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FCC Sets August 10 Deadline for New Nominations for Communications Equity and Diversity Council
Digigram Makes the Olympics
Digigram will supply its fellow French company, broadcaster RMC, with codecs for its broadcast team covering the upcoming Olympic Games in Japan.
Under the banner of One IP, Digigram packages pieces of equipment along with software for a complete remote broadcast package, according to the company.
[See Our Who’s Buying What Page]
For this particular case, 28 Digigram Iqoya Serv/Link codecs will be installed at Paris and Tokyo broadcast centers for RMC. In addition Iqoya Talk portable broadcast commentator codecs will be deployed along with Iqoya Guest smartphone codecs for onsite event production and contribution.
All of these elements work within Digigram’s Iqoya Connect middleware environment to connect and route signals.
Digigram Iqoya Talk commentator broadcast station.“The easy network configuration via Iqoya Connect is one of the solution’s main assets,” said Digigram’s Edouard Winckel, referring to features such as codec auto-detect and configuration. “This added value will help RMC teams in saving time while setting up their system.”
RMC and Digigram have had a lengthy supplier relationship. RMC leader of External Media Production Dimitri Grossi said, “This is a new scheme for us, and as a longtime solutions provider for RMC, we trust Digigram for its reliable solutions. I am confident the One IP solution will support a seamless processing and editing of live and recorded audio feeds, ready for delivery to the RMC headquarters in Paris.”
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The post Digigram Makes the Olympics appeared first on Radio World.
Red-Colored Holiday Return On Wall Street
Radio and television broadcasting companies that publicly trade on Wall Street were largely down on Tuesday.
Letter To The Editor: WBRU’s Sale A Student-Fueled Move
RBR+TVBR‘s recent coverage of FM station sales by Dartmouth College and Purdue University led retired Fletcher, Heald & Hildreth Member Peter Tannenwald to write a Letter to the Editor addressing a reference of the August 2017 decision by the entity that controlled the former WBRU-FM in Providence to sell the Alternative station.
As he explains, the vote to sell WBRU came from the students that maintained oversight of the station — not a university board of directors.
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Rising Tide: P&G’s New Effort At Spot TV
The latest Media Monitors Spot 10 TV report is out, and it shows Procter & Gamble Co. making a new push designed to boost sales of one of its best-known brands.
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NAB Speaks Out On Incidents Involving Broadcast Journalists
WASHINGTON, D.C. — The President/CEO of the NAB says the nation’s biggest lobbying organization representing broadcast media “is gravely concerned” by recent incidents of violence directed against broadcast journalists who are covering local news.
“A cornerstone of American democracy is the right of the free press to document the stories and events shaping our communities and our nation,” Gordon Smith said. “Journalists should be afforded the respect to safely provide this valuable service to the community without fear of violence, intimidation or harassment.”
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The InFOCUS Podcast: Wes Wyatt
With severe weather already impacting the U.S. as a tropical storm impacts the Southeast and extreme temperatures impacted much of the West Coast of the nation, how important is it for a local television station to invest in weather?
That’s just one question we asked Wes Wyatt, who will become the Chief Meteorologist at Gray Television-owned FOX affiliate WBRC-6 in Birmingham come July 26.
What else does Wes have to say about the role of weather at a broadcast TV station? Listen to this fresh RBR+TVBR InFOCUS Podcast, presented by dot.FM, to learn more!
Green Choice For ViacomCBS’ NYC Flagships
He’s been a part of the CBS family since 2015 and became interim News Director of WCBS-2 in New York in January.
Now, Johnny Green Jr. is being promoted to the top role for ViacomCBS’s flagship broadcast TV properties in the Big Apple, now part of a company division that includes CBS News.
It follows ViacomCBS‘s decision to sever its ties with news division leader David Friend following tales of gender and racial misconduct that also cost Peter Dunn his role as President of CBS Television Stations.
Green has been interim News Director at WCBS-2 in New York since January 2021, when then-SVP of News Friend and Dunn were suspended while ViacomCBS conducted an investigation into accusations against the two executives. He’s also been Vice President of News Services at CBS News, where he has overseen Newspath, the division’s affiliate news service, since August 2020.
Friend also led the local news department at WCBS-2 and sibling WLNY-55, branded as “TV 10” due to its placement across MVPDs in the New York Tri-State region.
With Friend and Dunn gone and former WABC-7 and ABC Owned Stations leader Wendy McMahon now President and co-head of CBS News and Stations, Green is getting the nod as President/GM of CBS News and Television Stations’ local businesses in New York.
Translation: He’s at the helm of CBS 2 and TV 10/55, plus Pluto TV “FAST” network CBSN New York and CBSNewYork.com.
Green, who is highly regarded among staff in New York, will assume his new responsibilities on July 12.
Green will continue to lead the CBS New York local newsroom and Newspath on a short-term basis while ViacomCBS conducts a search for his successors at WCBS-2 and at CBS News.
“Since returning to CBS nine weeks ago, I have been thoroughly impressed by the thoughtful and seasoned leadership Johnny has provided inside the CBS 2 newsroom and at Newspath,” McMahon said. “With this well-deserved promotion, we look forward to having Johnny lead our station-wide team efforts to produce great content, serve our diverse communities across the Tri-State Area, and promote a positive workplace culture.”
Green added, “I have great admiration for my colleagues at CBS New York and look forward to collaborating with all of them as we work together to positively transform our business and culture as a united CBS Stations and News organization. I am grateful for the support I have received from Wendy and [President and Co-Head of CBS News and Stations] Neeraj Khemlani and am excited to continue to work with them on bringing their vision to light.”
Prior to moving to New York last year, Green spent five years at WBZ-4 and WSBK-38, the CBS-owned stations in Boston. Green joined the duopoly in 2015 as Assistant News Director and one year later was named Vice President and News Director.
Prior to working in Boston, Green was an executive producer at WCAU-10 in Philadelphia. Before that, he was an executive producer at Hearst-owned WPXI-11 in Pittsburgh.
Green began his career as a producer at WCTI-TV in New Bern, N.C.
Green is a member of the National Association of Black Journalists.
A Silent Austin Translator Finds A New Home
It may be licensed for just 10 watts of power, but its signal can reach South Austin once this FM translator is up and running.
For Charles Crawford, that’s a large enough potential audience to invest in the silent property in Texas’ capital city.
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A Final ‘WINC’ And A Nod Goodbye
Its original FM namesake is now owned by Educational Media Foundation and sports the WAIW call letters. The FM station that then took those call letters was later sold with its sibling to Metro Radio Inc., in a deal announced in April.
Now, the last remaining asset that Allen Shaw owned in Virginia’s Shenandoah region is being sold, too.
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A Classical FM’s Quest For Survival
With the centennial of commercially licensed radio broadcasting in the U.S., many stations have come under the spotlight for their longevity, including KDKA-AM in Pittsburgh, WWJ-AM in Detroit and KNX-AM in Los Angeles.
In Texas, WRR claims to be the first licensed broadcast station in Texas, and to be “the second-oldest operating station in the U.S.”
Now, as WRR on August 5 will celebrate 100 years of service, it is in jeopardy of disappearing from the airwaves.
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An Erie Upgrade, Thanks To NFinity Move
It is the owner of the PBS Member station serving northwestern Pennsylvania, and the licensee of the NPR Member station with matching call letters that signify, “We Question and Learn.”
An upgrade to the stations’ broadcast facility was necessary, with the need for additional content recording and playback channels an acute one.
The new playout channels are in place, thanks to NVerzion.
Two additional NVerzion NFinity Video Servers are now operational at WQLN-TV and WQLN-FM 91.3, in Erie, Pa.
Four playout channels are dedicated to their existing four broadcast channels, while the record ports are being utilized for satellite feeds from incoming programming networks, along with “PBS Six” content associated with these services.
The new equipment is interconnected to the existing NVerzion automation system.
WQLN currently maintains two HD channels, with “PBS Kids” on its DT2 signal; two SD channels are also on the air. All are set up as 16×9. Two playout ports are configured for SD; two are configured for 1080i HD.
Before WQLN’s master control reconfiguration in 2009, servers were dedicated to SD and HD, respectively. Two additional channels maximized the server capacity. But, issues developed such as record ports being used as playout ports, along with confusion regarding accurate content in specified locations.
Now, WQLN is able to segment and QC programs on a separate PC without tying up additional video server ports.
And, there are no transcoding conflicts.
For product information, contact Reed Haslam, Director of Sales at NVerzion, at rhaslam@nverzion.com
A Media Asset Management Tool Gains Cloud Cover
BOCA RATON, FLA. — Independent Prague-headquartered automation systems producer Aveco has unveiled a media asset management (MAM) tool designed for cloud, hybrid-cloud and on-premises use.
Called GEMINI, the product manages media and AI-enriched metadata, plus timeline annotations describing any frame or segment of an asset, utilizing speech-to-text transcription, subtitles, or markers (e.g., soccer goals) utilizing secure HTML5. Assets are under control across all types of storage — in the cloud, NAS and SAN, video servers, as well as LTO and non-spinning disk archives.
“The introduction of the GEMINI MAM brings powerful tools that are easy to use, so people can concentrate on the task at hand, anywhere in the world and on any browser,” Aveco CEO Pavel Potuzak said.
The architecture of GEMINI scales from thousands to millions of media assets, from tens to hundreds of users, from out-of-the-box workflows to the most complex operations involving third-party media appliances. An integrated frame-accurate proxy video editor works together with popular NLEs and online rendering services to optimize news and production workflows.
GEMINI works with all internet browsers and all operating systems, as well as tablets running Android and iOS without the need for any plugins.
For redundancy, GEMINI MAM server components use a multi-node architecture. This means that if a node goes down, the remaining nodes continue to provide all services without interruption. Additionally, performance can be easily scaled up by simply adding more nodes.
Despite its San Fernando Valley contact number, AVECO maintains a U.S. operational center in Doral, Fla. It can be reached at 1-818-292-1489.
Enhanced & Extended VOD and Live Monitoring Tools, From Telestream
Telestream has released new enhancements to its IQ family of monitoring products and systems, a move the company says answers the need for enhanced VOD and Live monitoring capabilities for content owners, aggregators, CDN operators and subscription service providers.
“These enhancements provide users with increased visibility, reporting and analytics within their VOD networks,” the Nevada City, Calif.-based company says. “They empower users to drill down for additional proofs of performance, availability, and validation of live and on-demand offerings, providing more granular ways to find and fix faults fast.”
Telestream’s IQ VOD monitoring solution provides lightweight analysis focused on speed to determine content accessibility, ABR packaging, and quick audio and video checks, with results available in a single consolidated report. Long term analysis and diagnostics reporting is also available.
The solution is strategically positioned for validating large VOD content libraries, keeping pace with new content as it becomes available. “By taking advantage of the different monitoring methods and scheduling inherent within the Telestream solution, users can harness resources efficiently to make the most of their monitoring investment while limiting the impact on streaming services,” the company notes.
With the VOD monitoring platform, it is a straightforward task to automate the entire process using the open API, reviewing results in a consolidated report that takes no integration effort or additional data processing.
For live applications, the latest enhancements include expanded codec monitoring, including support for HEVC 4:2:2 profile. Enhancements also include additional pre-compression rapid pixel analysis of I-Frames. Should a closer analysis be required, clicking the MOS Level 2 option allows analysis of I, B and P frames without disrupting hundreds of other sources that may be running concurrently. This assures there aren’t issues that will be harder to identify once compressed.
Post-compression, spatial and other compression introduced issues can be analyzed and dealt with prior to moving the content on, where jitter, buffer, timing, and other factors can continue to be monitored and diagnosed.
Ability to check and validate the integrity of the content through multiple packagers, CDNs and distributors, enables a provider to better see what the customer experience will be and provides peace of mind, protection of revenue and proofs of performance.
“The recent announcement of AT&T’s WarnerMedia and Discovery merger accelerates global plans for direct-to-consumer products,” said Matthew Driscoll, Director of Product Management at Telestream. “Media giants are creating deep content libraries and establishing their brands across programming categories. The volume of content and complex distribution networks required to reach consumers drives the need for new tools. Tools that can assist operators in this massive transition and ensure a high-quality user experience in a wildly competitive landscape. Market and technology shifts like these are the driving force behind this VOD and live monitoring initiative at Telestream.”
Orban Reorganizes PCn1600 Sales
Orban Labs, the maker of audio processing systems for AM, FM, DAB+, HD Radio, television and Internet broadcasting, is “reorganizing” sales of its PCn1600 audio processing software.
Translation: years of exclusivity have ended for two entities that had exclusive sales licenses.
For several years, Modulation Index and StreamS had an exclusive license to sell PCn1600 processing; that exclusivity ended last week.
“All Orban dealers worldwide can now add our PCn1600 to their Orban product portfolio,” said Orban President David Day. “PCn1600 users have enjoyed the clarity and intelligibility that only Orban can provide, and we want them to continue offering this high quality to their listeners.”
It is Orban’s understanding that Modulation Index and StreamS will continue to support their existing PCn1600 users, Day added.
PCn1600 was developed by Bob Orban to bring the company’s audio processing technology to audio streaming operating natively on Windows PC platforms.
Orban has used variants of the PCn1600 in its XPN-AM processor and in the Linux-based Ross RSAP.