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CONVENTION
HIGHTLIGHTS |
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Giuliani
Leads The Way At R&R Convention 2003 (continued)
Moschitta didn’t
disappoint, reading off all the nominees and announcing
the winners with his signature rapid-fire delivery. In
fact, he finished the show in record time, at just about
an hour and a half.
Among the other winners at the sixth annual Industry Achievement Awards presented
by R&R: Infinity’s KROQ/Los Angeles won three national awards as top
Radio Station (markets 1-25), Market Manager/GM (Trip Reeb, who’s GM for
KCBS-FM & KROQ) and Marketing/Promotion Director (Amy Stevens); WJHM/Orlando
and WPLR/New Haven, CT were named national Radio Station of the Year in markets
26-100 and 101+, respectively; and Howard Stern was tapped as Syndicated Air
Personality of the Year.
On the label side, Interscope/Geffen/A&M and DreamWorks won Label of the
Year in the Platinum and Gold categories, respectively, and Interscope/Geffen/A&M’s
Brenda Romano was named Sr. Promo Exec of the Year. A tribute to all the winners
will be featured in next week’s R&R, and a full list of winners is
posted on R&R’s website (www.radioandrecords.com).
Group Heads Assess
FCC Rules
“I don’t think the new
rules were very well thought out,” Cumulus CEO Lew
Dickey said June 20 of the FCC’s new media-ownership
rules as he
sat on the “Radio: State of the Industry” panel that also included
Hogan, Emmis’ Jeff Smulyan, Entercom’s David Field and NextMedia’s
Skip Weller.
Dickey believes the provision in the new radio rules that forces cluster owners
to either sell clusters intact to minority buyers or parcel out the stations
individually will ultimately harm smaller stations, which he believes won’t
be able to compete. “Those little stations will be orphans,” he said,
explaining that since cluster owners will likely spin off their weakest stations
in order to comply with the new rules, the buyers of those stations will have
a hard time competing with the station combinations that are left.
He added that in some of Cumulus’ clusters the performance of the company’s
larger, more profitable stations allows Cumulus to carry the unprofitable small
stations and keep them on the air. “As a broadcaster, I am disappointed,” he
said. “This hurts the little guy, and it hurts diversity.” On the
flip side, fellow panelist and Clear Channel CEO John Hogan said the new rules
will be “inconsequential to us as a company and as an industry.”
Hogan called the media-ownership debate “like a gang tackle”: “Everybody
wants to get in on it, but very few actually understand our business. This is
a highly politicized topic.”
And Field added that while the debate is raging now, it won’t likely lead
to any significant legislation. “I think there’s a very good chance
that as this works its way through the process on Capitol Hill,” he said, “you’ll
end up with essentially a resolution that will be a minor nuisance, but not a
disruptive event for the industry.”
Panel: Labels Need To Refocus
Switching topics, Weller told the
crowd that labels are missing the boat when they focus attention
on marginal stations in large markets instead of on dominant
stations in smaller markets. “We have a station in
Erie, PA that has 100,000
listeners, and it’s not a reporting station so [the labels] really don’t
care about the radio station,” he said. “But they may have a station
in a top 100 market that has 50,000 listeners and they’ll support that
station. I think the [record] industry needs to look at the millions and millions
of people that they’re just not even covering. They used to cover them,
and their business used to be better, so maybe they should look at that.”
Meanwhile, Smulyan believes that educating the public on the issue of content
ownership is a major hurdle facing the record industry. “The music industry
is in grave straits today because we have raised a generation of kids who believe
that they have a constitutional right to get recorded works for free.” Smulyan
used the example of owning a grocery store to what’s happened to the record
industry: “If you go to a grocery store, fill up your basket, and when
you get to the checkout you just wave to the grocer, this is not a compelling
business proposition for the grocer. Pretty soon he’s not going to be a
grocer. And yet that’s what we’ve done to the music industry.”
Field presented a challenge to the industry: to debunk the myths that have been
propagated in the mainstream press. “There is so much false information
out there, it makes your blood boil,” Hogan added, “You couldn’t
have paid the New York Times five years ago to write about radio,” although
he acknowledged that the radio industry has been slow in responding to the fervent
criticism, a lot of which is focused specifically at Clear Channel.
®
2004 Radio & Records, Inc.
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