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Further Relaxation of Ownership Seems Unlikely

Radio World
3 years 10 months ago
Then-Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel is shown at a Senate hearing in 2020. She is now acting chairwoman. Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images.

The FCC’s ongoing local media ownership review is in a state of flux without a confirmed chairperson leading it.

Since late January the Federal Communications Commission has been led by Acting Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel, and FCC watchers consider it unlikely that she would proceed with the 2018 Quadrennial Review of Media Ownership Rules until a chair is named by President Biden and approved by the Senate. As of mid-June the FCC remained split 2–2 along party lines.

But even when a chair is named — Rosenworcel or anyone else — we probably shouldn’t expect a Democratic-controlled FCC to relax ownership rules further.

Unanimous vote

Broadcasters got a big win in April when the Supreme Court unanimously upheld changes that the FCC made to ownership rules in 2017. The commission had a Republican majority when those changes were made.

The ruling in “Federal Communications Commission v. Prometheus Radio Project” allowed the FCC to abolish the ban on newspaper/broadcast and radio/TV cross-ownership, and relax several local TV ownership regulations. Court challenges have now been exhausted.

That outcome “effectively reinstates the rules adopted in the 2017 Recon Order,” according to a FCC spokesperson.

One attorney familiar with the process says the FCC is likely to tread lightly on further rule changes at least until a chair is named.

“Traditionally an FCC interim chair is unwilling to begin any new initiatives, or in this case conclude the review with any changes. Especially when the current commission is deadlocked,” the attorney said.

And the political world has continued to turn since then-Chairman Ajit Pai prioritized relaxation of media ownership limits.

Rosenworcel voted against the rule changes then; and she again made her feelings known in a statement following the SCOTUS announcement.

“While I am disappointed by the court’s decision, the values that have long upheld our media policies — competition, localism and diversity — remain strong. I am committed to ensuring that these principles guide this agency as we move forward.”

Congress directs the FCC to review ownership rules every four years and update them to reflect competitive changes that affect the radio and television business. The process is intended to allow reforms to reflect the evolving media marketplace. In addition, local ownership rules seek to “promote competition, localism and viewpoint diversity in today’s radio marketplace,” according to the FCC.

The current cycle will likely be completed late this year or early 2022.

The review does offer the commission an opening to change the radio subcap limit, observers said. The Notice of Proposed Rulemaking that launched the process mentions the “local radio ownership rule” as one of those subject to review.

And pressure to relax ownership rules further has increased in light of the economic hit radio took during the pandemic.

The current caps were adopted in 1996. They allow for an entity to own up to eight stations in the largest markets, no more than five of which may be in the same service (AM or FM). The limits drop in smaller markets.

The National Association of Broadcasters thinks that one party should be able to own up to eight FM stations in any of the top 75 Nielsen radio markets. It also has said there should be no FCC ownership limits in markets smaller than the top 75, and that AMs should not be counted against the ownership limits.

In addition, NAB hopes that radio owners that incubate the ownership of stations by new entrants into broadcasting would be allowed to own up to two additional FMs in a market.

NAB in its proposal cited a dramatic increase in competition from streaming and satellite radio. It said over-the-air radio should have a level regulatory playing field with the new competition.

“We should take a close look”

The association is optimistic there will be some movement on radio subcaps.

“We think there will be changes. It’s more of a question how far the FCC will go. A lot will depend on who the chair is. Everyone has a different opinion,” an NAB spokesperson told Radio World.

The spokesperson anticipated that the FCC would issue a notice to refresh the record and collect additional comments before releasing a final order — and that in fact happened in early June.

In inviting fresh comments, the FCC wrote: “Beyond reviewing the existing record in light of the passage of time, we also seek submission of new or additional information regarding the media marketplace that commenters believe is relevant to this proceeding,” mentioning the broadcast industry’s evolution since early 2019, the growth of online audio and video sources and the impact of the pandemic.

When NAB floated its subcap proposal in 2019, the largest ownership group was opposed to higher FM limits. According to an internal memo reported on several industry websites, iHeartMedia Chairman and CEO Bob Pittman and COO Rich Bressler described the NAB proposal as “bad for the industry” and worried “what NAB’s idea would do to the value of AM properties.”

Emails requesting comment from iHeartMedia leadership were not returned.

Matthew McCormick, co-managing member at the law firm Fletcher, Heald & Hildreath PLC, would be surprised if there were any significant further relaxation of ownership rules. “I think it is unlikely that a Democratic-controlled commission will adopt the NAB’s proposal to loosen the radio ownership caps,” he said.

Commissioner Geoffrey Starks, in a speech to the Media Institute in May, said it is not clear if consolidation will accelerate following the Supreme Court decision.

“I certainly have a renewed interested in using the next Quadrennial Review to ensure that the pillars of diversity, localism and competition are fully considered in determining what future media ownership regulation should look like,” said Starks, the other Democrat on the commission.

“We should take a close look at everything and see what makes sense in today’s markets.”

Starks compared today’s media ownership landscape to how it was just 40 years ago.

“In 1983 there were about 50 dominant media companies. Today there are five media conglomerates that own about 90 percent of the media in the United States, including newspapers, magazines, movie studios and radio and television stations,” he said.

David Honig, president emeritus and co-founder of the Multicultural Media, Telecom & Internet Council, thinks it unlikely that this quadrennial review will result in further major changes.

“MMTC, along with NABOB [National Association of Black Owned Broadcasters], has asked the commission to maintain the local ownership caps, and we expect that to happen,” Honig told Radio World in an e-mail.

Others pointed out that as political administrations swing back and forth, so do priorities.

“A Democratic commission is unlikely to relax the multiple ownership rules any more than the Supreme Court required. [And] while the commission is tied 2–2, don’t expect controversial changes,” said Melodie Virtue, a communications attorney with Foster and Garvey PC.

More comments?

David Oxenford at Wilkinson Barker Knauer wrote on his blog earlier this year: “Now that the Third Circuit’s reasoning has been rejected, that still does not mean that the FCC, particularly a Democratic-controlled FCC, will automatically look to relax the radio rule.”

When Oxenford wrote that, he too anticipated that the commission would ask for more comments, as it eventually did. “In other words, any change in the radio ownership rules will not come quickly.”

But political volatility in Washington could also lead to a more unpredictable FCC, according to Scott Flick, a Washington-based attorney with Pillsbury Shaw Pittman LLP.

“The traditional Washington perspective on the FCC is that Democratic commissioners seek to regulate and Republican commissioners seek to deregulate. There was a period of time, however, where the views of an FCC commissioner were more informed by their background and experience than by their party affiliation,” he said.

“Whether it was the result of more flexibility in party ideology or a greater willingness to horse trade on issues to achieve the best overall result in that commissioner’s view, it led to a more predictable and consistent FCC.”

That consistency, Flick said, benefited everyone — not just those appearing before the FCC trying to build new businesses and business models without finding their plans upended every four years, but also “the FCC staffers themselves, whose job is made easier when the correct answer on a particular point is the same this year as it was last year, unaffected by perennial changes in commissioners and politics.”

The post Further Relaxation of Ownership Seems Unlikely appeared first on Radio World.

Randy J. Stine

Federated Media Finalizes Podcast, Streaming Audio Strategy

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

It’s a family owned company operating 12 radio stations and digital agency Federated Digital Solutions in the Indiana cities of South Bend and Fort Wayne. Among the stations it owns is famed WOWO-AM 1190, once heard across the Eastern Seaboard after dark.

Now, Federated Media has put a stamp on its future by finalizing its digital audio delivery strategy.

How so? It has powered Triton Digital to “power” the company’s podcast and streaming audio platform.

Specifically, Federated Media will utilize Triton’s audio streaming network for the delivery of its radio stations online.  In addition, Federated Media will use Triton’s podcast platform, Omny Studio, to support the creation, distribution, and promotion of its podcast content across devices including smart speakers and mobile phones.

Triton Digital is owned by iHeartMedia and was recently purchased from The E.W. Scripps Co.

RBR-TVBR

A New Entry for Video Editing and Screen Recording Needs

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

The latest version of Telestream’s video editing and screen recording software for the Mac has been brought to market.

Now available: ScreenFlow 10, giving users the ability to record multiple cameras, microphones, and screens, including iPhone and iPad screens simultaneously.

Built for anyone needing a screen recording and video editing application, ScreenFlow starts at $149 and comes with a new integrated Title Library, enhanced Color Effect Presets, an automatic Background Remover, support for Apple Silicon hardware, multiple performance enhancements and an Archive Storage feature that stores only what was used in the final finished program.

ScreenFlow’s intuitive interface was developed specifically for Mac users. Highly optimized to streamline content creation, ScreenFlow 10 features up to 250% smaller camera recordings at the same quality as ScreenFlow 9 and up to 75% less CPU usage during camera recording. Timeline thumbnail creation is 300% faster and exports are up to 66% faster on the latest Apple Silicon hardware.

Download the trial or purchase ScreenFlow 10 at: https://www.telestream.net/screenflow/overview.htm

RBR-TVBR

NAB Show Launches Annual ‘Product of the Year’ Awards

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

The NAB Show is now accepting nominations for the third annual Product of the Year awards.

Companies scheduled to exhibit in either the 2020 or 2021 NAB Show are eligible. The awards recognize the most significant and promising new products and technologies developed by NAB Show exhibitors.

Nominations are being accepted through September 17.

The Product of the Year award recipients will be selected by a panel of industry experts in 16 categories and announced during the official awards ceremony and reception at the Westgate Hotel on Tuesday, October 12. Nominated products and technologies must be available for delivery in calendar year 2021.

“NAB Show is the premier venue to launch and demonstrate new products that sit at the intersection of media, entertainment and technology,” said NAB Executive Vice President of Global Connections and Events Chris Brown. “We look forward to exploring innovations from the past two years and celebrating their impact on our industry.”

Product categories for the 2021 NAB Show Product of the Year awards are as follows:

  • AI/Machine Learning
  • Asset Management, Automation, Playout
  • Audio Production, Processing and Networking
  • Camera Support, Control and Accessories
  • Cameras
  • Cloud Computing and Storage
  • Digital Signage & Display Systems
  • Graphics, Editing, VXF, Switchers
  • Grip Equipment
  • Hardware Infrastructure
  • IT Networking/Infrastructure & Security
  • Location/Studio Lighting
  • Monitoring and Measuring Tools
  • Radio
  • Remote Production
  • Streaming

Companies should submit product nominations here. The official rules are available here. 

RBR-TVBR

USSI Global adds to its Executive Team

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

USSI Global has strengthened its executive team by appointing a Vice President of Programs and Innovation Lab.

Reporting to COO Anthony Morelli, he will focus on technology development and systems integration strategies that bring the company’s core broadcast, digital signage, and electronic business and consumer operations closer together.

Taking the position is Ted Korte, who will also be charged with driving technology and service innovations that “enhance USSI Global’s value as a turnkey project management company.”

Korte comes to USSI Global with 25 years of broadcast industry experience, including 20 years at Harris Corporation. He served as Director of Engineering across key business units (automation and asset management, video servers and editing, and TV and radio transmission), and in later years worked closely with the company’s digital signage and managed services teams. That led to stronger technical synergies across Harris’s broadcast and digital signage businesses.

Korte joined then-upstart Qligent in 2014, now a global leader in monitoring and analytics for broadcasters and OTT services. As COO/CTO, he established a brand reputation for Qligent as an innovator in transitioning QoS, QoE, and compliance monitoring operations to the cloud. After bringing the company’s pioneering Vision monitoring platform to market, Korte helped Qligent launch the industry’s first “monitoring as a service” platform, and expanded Qligent’s horizons into the now-ubiquitous big data space to generate detailed audience and business analytics.

He returned to Harris Corporation, now L3Harris, in 2019 where he focused on internal research and development projects for the space industry. He gained experience in program management and satellite technologies, including LEO groundstations and global networking systems that represent important emerging markets for USSI Global.

“Ted brings enormous value to USSI Global that will help us establish growth strategies for our core markets and new business opportunities, while broadening our horizons as a service-oriented organization,” said Morelli. “With several exciting new initiatives in motion, the time is right to bring on someone who has the right expertise and vision to propel our business forward, and deliver innovative programs and services for our customers. We are confident that Ted is the right person for this job, and we are proud to welcome him to the USSI Global team.”

RBR-TVBR

Television Broadcasting Services Schenectady, New York

Federal Register: FCC (Broadcasting)
3 years 10 months ago
On April 5, 2021, the Media Bureau, Video Division (Bureau) issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) in response to a petition for rulemaking filed by WRGB Licensee, LLC (Petitioner), the licensee of WRGB, channel 6 (CBS), Schenectady, New York, requesting the substitution of channel 35 for channel 6 at Schenectady in the DTV Table of Allotments. For the reasons set forth in the Report and Order referenced below, the Bureau amends FCC regulations to substitute channel 35 for channel 6 at Schenectady.
Federal Communications Commission

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Estuardo Valdemar Rodriguez

FCC Media Bureau News Items
3 years 10 months ago
Consent Decree, Estuardo Valdemar Rodriguez

EMF’s Quebecois Quest For Cross-Border Anglophones

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

TORONTO — At first glance, one may simply believe Educational Media Foundation seeks to fill a gap in its nearly national footprint for its KLOVE and Air 1 Christian music networks by grabbing a pair of commercially licensed FMs in an economic struggling portion of far Upstate New York.

Yes, EMF will be gaining a presence in such small cities as Malone, Massena and Chateaugay. But, more significantly, EMF has gained two facilities that will allow it to reach English-speaking audiences from Cornwall to Sainte-Anne-de-Bellevue and the western suburbs of Montréal.

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RBR-TVBR

Sencore Releases an ATSC 3.0 Transcoder

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

A maker of signal transmission and content monitoring solutions for the broadcast, cable, satellite and IPTV markets has released a new product that adds to its portfolio of ATSC 3.0 broadcast items.

The new Sencore TXS 3800 transcoder appliance converts multiple ATSC 3.0 services into
ATSC 1.0-like formats, for reuse and retransmission in existing cable, translator and MVPD systems.

The TXS 3800 is a dense terrestrial transcoder, capable of transcoding up to 4 ATSC 3.0 services in a single chassis. Video features include MPEG-2 and H.264 compression, along with down-scaling, transrating and caption conversion. Audio is transcoded to either AC-3 or AAC and service names are mapped into standard TVCT format. Once transcoded, all elements are packaged into an MPEG transport stream and output as traditional MPEG/IP for downstream use.

As ATSC 3.0 deployments continue to expand, broadcast, cable and MVPD providers are constantly looking for innovative new products to help them manage these new workflows. “The TXS 3800 is the perfect companion to seamlessly integrate ATSC 3.0 signals into existing signal paths with minimal impact to architecture and processes,” Sencore says.

To download the full datasheet, view features and product specifications or request a demo, visit www.sencore.com

RBR-TVBR

Two Chevy Truck Brands To Lose HD Radio Option

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

A chip shortage has been wreaking havoc on the automobile industry, hampering efforts to get new vehicles into showrooms and out the door with consumers who desire to replace their current ride.

Now, Chevrolet has alerted consumers that certain model year 2021 and 2022 pickup trucks will not come with Xperi’s HD Radio. And, the automotive company says, it is due to a chip shortage.

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Adam Jacobson

New Spot Cable Activity Brings Caffeinated Dollars

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

Of all of the advertisers using Spot Cable to reach consumers, there’s one that stands out.

And, it is perhaps the most recognizable coffee retailer in the world.

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Adam Jacobson

Stability Ahead of Independence Day Activity At Spot TV

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

The latest Media Monitors Spot Ten TV report is noteworthy for its lack of movement among the brands actively using national television to reach consumers.

And, as shown below, auto insurance specialists remain the most active of categories at Spot TV.

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Adam Jacobson

The Urban One Shareholder Votes Are In

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

Urban One, the multimedia company led by Alfred Liggins III that owns the TV One and Cleo cable television networks in addition to radio stations, Reach Media and a growing casino gaming operation, has submitted to the SEC the results of voting on matters ranging from executive compensation to its board of directors.

The votes came during Urban One’s annual shareholders meeting on June 23.

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Adam Jacobson

Adams’ Second Delmarva Deal Brings First State Double-Up

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

As RBR+TVBR first reported on June 22, Adams Radio Group, the Minnesota-based company led by Ron Stone, is selling two of its stations serving the Eastern Shore of Maryland and lower Delaware.

Stone then hinted at the sale of the remaining stations owned by Adams in the region.

Now, another station has been sold — this time a Class A Country station licensed to Seaford, Del.

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Adam Jacobson

A St. Louis Signal Sells In Fusion-Powered Translator Deal

Radio+Television Business Report
3 years 10 months ago

With a mere 99 watts from a broadcast tower used by Sinclair Broadcast Group for its ABC television affiliate, an FM translator reaches most of metropolitan St. Louis at 106.9 MHz.

Until now, this mini-FM facility has simulcast a religious AM. That will soon change, as the FM translator has just been sold.

Paperwork has been filed with the FCC that shows Kaufman Media agreeing to part ways with K295CQ in St. Louis, Mo.

It’s grabbing $125,000 for the baby FM, and the buyer is Rob Austin-led Fusion Radio.

And, Austin has plans in place that will see K295CQ get an upgraded facility and a new tower location, ending the use of the structure at the KDNL-30 studios.

That’s according to Dick Kozacko, who served as Austin’s broker of record. With an upgrade, the coverage area of K295CQ is expected to grow dramatically, making it a “super translator” with city-grade coverage of nearly the entire metropolitan area.

What are Austin’s plans? They could mirror those seen at WPAY-AM 1520 in Toledo and its two associated FM translators.

In addition to his Fusion Radio operation, Austin operates Jammtraxx Media, a Chicago-based operation that offers programming, production, imaging and mix show syndication.

He’s made a $25,000 downpayment to Kaufman, which will receive an additional $25,000 payment no later than August 2. A $75,000 payment will be made at closing.

This is expected to occur by September 1.

Kaufman Media is led by Bert Kaufman, who intended to sell K295CQ and originating station WGNU-AM 920 along with KXEN-AM 1010 and FM translator K283CI to Berry Broadcasting for $650,000 in July 2019. That transaction was never consummated.

Kozacko notes that offers for WGNU, KXEN and K283CI “are pending.”

Adam Jacobson

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