that my fiancé Valerie Jacobs and I launched on April 1, 2019. We had many years of experience of commercial radio broadcasting in South Africa; but as internet penetration continues to grow across Africa we saw a new opportunity.

As a retro station, we broadcast music from the ’60s, ’70s, ’80s and ’90s. But we don’t do that exclusively, and we have experimented a lot since we started. For example, recent months have seen us do something unique in South Africa by hosting a weekly “Trance Vibez” show in conjunction with Denon DJ SA and Midi Music.

Having used a variety of older equipment over the first 18 months of our existence, including an analog desk, we knew that we needed to upgrade to keep expanding and to benefit from enhanced capabilities.

We turned to Wild & Marr, Calrec’s partner in South Africa. We spoke with them in detail about Calrec’s AoIP-based Type R for Radio system. We were impressed and ordered and installed — with Wild & Marr’s expert guidance — a six-fader Type R with dual layer functionality, which gives us an extra six faders at the touch of a button.

We also added a Type R large soft panel with the feature sets preloaded for more control.

While the Type R core has enough I/O for our current needs, we also purchased a Type R analog I/O box that provides an additional 16 mic/line inputs and six GPIO interfaces. Being able to add more surfaces on the same core was cost-effective for us.

In terms of other equipment, we use two pairs of Shure SRH840 headphones, two Shure SM7B microphones and On-Stage’s versatile microphone boom arms.

[Read more Radio World articles about audio consoles and mixers]

Moving into the digital realm has been great. Microphone levels and music levels are now easily managed and compressed, which previously was virtually impossible. And then there’s the sound quality, with our listeners experiencing a far more crisp, clear and fuller sound. On our first broadcast with this technology, we were impressed with the positive comments from listeners about the improvement.

Although it may appear daunting at first, the Calrec Type R is probably one of the most user-friendly digital broadcast desks I’ve worked on. It has a simple layout, supersmooth faders and crystal-clear touchscreen display. The sleek, compact, no-fuss design fits perfectly into our studio environment, taking up less space while still doing the job that other much bigger desks do. For broadcasters where studio or desk space is limited, the Calrec Type R with its Ethernet connection does away with the old spaghetti junction of cables found in conventional studios. That’s also a major benefit regardless of size.

We are very happy with this solution; it takes us to the leading edge of radio broadcasting.

Radio World User Reports are testimonial articles intended to help readers understand why a colleague chose a particular product to solve a technical situation.

Info: In U.S., Chris Fichera at Calrec/Group One at 1-310-927-7788; international, Anthony Harrison at Calrec at +44-7832-487565; or visit www.calrec.com.

 

The post Calrec Has the Vibez in South Africa appeared first on Radio World.

John Badenhorst

Broadcast Applications

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
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Actions

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
.

Broadcast Actions

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
.

Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture, Corporation for Native Broadcasting, Station KXSW(FM), Sisseton, South Dakota

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
Issued a Notice of Apparent Liability for Forfeiture in the amount of $3,000 to Corporation for Native Broadcasting for failure to timely file a license renewal application for Station KXSW(FM), Sisseton, South Dakota

Pleadings

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
.

Applications

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
.

In the Matter of Online Political Files of Brewer Media Group, LLC, Licensee of Commercial Radio Station(s)

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
Brewer Media Group, LLC enters into consent decree to resolve political file investigation

In the Matter of Online Political Files of Dakota Communications, Ltd. , Licensee of Commercial Radio Station(s)

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 9 months ago
Dakota Communications, Ltd. enters into consent decree to resolve political file investigation

Inside the July 21, 2021 Issue of Radio World

Radio World
3 years 9 months ago

Mike Erickson on how to pick a broadcast processor. John Bisset on preventive maintenance, counterfeit circuit breakers and acoustic wall treatments.

Ron Schacht on why his AM station’s FM translator might be a net minus. Also, Paul Shulins on the services being offered by his new company.

And product news from SurferNetwork, Tieline, PromoSuite and WideOrbit.

Read the issue.

The post Inside the July 21, 2021 Issue of Radio World appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

State EAS Plan Deadlines Announced

Radio World
3 years 9 months ago

State emergency communications committees pay attention.

The FCC’s the Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau has announced that July 5, 2022, is the one-year deadline for filing State EAS Plans via the ARS online filing system, and the deadline for compliance with both the State EAS Plan content rules (Section 11.21(a)(1)-(7)) and EAS designations (Section 11.18).

[Read: Emergency Alert Changes Pass FCC]

The agency adds, “The ARS is an online filing system adopted in 2018 to modernize State EAS Plan submissions, and provide uniformity across State EAS Plans, in terms of both format and terminology, while affording sufficient flexibility to accommodate each SECC’s unique needs.”

 

The post State EAS Plan Deadlines Announced appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Hey, Alexa! I Want That iHeartMedia FM To Play This Song!

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

In a game-changer for broadcast radio in the digital space, iHeartMedia has unveiled an interactive feature from Amazon Alexa designed to allow listeners of an iHeart radio station’s audio stream to make song requests and dedications — bringing a new level of interactivity to what’s largely been “FM” for two generations.

Introducing voice-enabled air personality interactivity with Alexa.

It’s available as of today for Alexa users who listen to Country WCOS-FM 97.5 in Columbia, S.C.; and Top 40s KZZP-FM 104.7 in Phoenix, WXXL-FM in Orlando and KHKS-FM “Kiss FM” in Dallas. More stations will launch their capabilities soon, iHeartMedia says.

“Ever wish you could talk directly to your favorite radio DJs? Now you can!,” boasts the iHeart literature.

For a broadcast media company that pioneered voice-tracking and the importation of air talent across multiple markets, the very idea of communicating with a “live on the air DJ” is perhaps a chuckle-inducing notion.

That said, radio stations across all ownership groups over the last decade have rarely seen listeners phone in to request a song.

Thus, iHeartMedia deserves applause for using the smart speaker — the leading at-home device for audio content consumption — as a tool allowing listeners to better connect with the radio DJs and stations they hear on the company’s radio stations.

How does it work? “One can simply use their voice to seamlessly request songs and even dedicate them to family and friends,” iHeart explains. “Alexa will then send the request to the station, where radio DJs can queue them for on-air playback in front of millions of other listeners.”

Consider it the 2021 version of a once-normal activity seen for any popular music station, minus the telephone.

“We’re excited that for the first time our listeners will be able to talk to us directly through Alexa,” iHeartRadio Chief Product Officer Chris Williams said. “This is a direct line to allow our audience to talk back, to share their thoughts and help influence what you hear on the radio.”

Song requests and dedications “are just the beginning,” iHeart says, noting that iHeartRadio “is already experimenting with the latest Alexa updates to deliver even more interactive features in the future.” This includes Q&As with on-air personalities and show hosts, voice-driven polls, and contests.

Adam Jacobson

Cox Media Group’s Digital Dollar Solution: An Amazon Pact

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

If you can’t beat ’em, join ’em.

As many radio industry executives struggle with ways to combat local digital’s nonstop suction of dollars from AM and FM radio stations, Cox Media Group has opted to link up with Amazon Advertising as part of a Local Solutions plan to bring advertisers a 360-degree consumer touchpoint option.

Thanks to a strategic initiative announced Wednesday (7/21), Cox Media Group Local Solutions advertisers will be able to reach local audiences with Amazon Advertising digital offerings.

Simply stated, CMG Local Solutions advertisers can now programmatically buy display and OTT ads through the Amazon DSP and analyze their campaign performance with “full-funnel measurement” products offered by Amazon Advertising.

The goal: expanding local advertisers’ reach and increasing sales.

“This is an exciting new opportunity for CMG Local Solutions and our advertising partners,” said Joe Weir, a SVP of Digital at CMG. “Amazon Advertising’s digital offerings, combined with CMG Local Solutions’ unmatched product expertise, high performing products and platforms and CMG’s long-standing heritage, enables us to help local businesses achieve their marketing goals more effectively.”

— RBR+TVBR Wire Services

RBR-TVBR

Philip Falcone’s New Venture Snags Another LPTV Property

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

He was the face behind HC2 Holdings until the middle of 2020. Today, he’s amassing a collection of low-power broadcast TV stations through his recently formed Sovryn Holdings.

Now, Philip Falcone is acquiring another LPTV property. It’s located in the Valley of the Sun.

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Adam Jacobson

A Retrans Impasse Impacts Sinclair

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

For three weeks, Suddenlink customers in the Greenville-New Bern, N.C., area have been unable to tune to the market’s ABC affiliate.

The reason? A retransmission consent agreement expired June 30, and there’s no new deal in place. The station’s owner, Sinclair Broadcast Group, now says there likely won’t be one — period.

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Adam Jacobson

Digital Alert Systems Issues New FEMA IPAWS CA File

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

Digital Alert Systems, a provider of emergency communications products for video services providers, has released an important update of Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) digital certificates used to authenticate messaging from the Integrated Public Alert and Warning System (IPAWS).

The company has released updated IPAWS Certificate Authority (CA) credentials for the DASDEC and One-Net series of Emergency Alert System/Common Alerting Protocol (EAS/CAP) encoder/decoders.

They replace a certificate in the current certification chain that will expire on August 21.

All U.S. DASDEC and One-Net users are advised to replace the soon-to-expire certificate to ensure the required message authentication continues to operate properly. Digital Alert Systems reminds all EAS participants the FCC requires them to “configure their systems to reject all CAP-formatted EAS messages that include an invalid digital signature.”

Digital certificates, called CAs, are used by FEMA to create a chain of trust between an EAS device and the IPAWS servers. The DASDEC and One-Net EAS/CAP devices use these special digital certificates to validate the authenticity of IPAWS-sourced CAP alerts. These certificates are designed to expire on a specific date and time, requiring the issuing authority to publish new certificates as replacements.

All DASDEC and One-Net customers using the IPAWS system must have the latest certificates in place so only messages authenticated through IPAWS are processed. IPAWS users who do not update their equipment before Aug. 21 could see this error message: “Event Log: Digital Signature VERIFICATION ERROR: Signer UNTRUSTED! Check for correct CAP decoder CA file.” Alternatively, the device might simply ignore valid IPAWS alerts.

The new field service bulletin and CA file are now available from the Digital Alert Systems website. DASDEC and One-Net customers should go to the website, download the field service bulletin for instructions, and link to the new CA file.

RBR-TVBR

FCC Taps Florida Station on the Shoulder

Radio World
3 years 9 months ago

A Florida radio station has received a notice of violation from the FCC’s Enforcement Bureau for alleged spurious emissions on frequencies beyond the FM band.

The FCC said agents from its Miami office inspected WQTL(FM) in Tallahassee, which is owned by Adams Radio of Tallahassee.

The rules state that any emission on a frequency removed from a station’s carrier by more than 600 kHz must be attenuated at least 43 + 10 Log10 (Power, in watts) dB below the level of the unmodulated carrier, or 80 dB, whichever is the lesser attenuation.

[Read: FCC Nixes $1,500 Liability Against FM Translator]

The FCC noted that WQTL’s effective radiated power is 2250 Watts, so emissions on a frequency removed from carrier by more than 600 kHz must be attenuated by at least 76.52 dB.

The agents found that WQTL’s fundamental frequency, 106.1 MHz, had a signal level of –24.35 dBm. The Enforcement Bureau’s agents said they conducted measurements on spurious emissions from WQTL’s transmitter on two frequencies. Emissions on 121.249 MHz had a signal level of –54.89 dBm, and emissions on 136.41 MHz had a level of –75.50 dBm.

“The spurious emissions identified … have signal levels in excess of the limit for such emissions determined pursuant to Section 73.317(d) of the commission’s rules,” the bureau wrote.

The commission did not say what prompted this inspection. It has asked the station for additional information concerning the finding and any remedial actions taken. It has 20 days to reply.

 

The post FCC Taps Florida Station on the Shoulder appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Here’s The Truth: An Iowa Is Sold To VCY

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

VCY America has been in the news of late because of its pending acquisition of three FMs once controlled, and still licensed to, Royce International Broadcasting. 

As VCY waits for a Federal District Judge in California to finally give ownership of the trio formerly operated by Ed Stolz, it is moving forward with the purchase of a Class A FM serving Iowa’s largest market.

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Adam Jacobson

A ‘JOY’-ful Traffic and Weather Pact In the Southeast

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 9 months ago

Total Traffic and Weather Network (TTWN) has forged an expanded newswire content partnership with the owner and operator of 14 religious non-commercial stations across Georgia, Florida and Alabama.

Under the agreement, TTWN will provide news, sports, show-prep and audio content via its 24/7 News Source wire service to The JOY FM’s radio stations.

The 24/7 News Source provides its affiliate partners with market-customized text and audio news, weather, sports, and entertainment updates, including format-specific content and show-prep, plus the ability to instantly click-n-share stories via social media.

TTWN affiliate partners include more than 200 Christian Radio affiliates.

“It’s an exciting time for The JOY FM as we continue to expand our coverage across much of the Southeast, including Georgia, Florida and Alabama,” says Jerry Williams, Operations Director with The JOY FM. “Our partnership with Total Traffic & Weather Network has been an important part of our programming for many years and we wanted to continue to equip our news team with the timely and accurate content that 24/7 News Source Pro provides. We look forward to many more years of partnership with TTWN.”

TTWN is owned by iHeartMedia.

RBR-TVBR

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