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Industry News

Does College Radio Matter to College Students?

Radio World
4 years ago
Nassau Community College President Dr. Jermaine F. Williams, third from left, and Station Director Shawn Novatt, near center in suit, are shown with WHPC students and volunteers in 2019.

The author of this commentary is director of WHPC, Nassau Community College, Garden City (Long Island), New York.

WHPC 90.3 FM, the Voice of Nassau Community College, was named by the Intercollegiate Broadcasting System as the 2021 Abraham & Borst Best Overall College Radio Station and 2021 Best Community College Radio Station in the Nation.

As director of the station, I was asked by Radio World to comment on what makes for “college radio relevant in 2021,” especially given how younger people consume media.

I like to think that to be a successful college radio station today, you need to focus on one thing: the people you have volunteering their time to help make your station successful, which helps lead them on their own path to success.

Unless you are lucky enough to have a small budget to pay student managers (which I am aware happens at some college stations), the vast majority (if not everyone) is working for free — and sometimes, you get what you pay for.

This is why you need to make joining the college station competitive and worth their time investment once they successfully join in.

WHPC has over 50 extremely talented, wonderful “Community Volunteers” to help make the station sound great — but all of them, along with my staff of six part-time professionals, know that the focus of our station is our educational mission: WHPC exists to provide professional broadcast training to qualified Nassau Community College students.

Let’s dissect two points in that statement:

Professional broadcast training. It’s important not to just welcome someone who expresses interest in joining the station, throw them in a studio and let them play around.

At my two-year community college, my training program to be an on-air host lasts, on average, three to four hour-long sessions in studio, one-on-one, with me, learning how to use our equipment, learning the proper way to speak into a microphone and deciding what to talk about. The students get better and better over time.

Bottom line: Don’t just throw students on air and expect other students to do the training. You won’t get that professional sound you are looking for, and they won’t get the training they are looking for.

Qualified students. Don’t fall into the “warm bodies” trap and hire everyone who walks through the station’s main door. Have them fill out an application, interview those who take the time to completely fill it out, and be sure to ask them what their career goals are.

Don’t only accept communications majors (but give them a little preferential treatment), as you need people of all backgrounds and interests to make the station operate successfully. The students will also appreciate the interview experience for future job applications.

Be honest with everyone up front: Not everyone who applies gets the opportunity to join the station. Decide how many people you have space for and pick the students whom you feel will be best suited to fit in to your current schedule and who have the most potential to grow both at the station and in their own careers. It’s exciting to me how much interest there is.

While younger people are consuming more of their music and information online, they still know that radio works, and more of them listen than you think!

The people are what make your college station successful. I am thankful to my staff, volunteers and all the students who have stepped through the doors at WHPC over the past 49 years, even though I have only been here about five of them myself.

Without them, WHPC would not be the proud success I am proud to say it is.

Shawn Novatt has worked at stations including WBLI(FM) and WKJY(FM), both on Long Island, and WOR(AM) in New York. He graduated in 2000 with a BA in Audio/Radio from Hofstra University, where he volunteered as a student at WRHU(FM) in Hempstead, N.Y. His start in radio came at his high school station, WPOB(FM) in Plainview, N.Y.

The post Does College Radio Matter to College Students? appeared first on Radio World.

Shawn Novatt

Bloomberg Makes Audio Moves

Radio World
4 years ago

The Bloomberg radio and audio operation looks to be prospering these days.

Radio program syndicator Key Networks has announced that Bloomberg Radio has “hit a major benchmark in affiliate growth, with over 400 stations now carrying its business and consumer news programming.” That, according to Key, is a 25% growth rate since last October.

[Read: How Bloomberg Radio Put Remote Mixing Into Action]

Bloomberg Radio features news reports for stations along with specialty, targeted content such as “Bloomberg Money Minutes,” “Black Business Report,” “Green Business Report,” “Bloomberg Business of Sports,” and “The Luxury Report.”

In other Bloomberg news, Bloomberg Media has announced a multiyear agreement to co-produce and distribute more than a dozen new original podcasts. Also, iHeartMedia will distribute Bloomberg Media’s current slate of over 20 podcasts through its iHeartPodcast Network.

 

The post Bloomberg Makes Audio Moves appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

Univision’s Upfront Story: ‘Building on its Continued Transformation’

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

Virtually delivered Upfront presentations are in full swing, in lieu of the annual cocktail-fueled prance and dance across midtown Manhattan.

Among the media companies making their pitch to media buyers and CMOs on Tuesday was Univision Communications, with an entirely new C-Suite continuing a theme shared earlier this year in a “get to know you” session for the ad-buying community: Grow with Us.

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Adam Jacobson

Bell, With iHeart Boost, Rings In Another National Brand In Canada

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

TORONTO — It’s been a very notable first half of 2021 for Bell Media, which enjoys a cozy relationship with U.S.-based audio media giant iHeartMedia. In February, it gained a lot of attention for a substantial reduction in force at its radio division, with heritage Anglophone News/Talk AM in Montréal following major shifts at its Windsor, Ontario, operations that reach Detroit listeners. Then came the news that several TV leaders exited, including the man in charge of programming for Canada’s largest commercial broadcast network, CTV, and its associated CTV2 network and owned-and-operated TV channels.

The job cuts followed the late December 2020 arrival of a national Adult Contemporary radio brand, Move Radio.

Now, another national radio brand has emerged from Bell media.

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RBR-TVBR

After Nearly Four Years, Tri-Star Exits Southern Utah

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

On Sept. 25, 2017,  a new AM radio station licensed for broadcast at 1490 MHz in Santa Clara, Utah — and an associated FM translator it sought in the FCC’s recent Auction 99 — traded hands.

Now, those properties and a second FM translator are heading to a new owner.

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Adam Jacobson

Here Are The 2020 Broadcast Leadership Training Graduates!

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

WASHINGTON, D.C. — The NAB Leadership Foundation has revealed the 2020 Broadcast Leadership Training (BLT) class, which has graduated following the completion of the executive MBA-style program.

The BLT program teaches the fundamentals of purchasing, owning and operating radio and television stations to senior-level broadcast executives, particularly women and people of color, who aspire to advance as group executives or station owners.

Typically comprising ten in-person weekend sessions held in Washington, D.C., the program schedule and curriculum were altered to an online model and extended due to the pandemic.

“I am thrilled to see this class of talented broadcasters join the ranks of industry leaders who have grown from this program,” NAB Foundation President Michelle Duke said. “The tenacity and resolve shown to adapt and continue in the toughest circumstances demonstrates their commitment to excellence and success. We look forward to watching as they achieve new career heights and positively impact the broadcast industry.”

Diane Sutter, who is the BLT program founder and dean and President/CEO of ShootingStar Broadcasting, added, “We are so pleased to have the talented BLT Class of 2020 finally join our graduates. Despite the challenge of the pandemic, many in the class were promoted and one of the graduates was able to buy her first radio station. We are immensely proud of how this class rose to the occasion and look forward to watching as they continue to grow their careers.”

With this class, 344 participants have graduated from the program.

The 2020 Broadcast Leadership Training Class graduates are:

  • Adam Chase, Vice President / General Manager, KXXV-TV/The E.W. Scripps Company
  • Sue Diviney, Vice President, Finance, WTTG-TV Fox 5/WDCA-TV Fox 5 Plus
  • Bob Ellis, Vice President / General Manager, WJXT-TV/The Local Station
  • Kevin “Big Redd” Felder, Nationally syndicated radio host, “The Big Redd Radio Show”
  • Kevin Ferrara, Director of Operations, Magis Media
  • Tery Garras, Market Manager, KXLY-TV/Morgan Murphy Media
  • Estevan Gonzales, Owner & General Manager, KSWV Radio
  • Kristie Gonzales, President & General Manager, KVUE-TV/Tegna
  • Jeff Holub, VP & General Manager, WHNS-TV FOX Carolina/Meredith Corporation
  • Kathi Kolar, Owner & General Manager, KHBT, Open Roads Media LLC
  • Jinny Laderer, Founder & President Emerita, vCreative
  • Jaleigh Long, Vice President & Market Manager, Cox Media Group Atlanta Radio
  • Josh Morgan, Vice President & General Manager, WREX-TV/Quincy Media, Inc.
  • Brittney Quarles, General Sales Manager, Urban One
  • Antonio Roman, Regional President, Eastern Region, Univision Communications
  • Andrea Stahlman, News Director, WLKY-TV/Hearst Television
  • A.J. Vaughan, Partner Success Manager, Futuri Media
  • Melanie Webb, Vice President, Sales Operations, TEGNA
  • Tregg White, Vice President / General Manager, KGUN-TV/The E.W. Scripps Company

This year’s program sponsors include Beasley Broadcast Group, Cox Media Group, Fox TV Stations, Futuri, Graham Media Group, Gray Television, Hearst Television, Legend Communications, Meredith, Morgan Murphy Media, NAB, Nielsen Foundation, Quincy Media, Scripps, TEGNA and Univision Communications.

RBR-TVBR

The InFOCUS Podcast: Jon Yinger

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

To some broadcast industry observers, it seems that nearly every day a new transaction is reported by RBR+TVBR, a non-secular, non-profit buyer is grabbing a radio station.

Is it our imagination, or have broadcast ministries taken advantage of the pandemic by going on a buying binge?

Jon Yinger, President and CEO of The Christian Broadcasting System and Broadcast Properties LLC, shares his perspective on access to capital, and the strategic purchases religious groups are able to do today compared to a decade ago.

“It’s time to pick up a dream purchase,” Yinger says in this InFOCUS Podcast, presented by dot.FM.

Listen to “The InFOCUS Podcast: Jon Yinger” on Spreaker.

Adam Jacobson

NewsNation’s New President: Incoming from ABC News

Radio+Television Business Report
4 years ago

For the last seven years, he has served as the Senior Executive Producer of ABC News’ “Good Morning America.”

Now, he’s joining Sean Compton in taking on a leadership role at Nexstar Media Group‘s still-growing NewsNation operation.

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Adam Jacobson

Bertrand Combines Tech With Leadership

Radio World
4 years ago

How do you celebrate completing your master’s degree in organization development?

By posing with an FM combiner, of course!

This pic of Rob Bertrand, senior director of technology for WAMU(FM) in Washington, encompasses not one but two ambitious projects. “For me this photo symbolizes a major turning point in my personal journey as an engineer, a leader and as a person.”

I spotted the pic on social media so I asked him about it.

When Bertrand joined WAMU five years ago, he says, he figured he might pursue an MBA at American University, which owns the big public radio station. But after discussing it with a colleague in the IT department, he opted for an MSOD, Master of Science in Organization Development.

“She told me how many tech folks she knew who had gone through this renowned program at AU and found it to be transformational in how they led technical change in their organizations,” he told me in an email.

That program aims to help professionals turn into leaders. “Over the course of the two years, I met many engineers and former engineers who had grown frustrated with their technical feats not taking deeper root within their organizations. They (and I) found that the greatest challenge in a successful technical implementation was not just getting the technology right, which of course is essential; the real challenge was leading a change process within the organization that was actually embraced by people.”

Bertrand said the MSOD program “will forever inform who I am as an engineer and as a leader.”

That’s one accomplishment, but juggling it while bringing to fruition a complex master antenna project in his first few years at AU was the second.

You can read all about that project in our earlier article, but suffice it to say that the planning, design and construction work of that job fully overlapped his degree work.

“I was able to use what I was learning in the classroom throughout that project. In the end, it was those skills and not my technical background that made it possible to complete this enormously complex project within the boundaries of a university operation, on a tower surrounded by a university campus in an affluent enclave of our nation’s capital.”

Bertrand had envisioned being able to receive his diploma and then take a photo with the combiner. “It was my way of making sense of doing these two things simultaneously. And then COVID happened.” When AU finally held a belated ceremony, he finally got to take his photo.

Congrats, Rob, from those of us who celebrate lifelong learning.

 

The post Bertrand Combines Tech With Leadership appeared first on Radio World.

Paul McLane

Here Are the Latest Call Sign Changes

Radio World
4 years ago

The latest call sign actions report is out.

The Federal Communications Commission issues these regularly. In addition to helping managers keep an eye on the competition, the periodic summaries of recent call sign changes are fun for us radio geeks who love to share the history of various letter combinations and station names.

Just a sampling from the latest report: Audacy (formerly Entercom) changed the calls for FM station KAMP in Los Angeles to KNOU. According to RadioInsight.com, the station recently rebranded from CHR-formatted “Amp 97.1” to “97.1 Now, LA’s Party Station.”

Lakefront Communications in Milwaukee turned AM station WJYI into WJOI. The station has an interesting call sign history, and its Wikipedia listing indicates that the WJYI call letters and those of co-owned WJOI in Norfolk, Virginia, swapped last month.

And low-power FMs aren’t left out of the action. In Lufkin, Texas, V.E. Leach Ministries renames KEOE as KOWJ.

Read the latest report.

 

The post Here Are the Latest Call Sign Changes appeared first on Radio World.

RW Staff

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