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WLIW Set To Widen L.I. Radio Coverage
From April 2018 until July 2020, it had been in a simulcast with WLIR-FM and branded as “Real FM,” offering Classic Hits programming.
Soon, an FM translator with 10 watts of power covering such Long Island, N.Y., cities as Coram and Medford is set to be come a part of the WNET Public family.
The owner of NPR Member station WLIW-FM 88.3, which serves Suffolk County’s east end and is licensed to Hampton Bays, N.Y., is agreeing to purchase W245BA at 96.9 MHz, licensed to Manorville, N.Y.
The seller is Michael Aliffi, and he is earning $150,000 from the sale.
The deal negates a transaction consummated in November 2020 sale valued at just $10,000. It would have seen the translator become the property of former Big City Radio executive Michael Kakoyiannis.
With the translator, WLIW can expand its coverage westward into populous central Suffolk County.
WNET, known for its Thirteen PBS service, acquired WLIW-FM in October 2019, when it was known as WPPB-FM 88.3. It closed on the $944,834 acquisition in June 2020.
Media Stocks End Week On Mixed Note
While the Dow Industrials and Nasdaq indices were both down on Friday, broadcast media stocks saw mixed activity.
Among the key gainers are Townsquare Media, TEGNA, Sinclair Broadcast Group, and iHeartMedia.
Decliners include Entravision, Nexstar Media Group, and Saga Communications.
For a look at all of today’s closing prices from the broadcast media sector, please visit the homepage of RBR.com. The Wall Street Report is updated in real time across each business day!
Sonoma FM Station Ups Its Game With Panel Antenna
Community radio station KSVY(FM) in Sonoma, Calif., recently installed a new directional antenna system that is delivering improved coverage.
Bob Taylor is chief operator and manager of the station, which features an all-volunteer air staff. He told Radio World the station wanted higher elevation for improved reach. It looked for a site that was non-residential and that could provide generator support.
“The old site was on the outskirts of Sonoma on a side road with mixed tree coverage in low residential,” he said. “The new site is approximately 620 feet higher on a bald mountain with an unobstructed view. Hammett & Edison was a major contributor in filing for the project and guiding us through the needs of the FCC.” The former site remains available as a backup location.
The station airs at 91.3 MHz. Its new array uses two Kathrein Broadcast SIRA line FMC 05 broadband circular polarized FM panels. The panels are vertically stacked, with one skewed 12 degrees and the other skewed 328 degrees to achieve the desired pattern.
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Each panel is fed equally in phase and amplitude. Panels are mounted to a 4.5 inch OD pipe. The harness and main 7/8-inch foam feed line are dressed to the mounting pipe and routed vertically out of the aperture of the antenna. The pipe is mounted on a wooden pole.
During Construction of KSVY’s New Antenna Setup“The change has been dramatic,” said Taylor. “Elevation being the key here, dead spots and shadows in our area have nearly vanished completely. We also gained a population increase of approximately 120,000 due to the new pattern including the Petaluma, Cotati and Napa areas.”
A fundraising campaign included donations from a “Signal Booster Society” to support the project.
Taylor said KSVY has been an important resource for Sonoma Valley in the most recent emergency situations with severe fires and public safety power shutoff events.
“The local radio continues to be a crucial part of an emergency plan,” he said. “These situations where the first responders are busy doing what they do best require someone to get reliable information to the common person when the internet isn’t available.”
The Sonoma Index-Tribune recently wrote about the project and reported that KSVY first filed an application for a construction permit for a new antenna in 2008 but didn’t have the funds to build one at the time.
Radio World invites both users and suppliers to tell us about recently installed new or notable equipment. Email radioworld@futurenet.com.
The post Sonoma FM Station Ups Its Game With Panel Antenna appeared first on Radio World.
New GM, GSM Arrive in Jackson for Hearst
He’s been the General Sales Manager of Hearst Television’s ABC affiliate in Jackson, Miss., since 2017.
Now, he is the station’s President/GM. And, his successor as GSM has been named.
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Global Advertising Trends: Where Is Broadcast Media Heading?
New advertising spend forecasts for 100 markets worldwide show that the global ad market has largely weathered the impact of COVID-19, so far, and is on course to reach a value of $1 trillion in 2025.
Here’s the somber news for broadcasters: More than half of this money will be paid to just three companies: Alphabet, Meta and Amazon.
But, how are radio and TV poised to perform in the next five years? WARC, the international marketing intelligence service, has some new intelligence on the subject.
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More Time to Comment in ‘Resilient Networks’ NPRM
The FCC is giving more time to people who want to comment in its “resilient networks” proceeding.
This is the NPRM that, among other things, could lead to a requirement for broadcasters to have backup power at their transmission sites.
The Public Safety and Homeland Security Bureau extended the first comment deadline by 10 days to Dec. 16, with replies now due Jan. 14. The Edison Electric Institute requested the extension.
[“FCC Disaster NPRM Discusses Backup Requirements”]
The FCC notice of proposed rulemaking asks for comment on proposed rules to improve communications reliability during disasters.
The proposal considers changes to the Disaster Information Reporting System, or DIRS, the web-based system used by broadcasters and other communication providers to report service outages to the FCC. Participation currently is voluntary; the proposal asks if it should be mandatory to participate following a disaster.
The NPRM also seeks ways to mitigate the effects of power outages on communications networks after major storms and other events.
The FCC in the proposal asks detailed questions about how backup power can be deployed to reduce the frequency of power-related service disruptions. The commission raised the possibility of requiring backup power for participants in DIRS and NORS, the Network Outage Reporting System, and that list includes broadcasters.
Comment on this or any article. Email radioworld@futurenet.com.
The post More Time to Comment in ‘Resilient Networks’ NPRM appeared first on Radio World.
WISH Granted BIA Support In Ongoing DISH Fight
In 2020, DuJuan McCoy-owned Circle City Broadcasting sued Dish Network on the grounds that it refused to offer fair-market compensation for airing WISH-8, Indianapolis’ home for The CW, and MyNetwork sibling WNDY-23. Central to McCoy’s argument is that Dish’s decision was racially motivated. In March 2021, a federal judge ruled the lawsuit could proceed, with a motion to dismiss the suit filed by Dish denied.
Now, an intriguing new twist in the case has emerged, and it sees Dish fail in its attempt to block supplemental expert testimony on behalf of Circle City from a key figure at BIA Advisory Services.
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NAB Show Now Accepting Technical Paper and Panel Proposals
The 2022 NAB Show has issued a call for technical papers and panel proposals for the Broadcast Engineering and Information Technology (BEIT) track of the NAB Show Conference, held at the 2022 NAB Show in Las Vegas.
BEIT, which runs from April 24 to 26, is designed for broadcast engineers and technicians, contract engineers, broadcast equipment manufacturers, distributors, engineering consultants, R&D engineers, IT professionals and related media technologists, the NAB said.
The program features technical papers addressing the latest opportunities, challenges and solutions facing broadcast engineering and media industry IT professionals around the world.
In issuing the call for proposals, the NAB Show organizers said they are looking for presenters with fresh ideas and unique perspectives on key trends and technologies driving the future of radio, television and general media creation and delivery.
All paper and panel proposals should be submitted online through the 2022 BEIT Call for Papers and Panels portal.
Proposals are subject to peer review, and those featuring original research or highly regarded speakers receive most favorable consideration, the organizers said.
They also noted that all content proposed should be presented in a tutorial, non-promotional form. Proposals overtly promoting company products or services will not be accepted, although proposals explaining the underlying technologies used in broadcast products or services may be considered.
The deadline for BEIT paper and panel proposals is Jan. 14, 2022. Proposals selected for inclusion in the 2022 BEIT program will be announced in February 2022.
Additional information and forms for submitting a proposal can be found here.
The post NAB Show Now Accepting Technical Paper and Panel Proposals appeared first on Radio World.
After 32 Months, ‘iHeartPodcast’ AM Replaced With Oldies
In March 2019, iHeartMedia engaged in an experiment designed to expand the reach of several of its spoken-word podcasts by airing them as scheduled programming on a 5,000-watt AM radio station covering the Lehigh Valley of Pennsylvania.
Among the shows: The Daily Dive podcast from Los Angeles with Oscar Ramirez, and How to Money, and podcast stars Robert Lamb and Joe McCormick.
After several ratings periods with a 0.1 share of the audience, ranking last in a market that consumes Philadelphia radio stations and even the occasional New York City AM, iHeart has abandoned the all-podcast programming at WSAN-AM 1470 in Allentown.
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Letter: Shortwave memories
Dear RW: Thank you for the article in the Sept. 1 issue by James Careless, “Shortwave Radios Keep Up With Tech.”
When I worked for VOA — actually the International Broadcasting Bureau, later called the Broadcasting Board of Governors and then the U.S. Agency for Global Media — I believe upper management thought people in Djibouti had high-speed internet and laptop computers. In reality they lived largely in small huts made from corrugated roofing iron. They were lucky to have a radio.
When I was 12, my uncle had a TV shop as a second job. He fixed up a 1930s model radio with shortwave bands beside AM. It had the tubes with six or seven pins, shaped like a Coke bottle. I listened to VOA, the BBC, Radio Moscow and HCJB out of Quito, Ecuador.
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This experience led me to ham radio, a job at the local radio station to earn money for college, a role at 17 in helping to build KFTW in Fredericktown, Mo., a degree in electrical engineering and, at the end of my career, the job with IBB.
The first time I ever doubted what I heard on the radio was when Radio Moscow announced that the East German secret police had discovered a tunnel into East Berlin to smuggle spies into the German Workers Paradise. I thought “that was really people trying to get out of East Berlin.”
Decades years later, long after the collapse of the Soviet Union, I found out that the CIA had tunneled into East Berlin and tapped the phone lines of the secret police!
David R. DeSpain, P.E., W0BCG
Ft. Worth, Texas
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What You Can Learn From Mitch Albom On Great Presentations
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Eventide Celebrates the Seven-Second Delay
It’s an all-too-common danger with live radio: A guest or caller gets a bit salty and drops a word (or several words) that could lead to an FCC fine or a suit for slander. Thankfully, a simple audio buffer can provide a seven-second delay — just enough time for the producer or jok to react and spare tender ears.
The latest installment in Eventide’s 50 Years of Gear flashbacks to important moments in the company’s history goes back to 1977 and the Eventide Clockworks BD955 with its big yellow DUMP button before moving forward through time to discuss the company’s advances in digital delay technologies.
Check out “Flashback # 9.2 Dump & Go — The Profanity Delay” to enjoy this celebration of a classic tool for keeping the airwaves clean.
Send your equipment news to radioworld@futurenet.com.
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How is Podcasting Doing across the United Kingdom?
According to the just released Infinite Dial 2021 UK, 41% of UK residents over the age of 16 have listened to a podcast in the last month. That’s approximately 23 million people.
The Infinite Dial 2021 UK was conducted by Edison Research and sponsored by Bauer Media Group UK and Spotify. The study surveyed 1,000 UK residents age 16+ on a variety of measures including online digital audio platforms, radio, social media, smart speakers, and more.
The study revealed that 71% of those age 16+ are familiar with podcasts, and 59% of those age 16+ have ever listened to a podcast putting the UK on par with the United States in terms of monthly listening. .
The UK is slightly behind the U.S. regarding weekly podcast listening as 25% of the UK population age 16+ has listened to a podcast in the last week versus 29% in the U.S.
Weekly podcast listeners in the UK listen to an average of five podcast episodes per week.
Seventy-five percent of UK residents age 16+ listen to online audio each month, and 66% of UK residents age 16+ listen to online audio each week.
According to Larry Rosin, President of Edison Research, “It is exciting to analyze the findings from the UK Infinite Dial in the context of other countries. It is evident that the UK is on par regarding many measures of consumption, including monthly podcast listening, and actually outpaces the US in areas like weekly radio reach and weekly online audio reach.”
Download the full report HERE.