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With this year's Infinite Dial report from Edison Research now in the wild, and co-presented at Podcast Movement Evolutions in Chicago, it's the perfect time to have one of the presenters, James Cridland, on the show to dive into the findings.From online audio listening preferences to the opportunities for creators and brands, James walks us through some of the nuances of the report. James also dives into the Podnews Report Card 2025, where podcasters and creators get to share their feedback directly with the teams behind podcast apps and platforms like Apple Podcasts, Spotify, YouTube and more. Join regular co-host Danny Brown and James in this very enlightening episode!Guest co-host this episode: James Cridland James Cridland is Editor of Podnews, the daily podcast newsletter. He is a radio futurologist - a writer, consultant and public speaker on radio's future. James has worked in audio since 1989 as an award-winning copywriter, radio presenter, and internet strategist. One of the organisers of Next Radio, the UK radio ideas conference, James has worked with the world's largest radio conference, Radiodays Europe, since its inception. He's also part of the programming team for Radiodays Asia and Podcast Day 24. James's Website @JamesCridland on X Links to interesting things from this episodeThe Infinite Dial 2025 - Edison ResearchPodcasting 2.0 with Dave Jones and Adam CurryPocket Casts - listen to podcasts with the best free podcasting app. Built by listeners, for listeners.iHeartMedia purchased podcast plays to game their download numbers and the IAB says it's ok!? John Spurlock talks OP3.dev and how it could help filter this bad practice.Adam Curry - curryirc.com (@adamcurry) / XJames Cridland | James Cridland - radio futurologistThe Podnews Report Card 2025 ResultsIn & Around Podcasting is a podcast industry podcast brought to you by Mark Asquith and Danny Brown.If you enjoy the show, we'd love for you to leave us a rating or review on your favourite podcast app! You can also drop us a tip at https://www.inandaroundpodcasting.com/support, too!If you're an independent creator who would like to co-host with us, please let us know via Twitter and we'll get you booked!Please tell your friends that the show is available on Spotify, Apple Podcasts, and YouTube, plus wherever else they may listen to their podcasts.If you'd like your podcast trailer featuring in our "Wave File" segment, submit it via this quick contact form, please.The podcast is also available at
Dylan and his girlfriend have been brainstorming a concept for our next show dating idea. With the popularity of our Bachelor Cam campaign, we've been anxious to start something new. There's "Love Is Blind" but this is "Love Can't See". Basically, we'd ask the audience to help us pick our "bachelorette" and all her potential matches. The twist is no one, including the audience, will get to see what anyone looks like. Hence, the "Love Can't See" title. We discuss how we could make this reality show type concept work with a radio show. Listen as we riff and attempt to invent something brand new to radio!
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The Eagles and Chiefs head to the Super Bowl. Also, two major pharmacy chains CVS and Walmart will soon cut back on their hours. Plus, Consumer Confidential: Vicky Nguyen shares all the details of a new buccal fat removal plastic surgery trend. Plus, Generation Next: Al Roker gets to meet Zach Sang an American radio host as he shares his journey. And, D'Arcy Carden in studio 1A to talk about her role in the new movie “Shotgun Wedding.”
IBJ reporter Dave Lindquist, in this week for Mason King, talks with Emmis Corp. founder Jeff Smulyan about his 2022 memoir “Never Ride a Roller Coaster Upside Down: The Ups, Downs and Reinvention of an Entrepreneur” The book—which he wrote at his daughter's urging—caps a year of tremendous transition for Smulyan, whose roster of former employees includes David Letterman, Mike Pence, Isaac Hayes and Ken Griffey Jr. Emmis sold four Indianapolis radio stations and Indianapolis Monthly magazine in 2022, ending the company's four-decade run as a media powerhouse. Although Emmis still owns two radio stations in New York City, the company is now focused on three assets it has in the fields of e-commerce, ergonomics and corporate podcasting. Lindquist talks with Smulyan about his career, his successes and some of his initiatives that didn't go so well, including NextRadio—a costly effort to make mobile phones act like smart portable radios that never took off. The IBJ Podcast is brought to you by Taft.
Jeff Smulyan and his legendary Emmis Communications have been argueably one of the most innovative broadcasters in the past 30 years. Sports radio, the urban Power formats in New York and LA, and NextRadio among many others. Now Jeff is releasing his book NEVER RIDE A ROLLER COASTER UPSIDE DOWN where he candidly talks about his ups and downs in the broadcast business. He also talks about how he created one of the most envied work cultures in the broadcasting. Join us for a very interesting discussion with Jeff Smulyan.Media Insultant is produced each Tuesday & Friday. Jackson Weaver & Keith Samuels offer comments, ideas and sometimes snarky comments about the current media landscape. They focus on radio and TV primarily - but also any media that is relevent or beneficial to media sales and management. Videos are under the Media Insultant Showcase on Vimeo. Comments are always welcome at jackson@intownmedia.com Thanks for listening!
Alain Weill est un géant dans le monde des médias traditionnels. De RMC à L'Express en passant par BFMTV, il défie et secoue le secteur depuis quarante ans. Redonner un sens économique à des contenus qui n'intéressent personne ? Défi accepté pour cet homme d'affaires et entrepreneur. Quand Alain Weill en 2000 décide de créer son groupe média NextRadio et de racheter RMC alors au bord du gouffre, personne ne pensait le voir venir. Il l'a fait ! Audacieux, visionnaire et déterminé, il a introduit de nombreuses idées novatrices dans le paysage médiatique français. La plus impressionnante d'entre elles est probablement BFMTV qui s'est rapidement imposée comme la première chaîne d'information française devant les groupes TF1 et Canal avec leurs chaînes respectives. En 2017, il cède une partie de son groupe pour s'associer au géant des télécoms : le groupe Altice aux côtés de Patrick Drahi. Étendre son Empire et en faire le 3ème groupe média français. [00:03:52] Quand une entreprise ne sait pas innover et reste sur des modèles anciens, elle est condamnée. C'est ce que j'explique aux journalistes depuis 20 ans [00:04:00] Le succès d'Alain Weill réside dans sa capacité à tirer parti des avancées technologiques afin de produire de meilleurs modèles de gestion d'entreprise. Ses secrets les plus précieux ? Faire mieux pour nettement moins, rester frugal et se concentrer sur les priorités. Ne pas réinventer la roue et regarder ce qui se fait chez nos voisins et notamment aux États-Unis. Toujours surestimer ses concurrents. C'est un immense honneur pour moi de l'avoir reçu au micro de Génération Do It Yourself, lui qui est d'habitude si discret. Au-delà de cet honneur, Alain Weill m'a fait le plaisir de se livrer réellement sur un grand nombre d'aspects de sa vie d'entrepreneur. N'hésitez pas un instant à écouter cet épisode pour comprendre comment disrupter une industrie, diriger une organisation innovante et développer un empire. TIMELINE : 00.09.13 : Ses débuts chez NRJ 00:46:38 : Nouveaux départs : RMC et NextRadioTV 01:10:28 : BFM TV première chaîne d'info en France 01:29:31 : Ses débuts chez Altice Média 01:51:05 : Être autonome et avoir ses convictions propres On a cité avec Alain Weill plusieurs anciens épisodes de GDIY : #255 - Jean Todt - ONU, FIA, Ferrari - Légende vivante du sport automobile #250 - Alain Ducasse - Chef - Faire de sa cuisine un apprentissage, une passion et une marque mondiale Alain Weill vous recommande de lire : Seuls les paranoïaques survivent de Andrew Grove Amazon : La boutique à tout vendre de Brad Stone Outliers : The Story of Success de Maclcolm Gladwell Avec Alain Weill, on a parlé de : Maurice Siegel Jean-Paul Baudecroux NextRadioTV Gilbert Gross Max Guazzini Pierre Fabre Alpha Private Equity Guillaume Dubois Marc Le Fur Michel Combes Hotel Lily of the valley Arthur Dreyfuss Le temps des tempêtes de Nicolas Sarkozy en version audio Impressions et lignes claires de Edouard Philippe et Gilles Boyer La musique du générique vous plaît ? C'est à Morgan Prudhomme que je la dois ! Contactez-le sur : https://studio-module.com. Vous souhaitez sponsoriser Génération Do It Yourself ou nous proposer un partenariat ? Contactez mon label Orso Media via ce formulaire. Pour contacter Alain : LinkedIn
Someone new is joining the airwaves of K102!
Nails & Tracey's Radio Star podcast. WARNING Some of this content is X… keep your kids away! How does Liz Gogol; @lizontheedge, host of "Canada's Rock 20", balance network radio with her daily show? @1031freshradio @fm96rocks @y108rocks @power97wpg @thewolfca @1075daverocks WARNING Some of this content is X… keep your kids away! Crutches and cliches...full of them. And the latest title that could describe you..Yes YOU! Some big name guests coming soon to the Presenter Weekly Newsletter mailchi.mp/f5f305e99fee/onaircoach-newsletter ,Radio Star Bootcamp Q & A for Radio Star entrants with special guest appearances from Radio Star 2020 finalists PLUS all the latest and all you need to know about Radio Star '21. At OnAirCoach we are celebrating 14 years of Presenter Training and have worked with and mentored over 3,100 clients. Many have gone on to be extremely successful in their career. We hold online masterclasses and coach individually too. Nails Mahoney and Tracey Lee have over 50 years international media experience between them and worked for BBC, Today FM, RTE and spoken at Next Radio, TedX and ERS, Paris. www.onaircoach.net
Nails & Tracey's 1st Radio Star podcast. Chatting to the legendary Barry Lang of 2FM and RTE2 TV.#thehotline #thebeatbox ,Where he has been and his brand new radio show on Classic Hits, Ireland, Some big name guests coming soon to the Presenter Weekly Newsletter mailchi.mp/f5f305e99fee/onaircoach-newsletter ,Radio Star Bootcamp Q & A for Radio Star entrants with special guest appearances from Radio Star 2020 finalists PLUS all the latest and all you need to know about Radio Star '21. At OnAirCoach we are celebrating 14 years of Presenter Training and have worked with and mentored over 3,100 clients. Many have gone on to be extremely successful in their career. We hold online masterclasses and coach individually too. Nails Mahoney and Tracey Lee have over 50 years international media experience between them and worked for BBC, Today FM, RTE and spoken at Next Radio, TedX and ERS, Paris. www.onaircoach.net
On this episode of Broadcast Dialogue - The Podcast, we chat with Nails Mahoney. A veteran of radio on both sides of the pond, including stations in Vancouver and Toronto, Mahoney now runs talent coaching business OnAir Coach with partner Tracey Lee.OnAir Coach is behind the Radio Star international talent competition, which now in its fourth year, is helping propel young radio talent into their dream jobs.If you're looking for performance advice or among those who find themselves looking for work in the current radio landscape, this podcast is for you.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
Sherri's Playhouse proudly reprises our next radio play; The Thief's Tale! Whitney is a thief. A good one. Like a mosquito she comes in quietly, first anaesthetising, then feeding, and finally leaving before her prey know any better. It's a strategy which has worked for her 22 times in the past. But when she lands in Refuge, a discovery at an estate sale opens the door to other possibilities.
Find DSP: https://DeadsetPodcasting.com (https://DeadsetPodcasting.com) Support DSP: https://buymeacoffee.com/deadsetpod (https://buymeacoffee.com/deadsetpod) James Cridland is the editor of podnews.net, a podcasting industry expert, and a Radio futurologist. James has spent time making audio with Virgin Radio, the BBC, and Futuri Media, among many other industry giants. James is also one of the organisers of Next Radio, and has worked with Radiodays Europe. Australian Podcasters Facebook Group Questions: • Aussie accents in Podcasting, yes or no? [ Daniel M. Pearn from Barre Talk - AMR Show https://www.facebook.com/barretalkamr/ (https://www.facebook.com/barretalkamr/) ] • Exclusive content and exclusive platforms, good or not? [ Adam Jaffrey https://www.facebook.com/wavelengthcreative (https://www.facebook.com/wavelengthcreative) ] Socials: @joshuacliston Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/joshuacliston). Support this podcast
https://DeadsetPodcasting.com (Find DSP: https://DeadsetPodcasting.com) https://buymeacoffee.com/deadsetpod (Support DSP: https://buymeacoffee.com/deadsetpod) James Cridland is the Editor of (https://podnews.net/), a Podcasting industry expert, and a Radio futurologist. James has spent time making audio with Virgin Radio, the BBC, and Futuri Media, among many other industry giants. James is also one of the organisers of Next Radio, and has worked with Radiodays Europe. Topics discussed in this episode: The Australian (and UK) radio markets vs the USA radio market. Triple J and Double J, The Hottest 100 countdown, and competing with strong radio markets as a local Podcaster. Listening to podcasts on Android vs the Overcast app for iOS. Changing listening habits in 2020. Apple Podcasts and the 'security' of their users. Socials: Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/joshuacliston). Email: hello@deadsetpodcasting.com (mailto:hello@deadsetpodcasting.com) Support this podcast
Dans ce "Journal des médias" : la grève suspendue lundi matin au sein du groupe NetxRadio TV, mais les salariés de BFMTV et RMC seront peut-être surpris par les révélations du magazine Capital sur les comptes du groupe, la création d'un crédit d'impôt pour soutenir la presse, France Télévisions victime d'une cyberattaque, Patrick de Carolis élu maire d'Arles, la 5e vague du baromètre du CSA sur la consommation des médias depuis le confinement, et le retour de "Plus belle la vie" sur France 3.
Where to Next Radio - Host Robbin Terry - Guest Darrel Whisman - Poasstown
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Sebenarnya bagaimana sih kita harus bijak bermedia sosial ? apakah itu relevan atau hanya sebatas jargon. Simak yuk podcast ke-2 di Next Radio bareng Fikri Andhika seorang pengajar juga direktur program NXG Indonesia
#16 DaysOfActivism Next Radio Talk show by SAUTIplus
If you have lived in North Alabama for any length of time, you certainly know the name “Mojo!” Mojo is an institution in our community and he has done the 104.3 WZYP morning show with Ricky and Dee Dee for almost 20 years. Mojo does a lot of work for our community on the side as well. For instance, he will soon do his 100 hours plus charity event, Bikes or Bust, part of the Marine Corps’ Toys for Tots, on South Parkway the week before Thanksgiving. During the event, Mojo is outside hoisted up on a scissor lift. And when I say “100 hours,” I mean 100 straight hours! Last year, he remained on the lift for some five days. "The first night he was up there, I went up in the morning, probably around 5:30 a.m. I looked over at where he was sleeping. It was just full of ice. I think it was 27 degrees that day," U.S. Marine Corps Staff Sgt. Robert Ruiz said. On average, this charity provides 1500 or so new bikes each year to children in our community who wouldn’t have much of a Christmas otherwise. As Mojo mentions on this podcast, 100 plus hours fifty feet in the air is guaranteed to make him sick at some point! And, having started in 2003, this will be the seventeenth straight year that he has done this event! Mojo has had an interesting and varied career prior to his arrival in North Alabama. He grew up in Detroit and then served as a mechanic in the U.S. Army, followed by an abbreviated country music career before he found himself on the radio. I have always been fascinated by radio, as all kids my age were who grew up in Chicago and listened to WLUP. Mojo has been kind enough to have me on his show on Friday mornings to talk about consumer law and help for people with their financial issues so I was happy to turn the tables on him and learn about his history. I hope you enjoy his story as much as I did.
In Canada recently, I heard a little bit of history - or, so it seemed to me. Radio executives were openly banging the drum for FM chips in phones: an argument I thought was long since dead. You can understand why this discussion is still live in Canada. Some research I did about mobile phone data costs (https://podnews.net/article/mobile-data-worldwide) seems to point to Canada being exceptionally expensive for mobile data. In comparison to Australia (roughly the same population and land mass), Canadians pay almost FIVE TIMES MORE for a monthly plan that gives a THIRD LESS DATA. (I put this in capital letters because it still surprises me). Perhaps Canadian radio broadcasters sense an opportunity if FM chips are enabled. I’m not sure there is one, to be honest. As devices, mobile phones already significantly underperform when it comes to live, linear radio (whether streamed or delivered via FM). Research of UK radio listeners, on page 10 of this PDF (https://www.rajar.co.uk/docs/news/MIDAS_Winter_2018_final.pdf) , appears to show live radio accounting for less than 20% of all audio consumed on a phone. The most interactive device that we own, always within arm’s reach, is not the most ideal device for listening to an unpersonalised live stream, it would seem. It’s also not a great user experience. There are no logos and virtually no metadata when listening to FM radio (and in Canada, like the US and Australia, even RDS signals are exotic in many markets). The very action of tuning into a radio station requires the listener to remember a random number for no reason other than a historical anachronism. The company that got closest to fixing the user experience on mobile, Emmis's NextRadio, wasn't supported by other parts of the North American radio industry, and regrettably has joined Nokia's Visual Radio in the waste bin of good ideas. “But radio is most important in times of emergency”, claim the radio companies. But in reality, if an emergency, or a big news story, happens in the evenings or weekends, recent evidence suggests radio won’t cover it anyway (https://m.sandiegoreader.com/news/2019/may/14/ticker-san-diego-radios-pre-recorded-weekends/) . SMS and app alerts are much more effective at communicating immediate peril, like weather events or fire. If radio had a part to play here once, it doesn’t any more. (The aftermath from emergency, as a community starts putting things together? That’s a very different thing, where radio excels.) In any case, the technology is against it. The antenna used for FM or DAB+ reception in a mobile phone is the headphone cable: but that’s something that doesn’t exist in Apple or high-end Google phones, which use Bluetooth. Bluetooth headphones are a challenge with electronic measurement, too. And the strong AM stations that exist in Canadian metro areas? There’s only ever been one mobile phone with AM built-in, and the reason you don’t know about it is that it was fifteen years ago, and it was rubbish. There’s plenty of evidence that Canadian listeners use streaming rather less than their neighbours in the US. The Canadian radio companies could lean on the CRTC to more effectively regulate the price of mobile data from the cellular networks. But they won’t, because the Canadian radio companies ARE the cellular networks. Indeed, the cellular networks are the folks calling the shots in terms of whether FM chips are enabled or not. If the Canadian cellular networks aren’t pressuring the likes of Google and Apple for FM chips to be enabled - and let me remind you again, they own the FM radio networks - that points to a bigger issue. Let’s use our energy and focus on delighting our audience, not trying to capture a magic unicorn that offers, at best, dubious benefit. Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services
What is the NSCI? A new form of math? Also, more thoughts on open WiFi, Retro VGS, hackers thwarting ISIS, and much, much more… Special Guest: N/A Stories of the Week:--Random Access: Stagefright, Microsoft Android devices, NextRadio and AT&T, Yahoo’s LiveText now available in the US, Ethereum Frontier, Google+ detached from YouTube and Beta Channels, Windows 10 reviews.--”NSCI” Link: wrd.cm/1IrNzj7 Tech Roulette: --“Base-12” Link: bit.ly/13BptpG Important Messages:--”Open WiFi? Desktop computers vs. laptops? The Golden Stallion name? Dark iPad? Country Music?” Tool of the Week: --”Retro VGS” Link: www.retrovgs.com/ Hacksec: --”GhostSec thwarts ISIS” Link: bit.ly/1LQ95DC The Climax: --”Languages” APPENDIX: --”Book of Satoshi” Link: adbl.co/1HAh99I --”Libreboot X200” Link: bit.ly/1FI57ew --”Complete Liberty: Inside and Out” Link: amzn.to/1IRm5Jg--”EFF Secure Messaging Scorecard” Link: bit.ly/1E3UvBw--”The Open Wireless Movment” Link: Link: openwireless.org/ --”Dark Android Talk at PorcFest 2015” Link: youtu.be/qnw7ftEIHa4 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: www.patreon.com/sovryntech And you can tip me at: sovryntech.tip.me --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NXT: NXT-4V3J-VA4W-4EY3-GUWV2 NAMECOIN: NHfN1kpj8G9aUCCHuummBKa8mPvppN1UFa LITECOIN: LLUXwfWrKDpuK38ZnPD14K6zc6rUaRgo9W BITCOIN: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Don’t forget you can e-mail the show at: brian@zomiaofflinegames.com Also at Protonmail.ch at: anarchy@protonmail.ch I’m also on Telegram: @Sovryn Minilock.io ID: 67JpL89QkmcJHC9KMGjcNy9VrwsNYDpfCQu9gKXGijVVY BitMessage: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovrynBalnea --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- www.sovryntech.com www.twitter.com/sovryntech plus.google.com/+BrianSovryn1i/ liberty.me/members/briansovryn/ www.facebook.com/BrianSovryn instagram.com/Bsovryn/ steamcommunity.com/id/ninjaprogram/
What is the NSCI? A new form of math? Also, more thoughts on open WiFi, Retro VGS, hackers thwarting ISIS, and much, much more… Special Guest: N/A Stories of the Week:--Random Access: Stagefright, Microsoft Android devices, NextRadio and AT&T, Yahoo’s LiveText now available in the US, Ethereum Frontier, Google+ detached from YouTube and Beta Channels, Windows 10 reviews.--”NSCI” Link: wrd.cm/1IrNzj7 Tech Roulette: --“Base-12” Link: bit.ly/13BptpG Important Messages:--”Open WiFi? Desktop computers vs. laptops? The Golden Stallion name? Dark iPad? Country Music?” Tool of the Week: --”Retro VGS” Link: www.retrovgs.com/ Hacksec: --”GhostSec thwarts ISIS” Link: bit.ly/1LQ95DC The Climax: --”Languages” APPENDIX: --”Book of Satoshi” Link: adbl.co/1HAh99I --”Libreboot X200” Link: bit.ly/1FI57ew --”Complete Liberty: Inside and Out” Link: amzn.to/1IRm5Jg--”EFF Secure Messaging Scorecard” Link: bit.ly/1E3UvBw--”The Open Wireless Movment” Link: Link: openwireless.org/ --”Dark Android Talk at PorcFest 2015” Link: youtu.be/qnw7ftEIHa4 --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Make easy monthly donations through Patreon: www.patreon.com/sovryntech And you can tip me at: sovryntech.tip.me --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- NXT: NXT-4V3J-VA4W-4EY3-GUWV2 NAMECOIN: NHfN1kpj8G9aUCCHuummBKa8mPvppN1UFa LITECOIN: LLUXwfWrKDpuK38ZnPD14K6zc6rUaRgo9W BITCOIN: 1AEiTkWiF8x6yjQbbhoU89vHHMrkzQ7o8d --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Don’t forget you can e-mail the show at: brian@zomiaofflinegames.com Also at Protonmail.ch at: anarchy@protonmail.ch I’m also on Telegram: @Sovryn Minilock.io ID: 67JpL89QkmcJHC9KMGjcNy9VrwsNYDpfCQu9gKXGijVVY BitMessage: BM-NBMFb4W42CqTaonxApmUji1KNbkSESki --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- You can also visit our IRC channel on Freenode: #SovrynBalnea --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- www.sovryntech.com www.twitter.com/sovryntech plus.google.com/+BrianSovryn1i/ liberty.me/members/briansovryn/ www.facebook.com/BrianSovryn instagram.com/Bsovryn/ steamcommunity.com/id/ninjaprogram/
Rays Talk Show Episode 293: Hosts Ray Collazo and Yashira “Yaya” Rivera are joined by Delilah Dee to kick off 2019. The crew discusses how to infiltrate 2019 with your voice despite current political and cultural environment. Delilah Dee is the founder of Delilah & Company, a digital content and events agency that pushes positive messages to move people from dreamers into doers. Collazo and Rivera update everyone on the Government Shutdown, the R Kelly documentary aftermath and where the #AOC hate is really coming from. This episode originally airs as the “What’s Next” Radio program on WPPM 106.5FM People Powered Media in Philadelphia. Support PhillyCAM at PhillyCAM.org or on TuneIn. This episode was sponsored by Youth Testify. Support Youth Testify’s work to provide youth reproductive health rights at YouthTestify.org.
Rays Talk Show Episode 290: Rays Talk Show kicks of It’s “What Next” Series to get us ready for what to expect in 2019. And Rays Talk Show also kicks off this series on a new platform! This episode was recorded and originally aired on WPPM 106.5FM Community Radio Station in Philadelphia. Look out for the “What’s Next” Radio series on WPPM. On this episode, Host Ray Collazo is joined by Mikhel Harrison of Indivisible and Analilia Mejia, the New Jersey Executive Director of the Working Families Organization, to discuss ‘What’s Next” for activists after the 2018 Mid-terms. How did mid-terms change the game? How are we holding our friends accountable now that Democrats control the House? What policies are activists focusing on and how are they organizing to make positive change? Thanks again to Vanessa Graber and WPPM Radio for the beginning of this special collaboration. Catch Ray and friends on WPPM soon!
I still remember my first look round a radio station. In spite of writing to Signal Radio in Stoke-on-Trent and being ignored (shame on you, Signal), Radio Aire in Leeds held an open day, and I got to look round the studios. I remember being amazed by the equipment, and was astonished at how great the jingles sounded on the decent studio monitors; and the equipment everywhere. Do you need an on-site playout system? The BBC’s ViLOR solution for their local radio stations keeps the fancy studios, but moves all the playout equipment into a few regional centres - so, as a presenter on a local station, you’re not pressing “play” on a computer in the basement any more, but one a few hundred miles away. The benefits here are obvious - easier maintenance, more efficient air-conditioning, cheaper studio facilities. Speaking at Next Radio, RCS’s Philippe Generali unveiled a cloud-based system (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8SZc7SJWKZ8) called Raptor, that moves all of the playout software for a typical radio station into “the cloud”: so RCS look after the racks and the transmitter link, rather than your radio station. Do you need a music library? OmniPlayer’s playout system (https://omniplayer.com/) uses Spotify (as well as your local audio) so you’ll have access to any song that you need, almost. Do you need expensive soundproofed studios? A few years ago, I wrote about Vista Radio, a company that I’ve been proudly working with for the last two years, who don’t have radio studios (https://www.radioinfo.com.au/news/radio-stations-without-radio-studios) in their new facilities. Instead, their “open-air” studios are part of their office space. If you’re doing music programming, it’s unlikely you need the type of heavy soundproofing that legacy studios have; and if the only speech blocks are at breakfast, your office is quiet then anyway. Do you need studios at all? For UK-based EDM station This Is Electric, their presenters are at home (https://www.radioworld.com/news-and-business/this-is-electric-broadcasts-from-the-cloud) , using their own home studio (typically, a USB microphone into a laptop), controlling the playout software which is hosted for them by the UK company Broadcast Radio. The station is on DAB and on the internet. Do you need offices at all? Google’s G-Suite or Microsoft’s Office 365 offers all the functionality for office work, alongside planning systems like WideOrbit or Aquira. For most jobs, there’s little need for anything other than a web browser. The team at Aiir, (https://www.aiir.com/) who do radio websites, apps and many more things, don’t have a head office at all: and all work remotely from home. There’s no reason to spend all that money on rent and office space if your team are all remote workers. I’m now hearing about FM stations in the UK who operate entirely virtually - no offices at all, presenters doing their shows from home (both live and voicetracked), and all back-office work being done by home-workers on systems based in the cloud. Many sales operations already work this way. The discussion in the US earlier this year was all about “the local studio rule”, but, it seems the discussion for some forward-looking radio stations is whether they need a building at all. Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Why are you in radio anyway? I had a conversation a while ago about FM RDS, that thing which tells you what radio station you’re listening to on a big screen in your car, so you don’t forget. For some reason, this US radio company that I was talking to didn’t have RDS. The fundamental question from the radio guy? “Yeah, but how can I earn money from it?” There was an interesting article recently in a US publication - What’s Radio’s Why? (https://dicktaylorblog.com/2018/09/30/whats-radios-why/) - in essence, what’s the point of radio? For some reason, these two articles made a lot of things make sense. It reminded me of what drives people. Some people reading this will think that they do radio to get ratings and revenue. That’s the reason why we do anything - ratings or revenue (and ideally both). Others, though, think that they do radio for a different reason - and it’s a little simpler than “get ratings or get revenue”. Simply, we do radio (or a podcast, or a website, or a newsletter, or a conference, or any type of work) for one reason alone: to delight someone. If we delight someone, ratings and revenue will surely follow. But I suspect that for many people, ratings and revenue isn’t why they’re in the business. They’re in it because they have an overwhelming urge to delight other human beings. We can delight them by doing a good job covering stories they’re interested in. We can delight them by playing songs they love. We can delight them by being good company when they need it. Global, the media and entertainment company headquartered in London, has an “Obsession Statement” rather than a corporate one. It’s a great thing, and I’ve been known to read it aloud in meetings where people are violently disagreeing or getting highly emotional about what they do. Because it’s OK to feel strongly sometimes. Valerie Geller, when speaking at Next Radio about four years ago, said that our listeners’ health and safety should be our first priority. She didn’t say ratings and revenue (though she’s also seen plenty of that). Instead, caring for our audiences is number one. Perhaps those who are in radio for the “ratings and revenue” lack the passion of those who are in it to delight audiences. And maybe, just maybe, that lack of passion results in some of what we hear on the air. Are you in the business of ratings and revenue? Or are you in the business of delighting our audience? Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Stuart Clarkson talks to speakers and delegates at the Drive to Digital conference, organised by Digital Radio UK and held at the British Museum in London on Tuesday 25th September 2018. You will hear first from RadioToday's editor Roy Martin and then: Paul Hide (techUK), Peter Lawson (SMMT), Lawrie Hallett (Norwich SSDAB multiplex), Rob Haycock (CEO of radio manufacturer Pure), Jason Phipps (BBC Commissioning Editor of Podcasts), Gethin Jones (Hits Radio breakfast co-presenter), Ralph Bernard (former GWR Group Chairman), Ford Ennals (CEO of Digital Radio UK) and Ed Vaizey (former Minister for radio/digital at DCMS). James Cridland has highlights from the stage at last week's Next Radio conference and David Lloyd presents more RadioMoments.
Some clips of some of the best speakers at the radio ideas conference. Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Trevor Dann reports from the Next Radio event in London held this week - and talks to guests and speakers as well as organisers James Cridland and Matt Deegan. We hear from the organiser of the Community Radio Awards, Martin Steers - as well as Daniel Bruce from Internews who presented an award, and winners Fergus Ó hÍr (Raidió Fáilte), Julie Donaldson (Zetland FM) and Jane Steele (Drystone Radio). Plus - Stuart Clarkson and Roy Martin dissect the big industry stories of the week; James Cridland looks at the secret to achieving a growing radio industry around the world; and David Lloyd has more Radio Moments.
Visit https://podnews.net/update/next-radio-on for the story links in full, and to get our daily newsletter.
The secret to achieve a growing radio industry could be as simple as this I’m writing this in London, where the doors are (as I type) just about to open for Next Radio, the radio conference that I run here with my friend Matt Deegan. It’s a positive radio conference with an uplifting feel. Go to a radio conference in the US or Canada, and there won’t be very many smiling faces. There’s a general feeling in the US and Canada that radio is managing decline. But in other countries, radio is behaving differently. The UK commercial industry has grown, over the past year, by 5.2% (https://www.radiocentre.org/the-audio-market/ad-revenues-and-forecasts/) . It’s now a US $887m market. Australian commercial radio has grown too - over the past year, metro stations growing 3.8% (http://www.commercialradio.com.au/content/mediareleases/2018/2018-08-02-commercial-radio-posts-5-9-growth-in-ju#.W54cGP5KjOQ) to a US $573m market (and there’s more from the regions, too). Commercial radio in Finland is growing, too. Their figures are harder to decipher, but July grew by 6.6% (https://www.radiomedia.fi/uutiset/radio-uuteen-ennatykseen-kesalla) over June; and June grew by 17% over May. The market’s comparatively small at about US $93m - but it’s doing better than the UK if you bear in mind Finland’s small population. These aren’t the stories you hear from the US and Canada; and I’m often asked why. It’s not an easy answer. The UK’s seen relaxation of some regulations, and has a strongly multiplatform market (with AM/FM listening at under 50%). Brand consolidation has been an important part of the industry, as has national broadcasting. Australia’s regulation has historically been quite relaxed, too, but it isn’t particularly multiplatform. Brand consolidation has occurred here as well, with great swathes of radio stations losing their heritage callsigns in favour of more straightforward national branding. Finland has rejected digital radio, so isn’t multiplatform to any great extent. Much of radio is national, though there are a good number of local stations too. There’s no particular story of brand consolidation either. So - at first glance, there’s nothing in common particularly to these markets. Except, I think, there is. And it’s probably rather more simple than you’d think. In the UK, commercial radio has an effective industry body, Radiocentre. They promote the medium to agencies, lobby government, and sing radio’s praises. They’re really very good at it. In Australia, commercial radio, too, has an effective industry body. It’s called Commercial Radio Australia, and they, too, promote the medium to agencies, lobby government, and sing radio’s praises. They’re tenacious and efficient. And in Finland, their industry body is Radio Media. They lobby government, promote the medium to agencies, and market radio as well: to great effect. Unlike North America, these industry bodies only look after radio. They don’t represent television broadcasters as well. There’s no conflict of interest here. Their only concern is a healthy radio industry. And they do that one job very successfully. And, unlike North America, there’s one organisation doing everything from advertising promotion to lobbying and research. One, simple, straightforward organisation, made up of a membership of commercial radio broadcasters. Perhaps one of the ways for a successful, growing, industry really is as easy as copying these successful countries - and establishing an industry association that has only one focus: radio. Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis:...
I’m six foot four, something that I’m acutely aware of in two situations: first, whenever I’m on an economy airline flight, and second, whenever I’m on a subway train in Asia. Those useful straps from the ceiling - normally out of my way in the US and Europe, are all fighting to slap me in the face in subway trains in places like Japan, where the average height is 5’7” (171 cm) or Malaysia, where the average is 5’4” (164 cm). Those hand straps get a lot of use - just not by me. Where I see discomfort, others see opportunity - and so it is that a new Japanese organisation called Wakino Ad Company has spotted that commuters holding on to hand straps is an...advertising opportunity. Yes, the good folks at Wakino are hiring Japanese models with your ad in their armpits (https://www.adweek.com/creativity/this-japanese-company-believes-that-renting-space-on-armpits-is-the-next-great-ad-frontier/?utm_source=james.crid.land&utm_medium=web&utm_campaign=james.crid.land:2018-08-06) . This from a country where people have even rented out their thighs for advertising before now, so maybe it’ll catch on. The first advertiser is, it turns out, a laser hair removal company. Radio’s ad model is, in the main, still based on 30-seconds of someone shouting at you, followed by five or six more people shouting at you, then a nice jingle and back to the music. We’ve typically been pretty bad at maintaining the price for these things, too, so the interruptions have grown longer and more often. On visiting the United States in the mid 2000s, one broadcaster proudly told us that his station had 47 minutes of commercials every hour in the breakfast show. Yikes. Re-thinking how the revenue model works is a challenge; but we need to keep thinking. I’ve nothing particularly to base this on, but I have a feeling that the days of the six-minute-long advertising stopset, (and the banner ad, for that matter) are going away. We should be focusing both on increasing revenue AND on reducing the amount of spots sold. This isn’t just a rate integrity issue - it’s a programming issue, too. African radio has done some clever re-thinking, as Steve Martin from the BBC told the Next Radio conference in 2013 (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CbVRUtC6LTQ) - selling funeral announcements, hiring a village hall, and even moving all the commercials into one hour in the late afternoon (which astonishingly works). I’d not recommend any of that - and certainly wouldn’t go for advertising in armpits - but any ideas for replacements for the long advertising stopsets would be welcome. Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Visit https://podnews.net/update/next-radio-2 for the story links in full, and to get our daily newsletter.
I spent last week at Podcast Movement in Philadelphia - a conference with 2,300 delegates, it dwarfs any radio conference I've been to. This was a well-run conference: running to time throughout, with ten different tracks that delegates could go to. Reflecting podcasting's diverse nature, some tracks were basic advice about how to promote your show, or what to do in your podcast intro. Other tracks were rather more commercial in nature, delving deep into cost-per-thousand, targeting and analytics. Exhibitors offered everything, from microphones and mixers to hosting companies and guest-booking services. The conference hotel was packed, with a bar that was buzzing throughout. The thoughtful organisers had done a lot to encourage a diverse community spirit, even laying on childcare to those that needed it. It was also different for other reasons: it was wildly positive. Podcasting is still pretty small, even in the US. It's 4% of our total audio consumption, say Edison Research, and less than a fifth of the population listen to any podcast over the average week. Smart speakers are not being used for podcast listening to any degree. Google has only just woken up to podcasting. Revenue is small - the total US industry earnt just $314m last year. Radio, on the other hand? 58% of audio consumption (including satellite); 93% of the population listen every week; and smart speakers are having a significantly positive effect. Revenue? 43 times larger, at $13.8bn in the US last year. I bumped into a number of people who go to both conferences. All remarked how positive the podcasters were - and how negative the radio conferences are. Is it the whiff of freshly-raised VC money? Is it that podcasters are younger than radio folk? Is it that they’re just more enthusiastic about the medium? I believe there is plenty to be positive about for radio. In many countries it’s celebrating best-ever revenue, and best-ever audiences. That’s why Matt Deegan and I run a radio conference every year - it’s called Next Radio, and it’s on 17th September this year in central London. You’ll enjoy over 25 positive speakers, with great ideas for radio and podcasting. You can buy tickets at https://next.radio (https://next.radio) But in any case - when radio has far more audience, and far more revenue… why aren’t our conferences far more positive? Perhaps that’s something we can learn from podcasting. Support the show. (https://www.patreon.com/radiofuturologist) This podcast uses the following third-party services for analysis: Chartable - https://chartable.com/privacy
Visit https://podnews.net/update/next-radio-conference-speakers for the story links in full, and to get our daily newsletter.
In this episode, Martin is joined by Chris Howard M0TCH, Dan Romanchik KB6NU, and Ed Durrant DD5LP to discuss the latest Amateur / Ham Radio news. Colin M6BOY rounds up the news in brief, and this episode’s feature is - Upgrading to your next radio by Chris Howard M0TCH ICQ Amateur/Ham Radio Podcast Donors We would like to thank our monthly and annual subscription donors for keeping the podcast advert free. To donate, please visit - http://www.icqpodcast.com/donate PR Mention Bill Barnes N3JIX sponsored a Pennsylvania QSO Award in the name of ICQ Amateur/Ham Radio Podcast - http://www.nittany-arc.net/paqsosponsor.html Nigeria Next to Get 60GHz 2018 State of Ham Radio Survey 2m Radio Support for Long Distance Walker Irish Ham Radio Examination Report Trevor Baylis, Wind-up Radio Inventor Passes Reduced Power for Swedish Amateur Radio Operators Radio Drone Makes KH6JF/MM Accessible Using FT8 Auction of Former Amateur Radio Spectrum First Tunisian Individual Ham Radio Licenses Issued D-STAR Repeater GB7IC Nears 2000 Registrations
This week, host Jay Mitchell and prominent broadcaster Bud Walters conclude their discussion, focusing on translators, translator interference, music licensing, NextRadio and other distribution platforms. This week we feature a Sales Tip with a colorful way one guy handles objections —…Read more →
Welcome to episode 27 of the Wonder Junkie Podcast ft radio futurologist James Cridland. James is a radio futurologist - a writer, consultant and public speaker on radio’s future. He is Managing Editor of podnews.net, a daily podcast newsletter, and runs media.info, the media information website. He is a Director of the Canadian local radio broadcaster VISTA Radio. James has worked in radio since 1989 as an award-winning copywriter, presenter, and internet strategist. In 2001 he joined the original Virgin Radio in London, where he was Digital Media Director: launching the world’s first streaming radio smartphone app in March 2005. In 2007 he joined the BBC to work on the BBC iPlayer for radio, achieving a dramatic increase in the service’s audio quality, and being part of the team that laid the foundations for the UK Radioplayer. Since leaving the BBC in 2009, he has worked for a variety of businesses, including the receiver and silicon manufacturers Pure and Frontier Silicon, Radioplayer, Futuri Media, talkSPORT as well as a variety of media companies in Europe, North America, Asia and Australia; helping them focus on the benefits and challenges that new platforms bring to their business. He is one of the organisers of Next Radio, the UK radio ideas conference each September, and has worked with the world’s largest radio conference, Radiodays Europe, since its inception. If you enjoyed this episode, a review on iTunes would be awesome and for more information and to get in touch it's - http://petebailey.net Social - Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
Stuart Clarkson talks to Sam Pinkham & Amy Voce (aka Sam & Amy) as they announce to listeners that they're leaving Gem 106 after more than a decade to take over the breakfast show on Virgin Radio UK. Also - Kate Cocker reports from the radio ideas conference Next Radio, with guests Nicky Birch, Michelle Livesey, Megan Lazovick, Nails Mahoney, Sam Walker, James Cridland and Matt Deegan. There's also this week's radio industry news with Radio 1 Newsbeat legend Peter Bowes, and Radio Moments with David Lloyd.
Muchas interrupciones pero lo importante es que se vuelve al ruedo con una reseña de una serie de eventos desafortunados No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Con motivo del estreno del priemr trailer de IT una pequeña reseña de uno de los mejores libros del autor de Maine No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Horror en buenas dosis de la mano de dos maestros del Horror el gran Junji Ito y por otra parte la perversa genialidad de Clive Barker No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Y nos desvelamos viendo la pesentacion de la Nintendo Switch, nuestros corazones se llenaron de ilusion hasta que revelaron el precio en latinoamerica, pero para pasar ese rato amargo hablamos de la pirateria y los plagios No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Programa que recoje todo lo que esperado en 2017, y un especial con uan pequeña reseña de todas las peliculas de la saga de Pesadilla en la calle Elm No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
El resumen de los Game Awards, con lo bueno y lo extraño de la industria de los videojuegos, y tambien una reseña del autor de Providence, Howard Phillip Lovecraft, uno de los mejores escritores de historias de terror y alguans mini reseñas de sus obras No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Ya cas llega la navidad y a ritmo de metal Navideño, revisamos la pelicula de Assasins Creed y pasamos otra noche buena en la que no nos regalaron una Myth Cloth No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Capitulo 27, con los comentaros de la premiere de Animales fantasticos y donde encontrarlos, y un pequeño analisis e impresiones de lo que son las dos temporadas de Rick and Morty No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Lo nuevo de Marvel El Doctor Rarito, y una explicaciòn, sobre la ciencia ficciòn, ese genero que no sabias que te gustaba y que no son solo navesitas en el espacio No olvides dar Like en Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Despues de Mucho tiempo por fin la tercera parte del especialde Batman, esta vez hablando de como Batman llego al cine, sus priemros años, su lavado de cara y lo que nos espera el futuro. No olviden dar like en facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Based in the UK, Matt Deegan is one of the digital experts in the radio industry. He runs several DAB multiplexes, a digital radio station for children, and he’s even got his own radio conference, Next Radio. Now on the Programme Committee for Radiodays Europe, who would Matt like to see on the agenda in Amsterdam?
Segundo episodio de la 2 temporada aunque cronologicamente es el episodio 24 Y seguimos con otra semana ams llena de sorpresas con el trailer que nos cayo de bomba de los Power Ranger ademas continuamos con el especial de Batman en esta ocasion Hablando de -Knightfall -Killing Joke -Death of the Family - End game No olviden Seguirme en facebook https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai/?ref=bookmark
After a few weeks of mostly telly talk, here's a special edition on the oldest broadcast medium: radio. Where are the current trends in radio and online audio leading? Where will radio be, and what might it sound (and look) like on its 2022 centenary and beyond? Some leading figures of UK radio broadcasting today, with very different perspectives, come together for a discussion on the Future of Radio. Podcaster and broadcaster Ruth Barnes chairs a panel featuring Matt Deegan (Creative Director of Folder Media and co-founder of the Next Radio conference), Helen Boaden (Director of BBC Radio), Femi Adeyemi (Founder of internet radio station NTS) and journalist and broadcaster Miranda Sawyer. Produced by Rosina Sound for the British Library - thanks to them for sharing this content with the Media Podcast. Our regular programme returns in two weeks. Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/themediapodcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Empezamos la segunda temporada, ya pueden escuchar a la vocera y pues con cabezote y cosas nuevas ya van 23 programas y mas de seis meses de transmisión en este programa aparte de las noticias habituales también empezamos el especial de Batman Reseñando dos historias importantes como lo son Death in the Family y Under the Red Hood Disfrútenlo y no olviden seguirme en facebook: https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai/
Live from the Next Radio Conference 2016, Trevor Dann meets some of the speakers and guests. Lots of ideas from Edison Research, Saatchis, Sky TV and UK radio practitioners.
Programa 20 de Geektastiko Segunda parte Especial Resident Evil Hoy Resident Evil 2 y 3 No olviden darle like a mi pagina en facebook https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Programa 21 de Geektastiko Tercera parte Especial Resident Evil Hoy Resident Evil Code: Veronica y Resident Evil 4 No olviden darle like a mi pagina en facebook https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Programa 22 de Geektastiko Cuarta y Ultima parte Especial Resident Evil Hoy Resident Evil 5, Umbrella Chronicles y Darkside Chronicles No olviden darle like a mi pagina en facebook https://www.facebook.com/akisearunosekai
Matt Deegan & James Cridland, organisers of NextRadio 2016, talk about 'transmitter mindset' and why this is the golden age of radio. Plus news from Stuart Clarkson and David Lloyd's Radio Moments
In celebration of 4/20 A Tru Lady is joined by Up Next Radio crew with an array of topics. Since we all have 9 to 5s no one could partake in the ganga but TJ mixed a nice drink for all of us to enjoy.
The Voiceamerica.com Live Events team will be broadcasting live from the event floor at the NAB conference in Las Vegas Nevada! Join VoiceAmerica and Host Lori H. Schwartz of The Tech Cat Show as they go live from the Advanced Advertising Theater on the event floor and cover the Business of Content! VoiceAmerica will Broadcast the full 3 days of sessions that will bring together the key advertising technologies and content leaders who are building a true multi screen content environment, allowing broadcasters, digital publishers, and online influencers to leverage new forms of media, monetization and audiences behaviors to drive towards business goals.
Spreaker Live Show #49 for March 2nd, 2016Our Topic is the merging of commercial radio, podcasting and online streaming radio. We also discuss the NextRadio app that uses an FM chip that is in most smartphones today to connect to FM radio in listeners local radio markets. We also discuss whether getting podcasts content added to NextRadio is a potential future opportunity in the app. The interview was done on the exhibition floor in the Spreaker booth at the National Religious Broadcaster's Proclaim16 Convention (NRBConvention.com) Feb 26, 20016 in Nashville. Show Duration: 18 minutesHost: Rob Greenlee, Head of Content, Spreaker @robgreenlee - rob(at)spreaker(docom)Show Guest: Jeffrey H. Smulyan, Chairman, CEO, and Founder Emmis Communications Corporation, an Indianapolis–based radio and publishing company with operations in 9 U.S. markets. He widely recognized as one of the most visionary leaders in the radio industry. He is also the leading advocate of getting FM-enabled wireless devices in smartphones. He shepherded the unification of the radio industry behind the installation of the Emmis-created NextRadio application in a broad array of FM-enabled wireless devices, allowing consumers to listen to their local radio stations without data charges.Who owns and operates 19 FM and 4 AM radio stations in the nation’s largest markets and city/regional magazines, including national titles Texas Monthly and Los Angeles. Emmis owns the two top hip-hop brands in the world, KPWR Power 106 in Los Angeles and HOT 97 in New York City.Show Guest Topics:- He tells us about Emmis Communications and what the company operates in those 9 US markets?- How does he sees US commercial radio stations changing formats over the next few years to appeal to millennial?- Does he think Public Radio’s formats and quality impact commercial radio? - Whether he thinks commercial talk radio will adding more on-demand / podcasting?- Should radio stations develop new talk radio talent by creating original audio podcast shows at the local level? - How will CarPlay and Android Auto impact talk radio stations and audio distribution and listening in the car?- What are his thoughts on metrics around download distribution and advertiser support of podcasts. IAB role?- He gives an update on NextRadio and the possibility of adding audio podcasts to the app?Show Guest Links:http://Emmis.comhttp://nextradioapp.comhttp://jacobsmediablog.com/2016/01/29/jeff-smulyans-5-things-every-radio-professional-should-know-about-nextradio/http://nrb.orghttp://www.nrbconvention.org/Spreaker Links:http://Adore.fmhttp://blog.spreaker.comhttp://SpreakerLiveShow.comhttps://Spreaker.comVideo Demo of Spreaker Podcast Radio App: http://youtu.be/YZ3JddcxQjASend Questions and Comments to:Twitter: http://twitter.com/spreaker using #SpreakerLiveTwitter: http://twitter.com/robgreenlee Tech Support: support at spreaker.comRob Greenlee: Rob at Spreaker.com
Spreaker Live Show #49 for March 2nd, 2016Our Topic is the merging of commercial radio, podcasting and online streaming radio. We also discuss the NextRadio app that uses an FM chip that is in most smartphones today to connect to FM radio in listeners local radio markets. We also discuss whether getting podcasts content added to NextRadio is a potential future opportunity in the app. The interview was done on the exhibition floor in the Spreaker booth at the National Religious Broadcaster's Proclaim16 Convention (NRBConvention.com) Feb 26, 20016 in Nashville. Show Duration: 18 minutesHost: Rob Greenlee, Head of Content, Spreaker @robgreenlee - rob(at)spreaker(docom)Show Guest: Jeffrey H. Smulyan, Chairman, CEO, and Founder Emmis Communications Corporation, an Indianapolis–based radio and publishing company with operations in 9 U.S. markets. He widely recognized as one of the most visionary leaders in the radio industry. He is also the leading advocate of getting FM-enabled wireless devices in smartphones. He shepherded the unification of the radio industry behind the installation of the Emmis-created NextRadio application in a broad array of FM-enabled wireless devices, allowing consumers to listen to their local radio stations without data charges.Who owns and operates 19 FM and 4 AM radio stations in the nation’s largest markets and city/regional magazines, including national titles Texas Monthly and Los Angeles. Emmis owns the two top hip-hop brands in the world, KPWR Power 106 in Los Angeles and HOT 97 in New York City.Show Guest Topics:- He tells us about Emmis Communications and what the company operates in those 9 US markets?- How does he sees US commercial radio stations changing formats over the next few years to appeal to millennial?- Does he think Public Radio’s formats and quality impact commercial radio? - Whether he thinks commercial talk radio will adding more on-demand / podcasting?- Should radio stations develop new talk radio talent by creating original audio podcast shows at the local level? - How will CarPlay and Android Auto impact talk radio stations and audio distribution and listening in the car?- What are his thoughts on metrics around download distribution and advertiser support of podcasts. IAB role?- He gives an update on NextRadio and the possibility of adding audio podcasts to the app?Show Guest Links:http://Emmis.comhttp://nextradioapp.comhttp://jacobsmediablog.com/2016/01/29/jeff-smulyans-5-things-every-radio-professional-should-know-about-nextradio/http://nrb.orghttp://www.nrbconvention.org/Spreaker Links:http://Adore.fmhttp://blog.spreaker.comhttp://SpreakerLiveShow.comhttps://Spreaker.comVideo Demo of Spreaker Podcast Radio App: http://youtu.be/YZ3JddcxQjASend Questions and Comments to:Twitter: http://twitter.com/spreaker using #SpreakerLiveTwitter: http://twitter.com/robgreenlee Tech Support: support at spreaker.comRob Greenlee: Rob at Spreaker.com
Trevor Dann meets Ed Hooper from Omny to discuss their new platform for podcasters and broadcasters. Plus Tim Johns on NextRadio, news from Roy Martin and David Lloyd's Radio Moments #omny #timjohns #trevordann #davidlloyd #nextradio #radiotoday
Bumper edition with reports from the radio ideas conference NextRadio and the community radio conference plus RadAcad chair Chris Burns and David Lloyd's Radio Moments. Trevor Dann presents
The Met police were able to uncover a source for a Sun story using a RIPA request - how are we going to protect our sources in a digital age? Nick Wallis sits in for Olly Mann with guests Helen Zaltzman and creative director of Folder Media, Matt Deegan. Also on the programme, Rona Fairhead faces MPs before becoming the new chair of the BBC Trust - we discuss the highlights. Plus, a full report on the Next Radio Conference in London and the panel discuss the impact digital will make on in-car listening next year. All that plus the Media Quiz and details on our new, members-only website (not to be confused with the Guardian's new scheme). Support this show http://supporter.acast.com/themediapodcast. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Recorded at the Next Radio Conference, this podcast features advice from SoundCloud for creating shareable audio, and two major broadcasters give an insight into their social strategy
Trevor Dann talks to delegates and speakers at this year’s NextRadio conference inc Simon Hirst, Brett Spencer, Helen Zaltzman, Phil Critchlow, Geoff Jein and the organisers, James Cridland and Matt Deegan. Plus David Lloyd’s Radio Moments and the latest RT news from Roy Martin
Trevor Dann talks to new RadioCentre leader Siobhan Kenny and others at the Parliamentary reception to launch commercial radio's new report Action Stations. Plus the launch of Next Radio 2014 at the Royal Institution, news and Radio Moments.
James Cridland is a radio futurologist and Managing Director of Media UK - the UK's free media resource since 1994. We ask James about the future of radio.
In this month's podcast, I hear from both sides of one of British radio's finest mixed doubles: Annabel Port and Geoff Lloyd of Absolute Radio. Annabel reveals her Damascene conversion to radio, how she lost her social inhibitions, why doing a breakfast show ruined her personality, how to keep an on-air partnership fresh, and why she has tricky relationships with Topshop and the Harlem Globetrotters. Geoff describes how he discovered Annabel, vents about the Women Aren't Funny brigade, and insists that radio listeners are not unwashed mutants. Also, in the Sound Women members only audio snippet, he contemplates the BBC Desk Of Death. For more about Geoff Lloyd's Hometime Show on Absolute, and to subscribe to the podcast, click HERE. And click HERE for information about the annual Next Radio conference, and to see videos of previous years' talks. If you'd like to be on the Sound Women podcast, get in touch: email podcast@soundwomen.co.uk or tweet @soundwomen. Meanwhile, if you see me prowling around the forthcoming Radio Festival with a microphone, please do come up and start spouting podcast-friendly soundbites for November's episode. Helen Zaltzman *** CLICK HERE TO SUBSCRIBE TO THE SOUND WOMEN PODCAST ON iTUNES ***
Interviews with the speakers of the standout sessions of the Next Radio ideas conference. We hear from Absolute Radio's Geoff Lloyd on never underestimating your listeners and BBC Radio 5 Live's North of England reporter Nick Garnett on how to do an outside broadcast from anywhere Plus how the BBC's digital Glastonbury was put together and some ideas on innovative radio straight out of Africa.
Trevor Dann mingles with the delegates at NextRadio 2013. Featuring Larry Gifford from Radio Stuff. Plus David lloyd;'s Radio Moments and Roy Martin's news roundup.