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WINS Honored With World Radio Day Award

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

Iconic all-news station WINS(AM) in New York was chosen by the Academy of Radio Arts and Sciences of America to receive the 2022 World Radio Day Award.

“1010 WINS” is famous as the station that launched a groundbreaking all-news format in 1965. Today it is owned by Audacy.

The honor commemorates World Radio Day, established by UNESCO and celebrated annually on Feb. 13.

This is the third annual award given to a U.S. radio station; last year’s recipient was WHRU at Hofstra University on Long Island, and the first was all-news station WTOP in Washington.

The award honors a U.S. station that exemplifies the best attributes of the radio industry. Recipients may be large or small, commercial or noncommercial, located in any market, and broadcasting in any language. The jury looks for stations that demonstrate ideals of localism, audience reach, community service, effective use of new digital platforms, diversity in program content and staffing, and financial and ratings success.

Jurors included representatives of trade publications, including Radio World; broadcast law firms; consultants; and the New Jersey Broadcasters Association.

The post WINS Honored With World Radio Day Award appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

NATE Sets Membership Record

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

The association for companies that work on the U.S. communications infrastructure has set a new record.

NATE: The Communications Infrastructure Contractors Association said it now has 1,100 member companies.

It made the announcement at the NATE UNITE 2022 Conference in Las Vegas.

The association also announced that board members Jimmy Miller, Victor Drouin and Kevin Dougherty were elected to serve on its executive committee. Miller, president and CEO of MILLERCO in Gulfport, Miss., was re-elected as chairman of the board.

Member Services Coordinator Jill Rethke attributed the growth to “the association’s commitment to investing into strategic initiatives and benefits that directly support our membership.” The organization also has added staff positions in government relations, safety, health, compliance and marketing.

NATE members include tower construction firms, general contractors, vertical real estate companies, wireless carriers, engineering and technology companies, public safety and non-profit organizations, design professionals, manufacturers, distributors and training companies.

The post NATE Sets Membership Record appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Family Life Grows With Erie Move

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

It’s an unbuilt FM radio station licensed to a municipality right on the Pennsylvania/New York state line, with Lake Erie to its west.

Who’ll get to construct it? Not the company that had the winning bid in Auction 109 to put the facility on the air. That task, pending FCC approval, will go to growing broadcast ministry Family Life.

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Adam Jacobson

The InFOCUS Podcast: Nexstar’s Q4 2021 Earnings Call

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

Nexstar Media Group’s three C-Suite leaders — Chairman/CEO Perry Sook, President/COO Tom Carter and CFO Lee Ann Gliha — on Wednesday shared all of the details of the company’s Q4 and full-year 2021 earnings results in a conference call for financial analysts and shareholders.

The trio of executives offered commentary on the company’s health, including what ad categories performed well — and didn’t. There’s also intelligence on retransmission consent revenue, with Dan Kurnos of Benchmark Co. asking for more on the subject.

With Steven Cahall of Wells Fargo Securities also participating in the Q&A session, we offer this edited audio review of the earnings call in this RBR+TVBR InFOCUS Podcast.Listen to “The InFOCUS Podcast: Nexstar's Q4 2021 Earnings Call” on Spreaker.

Adam Jacobson

ACCESS NX Changes the Game for WSCO

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

Radio World Buyer’s Guide articles are intended to help readers understand why their colleagues chose particular products to solve various technical situations. This month’s articles focus on products for radio remotes and sports.

John Dinse and BJ DeGroot are ready to provide live courtside coverage.

WSCO(AM), a Wisconsin station that is part of the Woodward Radio Group, serves sports and talk programming to an audience that stretches from Green Bay to Oshkosh.

As part of its sports coverage, the station produces live play-by-play for Wisconsin major league, minor league, college and high school sports, as well as a sports morning show called “BJ and the Bear.” WSCO covers every game live for the Wisconsin Herd, the NBA G League affiliate of the Milwaukee Bucks.

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

In its search for a way to send audio from the arena back to the station, WSCO became familiar with ACCESS 2USB, a portable IP audio codec from Comrex that’s no longer available for purchase.

When Comrex released its latest model, WSCO decided to purchase a new ACCESS NX for courtside coverage of the Herd.

The station often uses a hard-wired internet connection, and intends to implement NX’s portable capabilities for live broadcasts of road games in the coming season. ACCESS NX’s attachable mixer allows them to feed in arena sound as well as maintain a private two-way connection with a producer at the studio.

The Comrex ACCESS NX

BJ DeGroot, assistant brand manager for WSCO/WHBY and co-host of “BJ and the Bear,” told Comrex, “It’s functional and reliable, and it’s changed the game for our live play-by-play broadcasting. As far as quality standpoint and ease of use is concerned, we have been so happy. If you’re looking to take your station to the next level, it’s the way to go.”

Info: http://comrex.com or email info@comrex.com.

The post ACCESS NX Changes the Game for WSCO appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Media Tech Firms Face ‘Bleak’ Components Outlook

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

“The picture is bleak.”

That’s the assessment from IABM, which published results of its electronic components supply survey of global media technology companies.

The association said lead times are lengthening and component prices are rising significantly since its last survey nine months ago.

“Respondents also sounded the alarm on their financial positions if component supply problems persist for a further 12 months; there are very few signs that the situation will improve in the short-to-medium term,” it wrote.

STMicroelectronics IC microchips designed by ARM Ltd. in a storage tray at CSI Electronic Manufacturing Services Ltd. in April. (Chris Ratcliffe/Bloomberg via Getty Images)

IABM is a trade association for broadcast and media technology. [See a list of IABM member companies.]

It said 97% of technology vendors reported being significantly affected by component shortages, with 63% saying they are severely affected, up from 40% last April.

“The survey finds that lead times for components have increased by an average of 74% and component costs by 44%, resulting in a 26% impact on final product costs.”

[Previously: “Chip Shortage Hits Radio Technology Marketplace”]

The association expressed concern that 86% of respondents “reported facing moderate or severe impact on their financial sustainability if the issues persist for another 12 months.”

CEO Peter White said in the announcement, “With no early prospect of the component shortage problem being resolved, many media tech companies have responded by redesigning their products to mitigate issues with sourcing specific components, and/or stockpiling components where possible to keep their production lines flowing in the face of dramatically increased lead times.”

He also cited evidence of component price increases “which will either need to be absorbed by media tech suppliers or will feed through into increased end-product prices.”

The association recently launched a service that allows companies to list their excess stock; members experiencing shortages can use it to find supplies. “I have been surprised that not many companies have taken advantage of the BaM Stock Exchange so far; perhaps this is the moment for them to do so,” White said in the release.

The post Media Tech Firms Face ‘Bleak’ Components Outlook appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

NAB Crystal Radio Finalists Are Announced

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

The list of 50 finalists for the NAB Crystal Radio Awards is out.

The National Association of Broadcasters released the list, below. The awards recognize radio stations for outstanding commitment to community service.

KBFB(FM) Dallas, Texas
KBHP(FM) Bemidji, Minn.
KBLB(FM) Baxter, Minn.
KCLY(FM) Clay Center, Kan.
KDWB(FM) Minneapolis, Minn.
KIKV(FM) Saint Cloud, Minn.
KIRO(FM) Seattle, Wash.
KJR(FM) Seattle, Wash.
KMVP(FM) Phoenix, Ariz.
KNDE(FM) College Station, Texas
KOSI(FM) Greenwood Village, Colo.
KPEK(FM) New York, N.Y.
KRMG(FM) Tulsa, Okla.
KRWM(FM) Seattle, Wash.
KSFI(FM) Salt Lake City, Utah
KSNE(FM) Las Vegas, Nv.
KTAR(FM) Phoenix, Ariz.
KTMY(FM) Saint Paul, Minn.
KUPD(FM) Phoenix, Ariz.
KXKT(FM) Omaha, Neb.
KYGO(FM) Greenwood Village, Colo.
KYW(AM) Philadelphia, Pa.
KZFN(FM) Moscow, Idaho
WBAB West Babylon, N.Y.
WBAL(AM) Baltimore, Md.
WBZZ(FM) Pittsburgh, Pa.
WDAS(FM) Philadelphia, Pa.
WDNS(FM) Bowling Green, Ky.
WDSN(FM) Pittsburgh, Pa.
WEDR(FM) Hollywood, Fla.
WFEZ(FM) Hollywood, Fla.
WFLC(FM) Hollywood, Fla.
WGKB(AM) Milwaukee, Wis.
WGY(AM) Schenectady, N.Y.
WHIO(FM) Dayton, Ohio
WHKO(FM) Dayton, Ohio
WHQT(FM) Hollywood, Fla.
WIYY(FM) Baltimore, Md.
WJNO(AM) West Palm Beach, Fla.
WMBX(FM) West Palm Beach, Fla.
WMGK(FM) Philadelphia, Pa.
WMMX(FM) Dayton, Ohio
WNRP(AM) Pensacola, Fla.
WOKV(FM) Jacksonville, Fla.
WSUN(FM) St. Petersburg, Fla.
WTAW(AM) College Station, Texas
WTLC(FM) Columbus, Ohio
WTMJ(AM) Milwaukee, Wis.
WUSQ(FM) Hagerstown, Md.
WXTU(FM) Philadelphia, Pa.

Winners will be announced on April 26 at the NAB Show in Las Vegas.

[Read the list of last year’s winners.]

The post NAB Crystal Radio Finalists Are Announced appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Gray Selects Smith For New ‘PeachtreeTV’ Role

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

He’s been the Marketing Manager for the CBS affiliate serving Atlanta and the independent broadcast TV station branded as “PeachtreeTV” for the past several years and stayed with Gray Television following its merger acquisition with Meredith Corp.

Now, this local TV executive is being rewarded.

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Adam Jacobson

NAB Announces 2022 Crystal Radio Award Finalists

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

The National Association of Broadcasters has announced the 50 finalists for the 35th annual NAB Crystal Radio Awards.

Winners will be announced on Tuesday, April 26 at the 2022 NAB Show in Las Vegas.

This year’s finalists are:

Ten Crystal Radio Award recipients will be chosen by a panel of judges representing the broadcast industry, community service organizations and public relations firms.

Since 1987, the NAB Crystal Radio Awards have recognized radio stations for their outstanding year-round commitment to community service.

RBR-TVBR

An Exclusive NFT Partnership For a Big iHeartMedia Show

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

Unique digital art. That’s perhaps the easiest way to describe what a non-fungible token, or “NFT,” is. It’s tied to cryptocurrency, and it’s hot.

The nation’s No. 1 creator and distributor of audio content understands this. Now, one of its top syndicated radio programs is partnering with OneOf on an exclusive NFT partnership.

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Adam Jacobson

With Far Less Political Dollars, Nexstar Sees A Soft Q4

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

On its surface, it appears that the nation’s No. 1 licensee of broadcast television stations didn’t perform so well in the final three months of 2021. Free Cash Flow was down 26.2%. Adjusted EBITDA was off by 24.5%.

However, tough comps due to very strong Q4 2020 political ad dollars are at play here. So, ex-political, how did Nexstar Media Group do in Q4 2021?

It beat the Street.

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Adam Jacobson

Ziggo Switching off Analog Radio via Cable

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

Dutch cable operator Ziggo is pulling the plug on its carriage of analog radio signals. The company is the last cable company in the Netherlands to offer analog radio as part of its service, but it is ending the service during the first quarter of 2022 to free up bandwidth.

According to Ziggo, only about 5% of its customers use its analog radio service. “In 2018, we started to discontinue the analog TV signal via cable, now it is analog radio’s turn,” the company wrote in its Dutch-language FAQ about the switchover.

To aid customers affected, Ziggo is offering a free FM antenna to replace the cable connection to their stereo system, or it suggests tuning digital radio stations via television or connecting a cable box to the stereo. The company is also offering for €50 (about $56) a DAB receiver that connects to an existing stereo system.

Ziggo carries more than 100 radio and audio channels via its television platform, including Dutch public and private stations, German and British public broadcasters, and German, French, and British international services.

Ziggo is the largest cable operator in the Netherlands, serving nearly 4 million households.

The post Ziggo Switching off Analog Radio via Cable appeared first on Radio World.

T. Carter Ross

Dave Lougee Is Exiting TEGNA. Here’s His Successor

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

With confirmation that TEGNA is being acquired by a partnership led by Standard General that sees Apollo Global Management taking a non-voting stake in the broadcast television company, CEO Dave Lougee will depart.

Who is his replacement? A familiar face for Soohyung Kim, the new TEGNA board chairman once closing occurs.

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Adam Jacobson

Thirty Years of Automation, Playout and Asset Management Products

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

The company was founded during the Velvet Revolution, some 11 months before the dissolution of Czechoslovakia. Today, this globally renowned entity founded by five engineers from the Scientific Research Institute of Television and Broadcasting in Praha is celebrating 30 years as a Prague-based company with customers and offices around the world.

With automotive brand Skoda its office mates in the Veleslavínská neighborhood on the west side of Prague, AVECO will be showcasing its three decades of achievement along with its current products of interest to broadcast professionals at the 2022 NAB Show in Las Vegas.

It’s selected Booth N1421 at the Las Vegas Convention Center for its return to the event, the NAB’s first in three years.

AVECO deployments range from multi-channel, multi-site operations – such as India’s ETV Bharat’s automation and media asset management system, supporting 5,000 reporters, 24 news studios and 24 full time news channels in 13 languages – to small standalone systems. Complete end-to-end production and playout facilities to individual products are also tied to AVECO.

“Since our humble beginnings with our motto ‘Let’s try!’ we’ve seen incredible changes in industry and technology,” said Pavel Potuzak, CEO of Aveco. “Today, our project with Televisa in Mexico would have been unthinkable when Aveco was formed. Think about it … fully redundant master control with frame-by-frame disaster recovery for 80 TV channels located on-prem and in the cloud.”

He continued, “From tape to servers to the cloud, our motto has changed with the industry as well to ‘Let’s Talk Automation!’ to better reflect our focus. With our vision of ‘Create – Manage – Deliver’, we provide media companies worldwide with our news/studio production automation, media asset management and playout solutions – on-prem, in the cloud and in hybrid architectures. We graciously thank our more than 300 customers worldwide that have helped us grow from a small group of friends in the Czech Republic to an international company with ten offices worldwide.”

Adam Jacobson

Innovation and Networking: Combined and Up Close at NAB Show

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

A new networking series focused on innovation is in the works for the 2022 NAB Show, the National Association of Broadcasters’ first since 2019.

According to the NAB, each “NABiQ challenge” will relate to NAB Show’s new content pillars.

NABiQ is a series of 90-minute daily facilitated workshops that are intended to harness the power of teamwork “to ideate, innovate and create prototypes for nine real-world challenges.” Each workshop will accommodate up to five teams of six participants each who will compete for the winning solution.

NABiQ

Innovation consultant, coach and design sprint master Maria Duloquin will facilitate nine 90-minute competition-style events encouraging attendees to collaborate in devising solutions to common challenges facing the industry.

Registrants will be placed in five teams of six members per challenge to develop innovative solutions and prototypes that address central themes.

“Our community craves engaged and invigorating networking opportunities, beyond traditional happy hours and conversations,” said Chris Brown, the NAB’s EVP and Managing Director of Global Connections and Events. “This dynamic ‘hackathon’ format allows attendees to collaborate and draw on their collective experiences to create the next great out-of-the-box solution for our industry.”

Duloquin added, “Building on diverse knowledge under a tight deadline is a sure-fire way to foster innovation. Teams listen to each other, prioritize ideas, and define the most powerful solutions in an intense but incredibly rewarding experience.”

NABiQ is supported by Cynopsis for Capitalize and ProVideoCoalition for Create. The complete list of challenges is available here. Each competition will be followed by informal networking, with winning solutions shared with the entire NAB Show community and via NAB Amplify.

To RSVP, attendees should create a show planner and add the challenge(s) of interest to their calendar.

RBR-TVBR

For Beijing ’22 Production, Planar’s The Pick For NBC Sports

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

The XXIV Olympic Winter Games have concluded, and among those that can look back in pride are the leaders of a Oregon-based company that’s emerged as a global leader in visualization technology.

Planar emerged as the company NBC Sports contracted to provide fine pitch LED video wall display technology for its production of Beijing 2022.

In particular, NBC Sports’ Beijing set showcased a Planar TVF Series LED video wall, with a 1.8mm pixel pitch that powered broadcast coverage from Studio A, with over 200 LED displays delivering more than 15 million pixels of resolution. NBC Sports used the video wall to achieve popular resolutions and deliver clear, crisp images from every angle and viewing distance.

Planar has been in use in prior Olympic Games.

“It’s a tremendous honor to partner with NBC Sports to return as its display technology
provider for this event,” Planar EVP Adam Schmidt said. “We’re excited to help enhance NBC Sports’ broadcast coverage for viewers.”

Adam Jacobson

To Ensure Olympics Production Gold, NBC Sports Tuned to Telestream

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

When it came time to produce the XXIV Olympic Winter Games in Beijing, which just wrapped up in the People’s Republic of China, NBC Sports turned to a privately held company with operations in California and Massachusetts to receive media capture, automated media processing, closed captioning, and test and measurement equipment.

Providing the needs: Telestream.

NBC Sports used both the Telestream Vantage Media Processing Platform and the Cinnafilm Tachyon processing library extensively across its coverage of the Beijing 2022 event, providing top-quality frame rate conversions.

NBC Sports also put to use Telestream’s Lightspeed Live Capture and Vantage to deliver a unique, mixed HDR/SDR conversion workflow for NBC Sports’ content produced in HDR. The NBC Sports Advanced Technology group worked with Telestream to develop custom color LUTs (Look Up Tables) that are used within Vantage to ensure the most accurate color processing pipeline throughout the production and postproduction process.

Additionally, NBC Sports used Telestream’s caption authoring and editing product in conjunction with Telestream Cloud’s Timed Text Speech service — an AI-powered transcription service; and Telestream 4K/8K HDR Waveform Monitors that support easy alignment and confidence monitoring with both local and remote operation.

Adam Jacobson

Everything Criss Man: ATSC 3.0 Comes To Jamaica

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

On Monday, January 31, the island nation known for reggae music and jerk chicken propelled its television broadcasting well into the 21st Century, as Television Jamaica Ltd. joined the U.S. and South Korea as the only three nations in the world to offer viewers NEXTGEN TV broadcasts.

The ATSC 3.0 standard is now in use at TVJ, which airs everything from newscasts to daytime animated series, and select second-run syndicated programming.

Leading the switching on ceremony for TVJ: A new Jamaican Minister with responsibility for Information, Hon. Robert Morgan. The ATSC 3.0 signal went live just after 6:30pm local time.

How many Jamaican TV viewers watched is the key question, as access to new ATSC 3.0-compatible televisions at a cost Jamaicans can afford will prove to be the key test to NEXTGEN TV’s rollout in the island nation.

That said, TVJ put NEXTGEN TV into action in order to abide by the Jamaican government’s decision to enforce a ATSC 3.0 transition no later than January 2022.

TVJ in December 2021 became an official member of ATSC Inc., and it has commenced consultations with U.S. and South Korean experts, as well as with local television set retailers, advertisers and other stakeholders on the next steps. Up to 20 similar transmission sites are being commissioned into service, bringing 95% coverage of Jamaica that is targeted for NEXTGEN TV.

TVJ is a member of the RJRGLEANER Communications Group, parent of 12 media brands.

“What TVJ and the RJRGLEANER group have done is not only invested in its own business, but it has invested in the digital future of Jamaica…I am impressed with the commitment shown to making government policy a reality”, Minister Morgan said.

The ATSC 3.0 installation was conducted by an all-Jamaican engineering team.

RJRGLEANER CEO Gary Allen notes that some $12 million USD was invested in the transition, with half of the funds tied to the first transmitter, now in operation in the Jamaican capital of Kingston.

 

Adam Jacobson

Why Do Cable TV Subscribers Still Pay For Service?

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 2 months ago

Given all of the chatter about OTT, SVOD, AVOD and Fast Channels, the future of cable TV as it has existed for four decades is being questioned by many across the television industry. To some, a MVPD is all about broadband, with TV service greatly diminished.

But, is that an exaggeration? Who still pays for cable TV and why?

CableTV.com surveyed Americans who still subscribe to traditional cable to understand why they keep the service.

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Adam Jacobson

Human Connection Draws in Younger Listeners

Radio World
3 years 2 months ago

This week, Radio World is providing coverage of the EBU Digital Radio Summit.

If broadcasters want to attract young listeners, they need to offer content that focuses on human connections and shared experiences, more than Top 40 hits.

That’s the message radio futurologist and Podnews editor James Cridland delivered during his keynote address to the European Broadcast Union’s (EBU) Digital Radio Summit. The summit was held online February 16, 2022.

“Ten great songs in a row is absolutely fine and a great radio programming technique, but it isn’t something that radio can do by itself anymore,” Cridland declared. “Spotify can do that very well.”

Radio’s decline amidst record listening
James Cridland began his address by noting how well radio appears to be doing these days.

“Radio is still tremendously popular,” he said. “Whether you are in the UK or New Zealand or Finland or the U.S., nine  out of 10 people are listening to the radio every single week.”

The trouble begins when one starts to dig deeper into the audience numbers. For instance, EBU data cited by Cridland showed “about a 3% decline in the last five years in terms of total audience, and a 6% decline in terms of younger audiences as well.” Meanwhile, total audience listening is “down by 7% in the last five years,” said Cridland, and “when you have a look at younger audiences, then you can see that nearly one out of five [listening] hours has gone away in the last five years.”

So why are U.K. radio audiences looking so strong in the research? “It’s only the fact that there are more old people in the U.K. that is keeping the figures up as high as it is,” he said.

Meanwhile, young listeners who aren’t tuning into radio now, won’t suddenly do so as they age. “You don’t grow into listening to more radio,” quipped Cridland. “So, we are not going to see a lot of people suddenly starting to listen to tons more radio because they happen to hit 30.”

The way back for radio
When it comes to reaching younger listeners, Cridland wants to target them where they are.

This isn’t on smart speakers, where 72% of the content consumed is radio, he said. Rather, it is on their smartphone-connected headphones.

RAJAR figures showing the disparity in radio listening among younger and older listeners.

“When you ask people, ‘what are you listening to on your headphones?’, podcasts and audio books are the No. 1 choice,” said Cridland. “Live radio is the least most popular in terms of 11%.”

The big takeaway: The 13–34 audience is listening to in-depth, meaningful spoken-word content when they listen to podcasts and audiobooks — the kind of content commercial radio rejected decades ago when it went Top 40.

This spoken-word content tends to focus on human connections and shared experiences, and it’s a model that radio must seize upon if it is to become relevant to younger listeners again. “That’s why people turned to radio in the middle of the pandemic because they wanted other human voices,” Cridland said. “They wanted that shared experience, [contact with] the other person who was out there dealing with the same things that they were dealing with as well.”

As for “live and local” being radio’s edge? “I would argue that live actually isn’t important at all … [and] that local is just another way of saying relevant,” he said. “Relevant content for people could be local, [it ] could be talking about what’s going on in their town in their city, [or it] could be talking about very, very other things as well … So real and relevant are very key parts of the content strategy that we should have in terms of radio.”

Cridland also advised radio broadcasters to stop defining themselves in terms of their delivery mechanisms (i.e., AM, FM, and DAB), and start thinking of themselves as content providers first.

As well, being live is less important in an online age where on demand content is so popular. He made his point by citing some Australian audio content that is recorded and then served out on radio and on demand, to maximize reach and penetration.

“I’m talking about making stuff, particularly in terms of great pieces of audio, that you can pre-produce and make sound absolutely fantastic as well,” he said.

Quoting from a U.S. patent application to underscore his point, Cridland said, “’traditional broadcast radio spends billions of dollars creating millions of hours of creative audio content that is only used once.’ And it’s [only] when you see that written down in black and white, then you suddenly realize, ‘oh, we could be doing so much more with the great content that we are making by packaging it up so that we can reuse it on the air, so that we can give that to other audiences.’”

In closing, Cridland said radio has a future, and “it’s focused less on music and more on speech. These days it’s producing audio for on-demand first, rather than live, which helps get the most value out of the audio. And I believe that the future is less about broadcasting and more about reaching audiences across multiple platforms, however they want to consume it.”

The post Human Connection Draws in Younger Listeners appeared first on Radio World.

James Careless

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Other REC sites

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  • Japan Earthquake Information
  • API for developers

But wait, there's more!

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  • Pacifica Network
  • LPFM Wiki
  • Report a bug with an REC system

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