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Radio World

Changes to Radio Technical Rules Advance

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The Federal Communications Commission has officially opened an NPRM aimed at changing certain technical rules covering broadcast radio.

This was expected; as we reported earlier, a draft notice of proposed rulemaking had been released. The commissioners have now approved it, which means the FCC will take public comment on the proposed changes for final action later. Comment deadlines are not yet set.

Acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel has said the changes are intended to fix rules that are “redundant, outdated or in conflict with other rules.”

The commission wants to change section 73.1665(b) to remove the maximum rated transmitter power limit for AM stations.

It also wants to change two rule sections that were adopted in 1997 to “harmonize” with the NCE FM community coverage standard in another section, which was adopted later.

A third change would eliminate section 73.316(d), “which we tentatively conclude is an unnecessary burden on applicants.” This involves FM transmitter interference to nearby antennas.

Also, the FCC wants to change a section that sets out signal strength contour overlap requirements for NCE FM Class D stations, “to harmonize the requirements with the more permissive standard applied to all other NCE-FM stations.” It said it wants to be consistent across different NCE FM station classes.

It also wants to delete a requirement that radio stations in the 76–100 MHz band protect common carrier services in Alaska. It said there are no such services remaining. Earlier, existing common carrier operations had been grandfathered in with the understanding that they would gradually move to other parts of the spectrum

The FCC also wants to tweak the definition of “AM fill-in area” in one part of the rules to conform to the requirement in another part. The goal is consistency across the rules for fill-in translator transmitter siting.

Last, the commission wants to amend the allocation and power limitations for broadcast stations within 320 kilometers of the Mexican and Canadian borders to comply with current treaty provisions.

The full proposal is posted on the Radio World website.

The post Changes to Radio Technical Rules Advance appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Lessons of Radio Row at the ACM Awards

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago
Artist Lindsay Ell visits with a station virtually.

Steve Kirsch is president of Silver Lake Audio, which produces multi-station radio remotes including renting the equipment and providing tech support. This interview is from the 2021 Radio World ebook “Remote Radio Phase II: What We’ve Learned During a Pandemic.”

RW: How did the pandemic change workflow for you and your clients? 

Steve Kirsch

Steve Kirsch: A lot of my smaller clients called in March 2020 as they were beginning to figure out how to have their morning show do their thing from their house. “Look, I’d like to rent a Comrex. We’re going to feed the audio back to the studio, but they’re not going to be there.” 

At the beginning they’d say, “Well, we need this for two weeks.” You remember? It seems crazy now to think about, but in the beginning we thought all this would be over. In March last year, you had [events] on the books for June that you knew were still going to happen. “By then, we’ll have this all sorted out.” 

A year later I had some clients who still have the equipment. I said, “Look, just keep this stuff until the pandemic’s over.” We shut the meter off, they’re not renting it any longer. They’re just borrowing it at this point. 

We were supposed to do a job in April 2020 for the Academy of Country Music Awards. They kicked that down the road from April to September, and they moved the venue from Las Vegas to Nashville; but they still wanted to do this radio multi-station broadcast. 

Now in a typical year, we would build a booth for each radio station on the floor of the convention center or wherever they were basing the show. We would set up the equipment in every booth, and the DJs would just show up and sit in the booth. We’d have a small crew. We’d show the guys how to use the equipment that we put out there; and then the artists, Luke Bryan, Lady Antebellum, would move through from one booth to another.

So keeping that format in mind, [the ACM] decided that they were going to go ahead and do this virtually last fall. They decided that as opposed to having the talent from the radio stations fly in, they would set up video monitors in each booth. The artists would move through the booth, but they would look at a video screen, and they would see the DJ back in their home studio. So they came to us and said, “How are we going to do this?”

By September, everybody was familiar with doing Zoom calls and Microsoft meetings. Whatever platform the radio station was accustomed to, we adapted that booth for their format, for their platform. 

We brought in computer monitors and put Focusrite Scarlet sound cards on those things, so you didn’t sound like those CNN interviews where the guy sounds like he’s in a garbage can, using the microphone that’s built into the computer. The Focusrite Scarlet is pro level in and USB out, and they interface with the computer. 

Then we used our regular setup, Mackie 1202s and headphone amps, and interfaced everything into the Zoom call. 

I would say half the stations still wanted Comrex or Tieline audio going back. The Zoom audio is pretty good. We never expected to use the Zoom audio, because most of the things that you’ve seen on TV have sounded so bad. We were surprised with these sound cards and how good the audio with the Zoom call actually was. 

RW: Did it work out well?

Kirsch: It worked great. 

We always provide Sony 7506 headphones as studio monitors for those events; the artist comes in and put the headphones on, they can listen to questions from the studio or whatever. [But] the academy didn’t want that look. 

They knew that the DJs in the studio were going to see the artists. They didn’t want the artists wearing headphones; and they were worried that the women wouldn’t put them on because it would mess up their hair. These are some of the things that we had to deal with. 

We debated going to IFB type earpieces like they use on TV. But then we just ended up looking for the least obtrusive earbuds that we could find, and they really loved those. I don’t know that we’re ever going back to the headphones because even though it’s radio, there’s so much of this stuff gets put on the social media platform now, with video streaming. 

RW: What about hygienic considerations, where you’ve got talent going from booth to booth.

Kirsch: We threw out all of our windscreens. We were using WindTech, they’re like six bucks a windscreen instead of 50 cents that you could get at B&H Photo if you buy 20 of them. We took all our WindTech windscreens off and bought new windscreens with the idea of throwing them out. 

We also bought those earbuds, and used alcohol wipes and put new tips on for the next event. 

We washed down the mics, we put new windscreens on; and we have a Seal-a-Meal heat sealer for bags. We heat sealed these mics, these windscreens and these earbuds in a bag; and we put a label on the outside. We knew the artist lineup so we’d write the artist’s name on the outside of the bag; and when they checked in to do the interviews, we handed them this bag.

Also my guys, in addition to being tested every day, they had to wear a plastic shield as well as a mask to sit in the booth and do the engineering.

The post Lessons of Radio Row at the ACM Awards appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

FCC Needs a Tech-Savvy Commissioner, AFCCE Says

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The AFCCE is urging the White House to nominate a fifth FCC commissioner — and to make it a person with a technical background.

The Association of Federal Communications Consulting Engineers is made up of engineers who serve clients with matters under the purview of the FCC. They provide comments, guidance and recommendations on rule interpretation, technical collaboration and FCC technical policy.

The group has sent a letter to the Biden administration and to Senators Maria Cantwell and Roger Wicker of the Commerce Committee, recommending that President Biden appoint a fifth FCC commissioner to help resolve anticipated deadlocks on pending matters. It also urges that the president to consider appointing a commissioner with technical, scientific or engineering background.

“At the FCC’s origin, commissioners were appointed based as much on their technical merit as other factors,” wrote AFCCE President John George.

“In recent decades, however, commissioners have relied upon the FCC’s Office of Engineering and Technology and the FCC’s staff engineers for technical advice, but those technical resources have suffered massive attrition over the past two decades with few positions backfilled. As the FCC itself has reduced its technological depth, the technology inherent in the industries regulated by the FCC — including broadcasting and multicast, personal wireless, and Wi-Fi — have become infinitely more complex.”

George wrote that having at least one FCC commissioner with a substantial technical background and a fundamental understanding of RF and communications technologies “would be in the greater public interest and would provide an additional measure of balance and robustness to the FCC’s overall decision-making process.”

The FCC currently has four members, two Democrats and two Republicans, and is led by acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel.

[Related: “Radio Technical Rules to Be Cleaned Up”]

The post FCC Needs a Tech-Savvy Commissioner, AFCCE Says appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

iHeart Names LeGrett President of Sports

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago
Kevin LeGrett

iHeartMedia named Kevin LeGrett as president of iHeartMedia Sports.

The portfolio includes the iHeartSports Network, which provides sports content and updates on 500+ stations; the Fox Sports Network, with syndicated names like Colin Cowherd and Dan Patrick; and 80 sports talk stations. It also crosses over into the iHeartPodcast Network, with 40 national and 100 local sports podcasts and a recently announced podcast deal with the NFL.

[Visit Radio World’s People News Page]

LeGrett currently is division president and president of the L.A. region for iHeartMedia.

Alexis Ginas

The announcement was made by Greg Ashlock, CEO of the Multi-Platform Group at iHeartMedia.

Alexis Ginas becomes president for Los Angeles, its largest revenue region, and will report to LeGrett, who retains his role of division president for the Markets Group. Ginas was involved with two IPO leadership teams and most recently was at Madison Valley, a media and technology consulting practice that she founded.

Send news of engineering and executive personnel changes to radioworld@futurenet.com.

 

The post iHeart Names LeGrett President of Sports appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Broadcasters Honored for Community Service

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The National Association of Broadcasters Leadership Foundation named the recipients of its Celebration of Service to America Awards over the weekend, recognizing community service by local broadcasters.

Below are the radio recipients of the Service to Community Awards for Radio, with details of their service campaigns and the announcement text from the NABLF describing them:

Ownership Group
Zimmer Radio of Mid-Missouri, “Miracles for Kids Radiothon“

For the Zimmer Radio & Marketing Group team, the annual Children’s Miracle Network radiothon is personal. Raising money and awareness for MU’s Children’s Hospital to help sick kids is the main reason “why we do the radiothon,” but this radiothon also happens because many staff members have needed this hospital for their own children at some point. As the self-proclaimed “crown jewel event for the company,” this radiothon showcases the power of radio and love for local communities. The 14th annual 2020 Miracle for Kids radiothon raised over $248,000 and awareness for the phenomenal work of the doctors, nurses and staff every single day at the local Children’s Hospital.

A photo of civil unrest in Minneapolis/St. Paul. Hubbard Broadcasting station KTMY(FM) was honored for coverage and a campaign to help business rebuild and the community recover.

Major Market
KTMY(FM), St. Paul, Minn., “KTMY Rebuilds the Neighborhoods,” Hubbard Broadcasting

Minority-owned businesses in Minneapolis and St. Paul that were already disproportionately affected by COVID-19 restrictions were dealt a brutal blow during the uprising that took place in the aftermath of the death of George Floyd. During the civil unrest across the cities, many of these places were vandalized, looted and burned to the ground. In partnership with the Neighborhood Development Center, KTMY launched “10 Stories in 10 Days” to tell the stories of these local businesses hurting and inspire the community to lend a hand. Their show hosts turned their mics over to these business owners, many of whom came to this country chasing the American dream, so they could share their stories with the audience. As a result of this partnership and campaign, KTMY raised over $145,000 for these businesses to rebuild and highlighted the local community’s power and small business owners’ resilience.

Medium Market
WYCT(FM), Pensacola, Fla., Hurricane Sally Relief Efforts, iHeartMedia Inc.

In September 2020, Hurricane Sally meandered into the Gulf of Mexico and 36 hours out, this slow-moving storm was forecast to make landfall 200 miles away from Pensacola. Instead, it took a slow right turn and became the first direct hit for Pensacola in 16 years. Following the devastation of this hurricane, the team at WYCT(FM) wanted to do something to help the community rebuild and recover from the storm. In partnership with United Way of West Florida and their TV partner WEAR(TV), this local station launched “Mission Restore Hope” to raise over $300,000 to help local organizations fund rebuilding efforts and help the community feel at home again.

Small Market
KNDE(FM), College Station, Texas, “136 Charities, $794,573, One Day and the KNDE Team,” Bryan Broadcasting Corp.

Amid canceled events and poorly attended virtual fundraisers, many local nonprofits found themselves on the brink of extinction. In partnership with the Community Foundation of the Brazos Valley, the KNDE team decided it was time to showcase local radio’s power. During the 18-hour virtual giving event held on Oct. 27, 2020, this local station educated its audience on the work of 136 charities and solicited donations to help keep the community members afloat. In one day, this team raised $794,573 and proved that local broadcasting does matter.

Television stations and groups were honored in similar categories. Recipients included the E.W. Scripps Company; WISN(TV), Milwaukee; WMC(TV), Memphis, Tenn.; and KTVB(TV), Boise, Idaho.

 

The post Broadcasters Honored for Community Service appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Apps Are Your Conduit to Success

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago
Chris Gould

The author is founder and VP digital technologies at All in Media, a supplier of radio station applications and part of Xperi.

 There are, more or less, 131 FM radio stations in New York. And only 75 AM stations.

That’s it — that’s the expanse of a content choice that is advertiser-supported and has a built-in limit to how broadly it can get its message out.

Now compare this to the wonderful, sometimes wild, world of apps.

In the iOS world, you can listen to 40,000 radio stations in your car, accessible through your phone or CarPlay. It’s hands-down the sector with the biggest growth — and has been for a long time.

This massive and noisy environment is, today, the cornerstone of a broadcaster’s digital strategy: The infrastructure that a radio station invests in to deploy mobile apps dictates its ability to innovate user experiences, leverage metadata and expand into new integrations such as Amazon Fire TV, Android Auto, Sonos, Bose and Amazon Alexa.

[Read: RadioFX Provides Apps to El Dorado]

Indeed, the right digital infrastructure helps to ensure an expanding and evolving experience across many digital ecosystems.

Expanding the Ecosystem

About a decade ago, the drive for apps was arguably a curious “me too” trend, with little upside.

Since then, as it has morphed into a driver of affordable, scalable innovation, it has, frankly, become a survival imperative for broadcasters to stay ahead of a competitive and constantly evolving digital content landscape. And in the process it has changed the game.

But while good app infrastructure is critical to cost-efficient innovation, it can be a tall mountain to climb.

Fig. 1: Backend app infrastructure is complex. Here’s a sample infrastructure required for a broadcaster to support their smartphone apps and other connected platforms.

On the surface it looks easy: Apps are user-friendly and simple (that is the whole point of an app); but as seen in Fig. 1, behind the curtain is a complex set of systems and moving parts that must be integrated into a single API in order to open up that innovation efficiency for broadcasters.

A great example of how good app infrastructure opens up new opportunities is Commercial Radio Australia’s app, which brings together different radio stations into a single aggregator app, owned and operated by the radio industry.

At AIM, we worked for years with Australia’s big commercial and public service broadcasters, so we understood their specific needs and requirements. When the industry evolved and an app was needed, we were able to create an app and app infrastructure that enabled Commercial Radio Australia to have control of the platform.

This work also helped build support for new platforms, such as Google Home and Alexa.

For example, a key issue radio stations were having was with the accuracy of station matching on Alexa. Radio is one of the most used features on Alexa but, in Australia, Alexa would get the right station just 23% of the time. That could be because Alexa misunderstood the name, or a station had changed name, or there were multiple stations with the same name, and Alexa wasn’t matching.

Supported by the app infrastructure, AIM was able to work with Commercial Radio Australia and Amazon to enable a smarter, more sophisticated way of searching for radio stations and improved the accuracy to close to 100%.

Affordable Innovation

Any broadcaster can innovate, but innovation takes a lot longer and more resources without the kind of adaptable, end-to-end platform that a centralized digital app infrastructure offers: It can make innovation more time- and cost-efficient, and easily scaled, for example to allow the launch of an Alexa service, Siri, Sonos or any number of digital extensions.

But is it possible for broadcasters to DIY app infrastructure to reach this affordable innovation? Maybe — if they have the resources for a permanent team of developers to keep the apps fresh enough to engage listeners, to build infrastructure that can integrate multiple disparate elements — from scheduling to third-party content to live streams, podcasts, user login, ad systems, analytics, listening systems and more.

The reality? Most broadcasters don’t have the resources, time or focus to develop this infrastructure. “Buy vs. build” truly makes sense when it comes to app strategy.

At AIM, we do it for broadcast customers with RadioAPI, which enables simple distribution of content to platforms including broadcast, mobile, web, hybrid cars and smart speakers, while keeping content within the broadcaster’s control.

A Personalized App Experience

Online listening, mobile listening, listening via smart speakers is growing in popularity; and radio stations are at its heart. Not being available via app means missing out on an exponentially expanding audience through the sheer volume of listeners and through access to analytics.

Apps can track listener behavior, from listening times to played tracks. People often search for a local radio station in the App Store, presenting a golden opportunity: Broadcasters can surface additional content, including on-demand to podcasts, catch-up content or new stories.

Being in control of the gateway to listeners — because you own the app — means full control of the user experience. That’s when your listeners come to your app and start listening to your content.

A good example is Bauer, which rolled out its subscription service with two things: a strong base of mobile app listeners and access to analytics (Fig. 2).

Fig. 2: Bauer recently introduced its Planet Rock Premium subscription service with a strong base of mobile app listeners and access to analytics.

The listener base helped Bauer monetize new options and features, while expanded analytics told them who, and when, users were consuming content — down to what tracks people were tuning into … and out of.

Revenue Opportunities and Control

This all opens up revenue opportunities. Subscription radio for an enhanced experience is one example, as is targeted audio advertising.

Ultimately, great content underpins it all. Good infrastructure and tools mean that content produced for the live broadcast stations can be easily repurposed for the app, then for a smart speaker or connected car platforms. You go into a system and do it once — and the content gets published across the range of platforms that matter to radio stations.

And because good app infrastructure gives the broadcasters complete control, and enables tight access management, their high-value content and unique intellectual property are protected from hijacking aggregators.

Ultimately, apps are a conduit to increased monetization, analytics, efficiency, content and interactivity. And that’s something that makes everyone happy, from listeners to broadcasters and technology providers.

Comment on this or any story. Email mailto:radioworld@futurenet.com with “Letter to the Editor” in the subject field.

The post Apps Are Your Conduit to Success appeared first on Radio World.

Chris Gould

40% of Engineers Got a Raise in Past Year

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The Society of Broadcast Engineers has completed its latest salary survey. “Once again, the survey shows that individuals who hold SBE certification on average earn a higher salary than those who do not hold SBE certification,” said President Wayne Pecena. “In short: SBE certification pays.”

The survey finds that the average radio engineer who responded and who holds SBE certification earns a salary of about $81,700 (compared to $78,000 in the 2020 study) while those without certification averaged $72,700 this year (compared to $70,400 last time).

[Read: SBE Drive Nets New Members]

TV engineers and those who work in both radio and TV were grouped together for the purpose of reporting average salary. This group averaged about $90,000 with certification, and $78,600 without.

About 40% of respondents received a salary increase in the past 12 months.

There were 320 qualified respondents. Forty-two percent work just in radio, 31% in TV, and 20% work in both.

The complete results are available free to society members and the survey is available for purchase by others through the SBE Bookstore.

The survey included 23 questions about job titles, broadcast market size and compensation in dollars and offered benefits. It sought responses from both members and non-members. Responses are anonymous. It was conducted April 1 to June 15.

 

The post 40% of Engineers Got a Raise in Past Year appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

EBU Finds That Radio Is in the Air

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The author is manager of the Media Intelligence Service at the European Broadcasting Union.

In these days of flashy audio innovations — with professionals, the trade press and dedicated events and conferences often focusing on podcasts, vocal assistants and social audio — we tend to forget the central role that old-fashioned and resilient broadcast radio plays in peoples’ lives.

At the EBU, we estimate that broadcast radio still represents between 85 and 90% of total radio consumption, which remains the bulk of audio consumption.

[Read: The Great Unbundling of Radio]

To understand the situation of broadcast radio, we have recently conducted research on the distribution networks used by radio services in Europe and the northern African territories that form part of the EBU, i.e. in 56 countries with a total population of more than 1 billion.

Many readers will no doubt be surprised to learn that our census found more than 12,000 radio services across the area. These are services operating each under their own brand, independently from the number of frequencies or transmitters.

Less surprisingly, 95% of those services broadcast in FM. This sends out a strong signal showing how prevalent FM remains.

Of course, the picture on the ground is more diverse, from Southern Europe where dials are typically overcrowded to Algeria, the sole remaining public radio monopoly in the area, and on to Norway, the only country to have shut down analog FM radio nationwide. Although some countries still grant FM licenses, the total number of services in this band is on the decrease.

The future looks darker for other analog networks, medium- and longwave. There are already 19 countries with no medium-wave services, although the U.K. still operates 69 services in that band, nearly as many as all 27 countries of the European Union taken together, where 74 services were identified.

There are only 12 services available in longwave, down from 21 in 2017 and 18 in 2019. Those originate in 10 countries, with public radio in Algeria and Iceland broadcasting two different signals. The LW band is only used for radio in Region 1 of the ITU, and outside the area covered by our study, in Mongolia and Turkmenistan.

As the reader may guess, digital radio broadcast networks are the fastest-growing. In 2021 nearly 2,000 different services were identified, a 23% increase in only two years, with no sign of slowing down short term. Again, the U.K. is an outlier here, with 80% of the 265 DAB stations identified. Meanwhile, DAB+ continues gaining ground.

And what about international radio? More shortwave services are appearing, but often at a high cost: large, well-known broadcasters are turning away from a bandwidth that is increasingly being taken over by religious denominational and other niche services. DRM, for its part, has not been embraced so far as a viable digital alternative to shortwave.

Comment on this or any story. Email mailto:radioworld@futurenet.com with “Letter to the Editor” in the subject field.

 

The post EBU Finds That Radio Is in the Air appeared first on Radio World.

David Fernández Quijada

REC Networks Sees NAB “Conspiracy Campaign”

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

REC Networks founder Michi Bradley is criticizing the National Association of Broadcasters for running what she describes as a conspiracy campaign against her petition to increase the maximum power for low-power FMs to 250 watts.

NAB has been a vocal opponent of REC’s “Simple 250” proposal, telling the FCC it has concerns about potential interference to existing FM signals, in particular to translators. The association also has questioned the capabilities of some LPFM stations to address interference complaints adequately.

The petition would amend Parts 73 and 74 of the rules to create an LP250 class of service with an effective service contour of about 4-1/2 miles, in addition to the current LP100 service. The NAB has been vigorous in opposition, and last week we told you about its latest reply comments.

REC Networks too has filed replies, alleging that NAB relies on several “conspiracy theories.”

One, Bradley says, is the “crowded spectrum” argument: “NAB continues to [revel] in this ongoing conspiracy theory that claims that LP250 would result in ‘further congestion’ of the already crowded FM band, yet provides absolutely no technical data to support their claim.”

REC continues: “[C]ontour overlap between commercial stations already exists because of the use of distance separation instead of contours in order to space stations apart. The NAB does not seem to have any problem with that kind of spectrum crowding and interference as it would likely involve its own membership. If anything, it is REC and not the NAB that has been the most transparent in disclosing isolated incidents of interference with the upgrade to LP250 and as we will explain, that upgrades to LP250 follow the same accepted standards that currently allow full-service commercial FM stations to be able to be spaced, without regard to contour overlap.”

REC Networks proposes that an upgrade from LP100 to LP250 be allowed as a simple minor change application.

It acknowledges the potential for an LPFM to create or increase overlap with an authorized facility due to specific geographic situations, and says it understands comments from ABC-Disney expressing concern over LP250 and its potential impact on WPVI(TV), a legacy Channel 6 station in Philadelphia.

However, REC says the possibility of any new LP100 stations near Philadelphia is extremely small. “ABC-Disney should not need to be concerned about the outcome of this proceeding as it will have no impact on WPVI operations.”

NAB also portrays LPFM stakeholders as “having no regard for the rules,” Bradley wrote, but this generalizes to the entire service from a small number of situations, she argues.

Further, she argues that “NAB tries to play the COVID sympathy card.” The association, she wrote, “claims that radio stations had to quickly reconfigure their systems to comply with social distancing guidelines and remote operations, newsgathering and reporting. It would be completely pathetic to assume that these reactions and precautions to protect and inform the local community were exclusive to full-service broadcast stations.”

And NAB says the economic downturn caused by the pandemic has severely impacted the radio industry and that advertising dollars which sustain radio were among the first business cuts when businesses contract during downturns, according to REC.

“They fail to recognize that LPFM stations were in a similar situation during the pandemic,” REC told the FCC.

There are 2,159 licensed LPFM 100 stations in the United States, according to the latest data from the FCC. The approximate service range of a 100 watt LPFM station is 3.5 miles radius.

The post REC Networks Sees NAB “Conspiracy Campaign” appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

BW Broadcast Closes, at Least Temporarily

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago
Scott Incz

Broadcast equipment manufacturer BW Broadcast has shut down, at least temporarily, after the death of its co-founder Scott Incz, according to BW’s U.S. distributor SCMS.

The manufacturer’s other co-founder, Roger Howe, died last year.

SCMS President Bob Cauthen said he was notified last week by BW Broadcast that Incz had died but that he had no further details.

Cauthen said he expects BW “will be reopened at some point under a new ownership.”

“As the U.S. distributor, we will continue to provide service and parts to our U.S. customers as well as offer service at our North Carolina corporate facility and provide parts as they are available,” Cauthen said. “We have a significant stock of finished product and parts to accomplish this. Additionally, we will be able to work closely with several BW employees for worldwide service support.”

BW Broadcast makes transmitters, audio processors, monitors and other equipment. It was founded by Roger Howe and Scott Incz in 1997. Howe died in early 2020.

“Scott was a valued business partner for many years,” said Matt Cauthen, vice president of SCMS, “and more importantly, a friend. He will be missed.”

The post BW Broadcast Closes, at Least Temporarily appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Don Backus Retires

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

Don Backus has announced his retirement.

He is well known in broadcasting for his equipment sales and marketing roles at companies like Rohde & Schwarz, ENCO, BE and Audio Broadcast Group. And for two decades before that, he came up through the station side, in management, on-air, news, sales and ownership.

Throughout his career, he has maintained close ties to the state of Michigan.

Backus attended Michigan State University in East Lansing, where he worked at the carrier current radio station. His early career included programming, production and on-air positions at WVIC in East Lansing, doing mornings and middays; WITL in Lansing doing afternoons; and WSJM in St. Joseph doing middays and FM programming.

At the microphone of WVIC(FM) East Lansing, Mich., in 1979

From 1983 to 1993, he was co-owner, president and general manager of FM station WDBI in Tawas City, Mich., where he also worked on-air and as chief engineer. His final station role was as general sales manager of the Williams Communications stations in Longview and Tyler, Texas.

His career in technology sales started at Audio Broadcast Group, another Michigan firm, which he joined in 1994 and where he was a sales engineer and digital systems manager.

“I moved into the technology side when I realized that my passion for broadcasting could be channeled into enabling broadcasters to use the newer technology coming onto the market to both improve programming and profitability,” he told me. “I felt then, and still feel, that my experience as a station manager provided me with an empathy all too rare in equipment sales.”

At the 1985 NAB Show

He later joined radio automation provider ENCO Systems in 1999 and held the position of VP of sales and marketing. A highlight of his time there was winning a contract with National Public Radio as part of its ContentDepot rollout to provide 125 automation systems to affiliate stations.

After that he became the eastern U.S. sales manager for Broadcast Electronics, where he sold automation systems, broadcast transmitters and mobile and social media platforms.

And for the past four years Backus has been North American Account Manager, Radio Transmitters for Rohde & Schwarz, where a key responsibility has been to be that company’s face to the U.S. market for its liquid-cooled solid-state FM transmitters.

He estimates he has traveled a half million miles in that position. “The R&S people are great and were a dream to work with,” he said.

Backus has been part of the fabric of the radio technology side of our biz. He has been a member of the National Radio Systems Committee, active in several of its subcommittees and working groups. He also has been a member of the NAB Radio Technology Committee, working on its Next Generation Architecture Digital Radio Working Group.

He’s a director of the Michigan Association of Broadcasters Foundation and he served two terms as associate director of the MAB itself. For 25 years he has helped plan the engineering content of the MAB’s annual Great Lakes Broadcast Conference.

“Since Michigan State college radio in the fall of 1972, I’ve always considered myself a broadcaster,” he told me. “I have never had a job that wasn’t interesting, challenging or fun, and most of the time, all three.”

He and his wife of 48 years, Nancy, live in Grand Rapids. They plan to travel and spend time with their five grandchildren.

“The technology, however powerful, isn’t the point,” he told me in a career summary. “The point is the benefit that you, your people and your listeners get out of it.”

The post Don Backus Retires appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

11 Texas Stations Face License Expiration

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago
Plains Independent School District is one of the licensees from whom the FCC is awaiting renewal applications.

Eleven radio stations in Texas face the loss of their licenses if they fail to apply for renewal by the end of this month. They include three full-service FMs, three AMs and five low-power FMs.

The Federal Communications Commission released the list of stations that it says haven’t filed yet. “Their licenses will expire as of Aug. 1, 2021, provided no renewal application is received by midnight on the date of expiration.”

The stations are:

KDSH(LP), Borger, Texas; Living River Ministries Inc.

KKFH(LP), Conroe, Texas; Fuente De Vida – Conroe Inc.

KRKF(LP), Corpus Christi, Texas; Stedfast Ministries

KBRA(FM), Freer, Texas; Cobra Broadcasting LLC – KBRA

KTEZ(LP), Killeen, Texas; Kates Media Group Inc.

KJJT(FM), Los Ybanez, Texas; Jesus Pena Acosta

KIRT(AM), Mission, Texas; Bravo Broadcasting Company, Inc.

KLBW(AM), New Boston, Texas; Chapel of Light

KOZA(AM), Odessa, Texas; Stellar Media Inc.

KPHS(FM), Plains, Texas; Plains Independent School District

KHDJ(LP), San Antonio, Texas; Educacional MTY

The post 11 Texas Stations Face License Expiration appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Tyler on AoIP for Everyone

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

This is one in a series of articles from the ebook “The Real World of AoIP.”

Radio World recently asked several manufacturers to identify the most important technical development or trend in the use of AoIP.

At Wheatstone, Jay Tyler, director of sales, said AoIP today is all about access — access from home, access through the cloud, and especially about access for everyone.

“Our customer base has traditionally been the iHearts and Townsquares of the industry, but more recently, we’ve been getting calls from GMs of family-owned stations or of smaller regional station groups who find that they can’t maneuver in these times without AoIP,” he said.

“Events [of the pandemic] just pushed their plans for AoIP further up on the calendar.”

At the same time, he said, AoIP is following the same trajectory as IP in general and has become a lot more scalable.

“We can now scale the systems used by the iHearts and the Townsquares for those smaller operations and smaller budgets, and we can scale a lot about what makes AoIP useful by adding more and more functions to it. We started out replacing soundcards with AoIP drivers, and now we’re adding appliances, virtual mixers and UIs, software apps, and even, in the case of our Blade-4, codecs.”

Tyler said Wheatstone sees the cloud as the next trend in AoIP, and an important one for regional broadcasters or anyone who wants to join operations and get some of those cost savings.

“Wheatstone has been doing a lot with container platforms like Docker for some time, and this is a great option for running many different applications on a single machine or cloud instance.

“We’re talking about a very lightweight, resource-efficient VM, where one container could host WheatNet-IP audio processing and another could host the station automation. Each is totally isolated yet both run off the same OS kernel. One container communicates with the other through APIs and because each container operates independently of the other, you avoid unintended interactions between software components and eliminate a single point of failure,” Tyler said.

“The container virtualization layer is extremely flexible and can scale up as we need.”

The post Tyler on AoIP for Everyone appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

NABLF Awards Air to on 500+ Local Stations Nationwide

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The National Association of Broadcasters Leadership Foundation’s Celebration of Service to America Awards, scheduled for July 10, will be shown on over 500 TV stations according to a release. Over 200 stations will air the program immediately with others airing it through Aug. 14.

The awards honor local radio and television stations from across the country for local community public service.

[Read: NAB Foundation Will Honor Lin-Manuel Miranda]

This is a list of finalist radio and TV stations. Tamron Hall will host the ceremonies.

In addition to the public service awards there will also be the first John D. Dingell, Jr. Award for Excellence, for a Congressmen.

Broadway writer/actor Lin-Manuel Miranda will receive the 2021 Service to Leadership Award, the NAB Leadership Foundation’s highest individual honor. And Procter & Gamble will receive the 2021 Corporate Leadership Award.

 

The post NABLF Awards Air to on 500+ Local Stations Nationwide appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Uncovering What Makes an Effective Sonic Brand

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

We all know that there’s power in a melody. But how closely do listeners actually associate a melody with a brand?

A recent study conducted by one audio company set to find out. The 2021 Audio Logo Index survey gathered responses of 3,700 consumers in the U.S. and U.K. to evaluate more than 100 consumer brands’ audio logos. The survey found that consumers were more consistently able to identify a brand when the name of that brand was tied to an audio melody.

According to the audio intelligence company Veritonic, which conducted the survey, two strong features work best to define a strong sonic brand: one, the audio logo has to say the name of the brand and two, the logo must have a melody to it.

[Read: Survey Says U.S. Radio Listeners Engaged and Receptive to Ads]

The study specifically analyzed how memorable an audio logo was and what emotional resonance it held for a listener. The survey measured and scored all types of audio content including voices, music, ads and audio logos.

For example, the survey found that those with a combined audio feature that mentions the brand name and have a melody led to higher scores. Those with both a melody and a brand name mention scored an average 78 Veritonic Audio Score. Those without scored a 54 average.

The survey also asked respondents to name the company that came to mind when they heard an audio logo. Topping the list of brands that have the strongest degree of association: State Farm, followed by Arby’s, Ace Hardware and AutoZone. Insurance firms in particular seem to understand the power of putting a brand name into the sonic brand: three of the top 10 strongest audio logos with brand association are State Farm, Farmers and Liberty Mutual.

The study also found a weak brand association for those audio logos that do not say the brand name or have a melody. Less than 2% of respondents were able to correctly associate the audio logo belonging to mainstream brands like Southwest, T-Mobile or Amazon.

Another weak brand association: those audio logos that have a melody but don’t mention the name itself. Despite investment in its long-standing sonic brand, only 13% of respondents could correctly associate the specific audio “ding” belonging to the technology company Intel. The same issues arose with the audio logo for Mastercard; upon hearing the Mastercard logo, none of the respondents could associate it with the brand.

Mastercard isn’t the only major company with a sonic brand no one can associate with the company. Honda, Audi, Nissan and Sprint share that same fate, the survey found.

So how can companies grow association of their audio logo with their brands? In a blog post, Pierre Bouvard, chief Insights Officer at Cumulus Media/Westwood One, “they should take a page from State Farm’s resurgence of brand association and introduce the brand name into the audio logo.”

Other findings revealed by the study found that:

  • Audio logos that mention the brand scored a Veritonic Audio Score of 69 on average. Audio logos that did not mention the brand scored significantly lower with an average 55 Veritonic Audio Score.
  • Audio logos that included a melody saw a 77 average Veritonic Audio Score compared to those without a melody at an average of 60.

More information is available at the 2021 Audio Logo Index.

 

The post Uncovering What Makes an Effective Sonic Brand appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

WorldCast Systems Releases Codec Updates

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

It must be the season for codec updates.

WorldCast Systems has announced an update for its APT badge line of codecs.

System Release 4.0 is for the APT IP, AoIP Multichannel and MPX Multichannel codecs.

[Check Out More Products at Radio World’s Products Section]

According to a release, SR 4.0 adds APTmpX, a nondestructive MPX/composite signal compression algorithm which should save network bandwidth without compromising signal quality, according to the company. SynchroStream, according to WorldCast, synchronizes multiple transmitters used in a single-frequency network with use of an external 10 MHz clock.

Other additions include NAT transversal connection mode for assuring codec connections; and NTP content-alignment for coordinating programming across a multi-frequency network by using IP packet time stamps.

Send your new equipment news to radioworld@futurenet.com.

Info: www.worldcastsystems.com

The post WorldCast Systems Releases Codec Updates appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

LPFM Facing $3,500 Forfeiture

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

An LPFM is facing a $3,500 potential liability for two alleged infractions: failing to file its license renewal application on time and operating a station without authority.

Rules set by the Federal Communications Commission require that license renewal applications must be filed no later than the first day of the fourth month prior to the expiration. In the case of Minority Educational Broadcasting Association, operator of low-power FM station WPJM in Palatka, Fla., a renewal application should have been filed by Oct. 1, 2019. That’s four months prior to the license expiration date of Feb. 1, 2020. But no such application was filed.

[Read: FCC Admonishes Licensees for Missed Deadlines — but Agrees to Cancel Forfeitures]

The Media Bureau sent a letter to the licensee to warn them that if no renewal application was filed by Feb. 1, the license for WPJM would expire. On Feb. 3, the bureau received a renewal application but did not provide any explanation for the late filing.

Also of note, the Media Bureau said: the licensee did not request a special temporary authority for the right to legally operate the station after the license expired.

The commission’s forfeiture rules establish a base forfeiture of $3,000 for failure to file a required form. It also sets a base forfeiture of $10,000 for operating without authority, although the commission has the right to adjust that amount up or down depending on the gravity of the violation and history of prior offenses, among other matters.

Based on the review of the facts and circumstances, the Media Bureau found that a $7,000 forfeiture was appropriate, including the $3,000 for failing to file a required form and $4,000 for operating without a license. But the bureau, after considering the record as a whole, decided to reduce the forfeiture further by setting a forfeiture of $1,500 for failing to file a timely application and $2,000 for unauthorized operations — for a total of $3,500 — because as an LPFM, the station is providing a secondary service.

As part of the license renewal process, the bureau also considers whether the station has properly served the public interest, if there have been no serious violations of the Communications Act and FCC rules and if there have been no other violations that constitute a pattern of abuse.

In this case, the bureau did not find any serious violations that, when considered together, show a pattern of abuse. As a result, the Media Bureau granted the renewal application to the LPFM.

But for that to happen, Minority Educational Broadcasting Association must submit $3,500 within 30 days for its violation of FCC rules and the Communications Act or submit a written statement seeking reduction of cancellation of the proposed forfeiture.

 

The post LPFM Facing $3,500 Forfeiture appeared first on Radio World.

Susan Ashworth

NAB Renews Objections to LP-250

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

The National Association of Broadcasters remains steadfast in its opposition to an increase in power for the LPFM service in the United States despite a new plan by one low-power advocate to simplify the process to boost the maximum power level for many stations from 100 to 250 watts.

REC Networks’ “Simple 250” LPFM proposal is being considered by the FCC and would amend Parts 73 and 74 of the rules to create an LP-250 class of service with an effective service contour of about 4.5 miles in addition to the current LP100 service.

However, NAB continues to argue the petition does not justify such a dramatic change to LPFM service. In reply comments filed this week the group reiterates worries over possible interference to FM translators and how a power increase would contradict the FCC’s aim to preserve the “simple nature” of LPFM.

[Read: LP-250 FM Petition Draws Lots of Interest]

NAB told the FCC granting a maximum power level of 250 watts would put LPFM stations on equal footing with 250 watt Class A stations.

“Granting REC’s request would effectively provide LPFM stations the same coverage as full-service Part 73 FM stations, but with a fraction of the obligations. Given that any LPFM entity is always free to apply for a Class A FM station, which would operate with the same radiated power as REC’s request, NAB respectfully asks the FCC to prohibit such a sidestep of its rules and dismiss the petition,” NAB commented to the FCC.

The NAB has been joined by Educational Media Foundation (EMF), the largest owner of noncommercial religious stations in the United States, arguing against adoption of the Simple LPFM plan. EMF, which also deploys a large FM translator network, has said in comments the plan under consideration would dangerously allow LPFMs to increase their power without any examination of whether it would cause actual interference with other stations.

“NAB echoes EMF’s concerns that the petition effectively ignores the potentially harmful interference that allowing LPFM power increases will cause to existing radio services,” NAB commented. And while REC asserts that its proposal will cause “only de minimis disruption” to FM radio service, NAB said it believes that characterization is unrealistic.

In particular, NAB points to concern over potential interference to FM translators. “FM translators provide vital radio service to millions of listeners in areas where direct reception of radio broadcast signals is inadequate due to distance or terrain barriers. Translators are also a lifeline for many AM broadcasters, helping them to improve fill-in service or launch first-time nighttime service,” NAB said. “Given these concerns, it is perplexing that the petition fails to even acknowledge the impact of LP-250 service on translator service.”

NAB in its most recent comments also expresses a lack of trust in how LPFM broadcasters would handle interference complaints if necessary. “A cursory glance at the FCC’s website reveals numerous instances of LPFM stations broadcasting at much higher power levels than authorized, including one station that operated at 23 times its authorized power and another that was recently issued a Notice of Violation for spurious out-of-band emissions affect air safety near the Orlando International Airport.”

The broadcast industry group also contends LPFM volunteers are often unqualified to handle technical obligations required by the FCC.

In conclusion, NAB says the Simple LPFM petition contradicts the intent of low-power FM service when it was created. “Granting REC’s proposal would also undermine the intended localized nature of LPFM service envisioned by the FCC and Congress by allowing some LPFM stations to expand their coverage area by a 100% or more and reach hundreds of thousands of additional listeners, including in some of the largest markets nationwide,” NAB commented.

Common Frequency and other LPFM advocates have subsequently filed comments asserting that some of NAB’s arguments are “not substantiated and incorrect.” Here are the FCC filings regarding the Simple LPFM proposal.

 

The post NAB Renews Objections to LP-250 appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

TSG Moves Into Larger Facility

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

Technical Services Group, a Baton Rouge, La.-based broadcast engineering and commercial AV consultancy, designer and integrator, moved into new, much larger facilities to accommodate growth in business. At 36,000 square feet, the new digs are said to be six times larger than their previous home.

A fabrication workshop at the new Technical Services Group facility in Baton Rouge, La.

TSG CEO Bo Hoover said, “Both our commercial AV and broadcast integration, RF, and field services teams are busier than ever. The transmission business continues to grow, too, even as we draw closer to the end of the FCC Repack.”

The new site includes a 25,000-square-foot warehouse; climate-controlled sections for fabrication, integration and training; staging areas for projects; and a loading dock.

Hoover added, “This new facility is an important move forward for TSG and our clients. Now, we have more space to stage, store, and prepare equipment in order to respond faster to what our clients demand. We’ve also incorporated advanced technologies to manage inventories and provide better facility-wide communications.”

The post TSG Moves Into Larger Facility appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Inside the July 7, 2021 Issue of Radio World

Radio World
3 years 11 months ago

Meet Curtis LeGeyt, the next president/CEO of the National Association of Broadcasters, in our special expanded newsmaker interview.

Also, Buyer’s Guide looks at consoles, mixers and routers, featuring products from Arrakis, Broadcast Tools, Calrec, Henry Engineering, Lawo, Logitek, Telos Alliance and Wheatstone.

And read about market research from the European Broadcasting Union that finds that nearly 90% of radio consumption is to linear stations transmitted via broadcast networks.

Read the issue.

 

The post Inside the July 7, 2021 Issue of Radio World appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

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