April 14, 2005

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Spanish-Language Radio Sizzles
Jack Rattigan had a hunch. Rattigan, the general manager of Davidson Media's WVXX in Norfolk, VA, believed the time was right for Norfolk's first-ever fulltime Spanish language station. So just before sunrise on the last day of February, Rattigan switched the classic rock station to round-the-clock Spanish.
   The hunch paid off. "It's unbelievable how fast this is growing," says Rattigan, who at 76 has been in the broadcast business for more than 50 years. "I've never experienced anything like this."
   WVXX's success with Spanish radio or "Selecta 1050" has been mirrored many times over in scores of cities. The number of Spanish stations has nearly doubled in the last 10 years, from 400 in 1995 to about 750 today. Overall, the Spanish language audience has grown about 37% since 1998 and represents about 9% of all radio listeners.
   The success of Hispanic radio outside the West and Southwest can be traced to the migration of Spanish speaking immigrants to the North and Eastern seaboard, says Felipe Korzenny, professor of advertising and integrated marketing at Florida State University in Tallahassee.
   "Radio is a voice that has many functions in the Hispanic community," Korzenny says. "It has become the town crier, the watering well." Stations serve as a message board for listeners, exchanging information, broadcasting job openings, child care and marital advice, health and finance programs, and information on immigration. "Latin America has a heritage of small town radio stations where radio is the community, and it has been largely replicated in the U.S.," Korzenny says.

   

   WVXX offers a combination of locally programmed music and personalities along with programming from Bustos Radio Networks in Sacramento. While listeners immediately were attracted to the station's broad playlist, the Norfolk/Hampton Roads area business community quickly embraced the station's new format. Rattigan reports that car dealers, furniture stores and big retailers bought advertising and signed on for sales promotions.
   "Most of the advertising came to us. We haven't had time to get out and sell," says Rattigan, who is hiring staff as quickly as he is able.

Satellite Radio: Too Early For Cigars
Cox Radio President and CEO Bob Neil responded to a March 30 Wall Street Journal article entitled "Battle Stations: Two Upstarts Vie for Dominance in Satellite Radio." Neil pointed out in his "Letter to the Editor," why he believes the hype over the satellite radio is premature.
   "I appreciated the compelling page-one history of the satellite market and the differences between XM and Sirius satellite radio services as they race to capture the satellite audience. But...I fail to see how satellite radio is 'on the verge of reaching a critical mass.'
   Your article accurately describes the industry as 'an embryonic new medium' with XM and Sirius boasting just 4 million subscribers. Indeed, the top three radio stations in New York City alone have a bigger audience than that, at close to 7 million. And when compared with the total universe of nearly 250 million radio listeners, I'd liken the satellite market more to a zygote than to an embryo.
   Satellite radio's financials are even more dismal. XM and Sirius have an impressive combined market cap of $14 billion, notably double that of the top five pure play radio companies -- Cox Radio, Entercom, Citadel, Cumulus and Radio One -- which closed 2004 with a combined market cap of $7.5 billion. But a closer look at the satellite numbers tells a different story. XM and Sirius sport combined revenues of just over $300 million, while the combined revenues of the top five pure play radio companies is $2 billion. Further, the combined free cash flow from the top five pure play radio companies rang in more than $500 million in 2004, while the combined cash flow deficit for XM and Sirius was a staggering $655 million. Remember the dot-com bubble burst?
   The bottom line: Satellite radio's impact on traditional radio is minimal. Its formats appeal to specific tastes, not the mass market; its usage isn't exclusive; and even if satellite radio achieves the success of satellite television, it would still be a niche product reaching less than 10% of the population, vs. traditional radio's 94%.
   So, it looks like the only thing reaching 'critical mass' is satellite radio's losses."

HD Radio Home Theater Receiver Unveiled
   Yamaha Electronics has introduced a new A/V digital home theater receiver with HD Radio technology which seamlessly transmits digital audio and data alongside existing AM and FM analog signals. That allows listeners with Yamaha’s HD Radio compatible receivers to enjoy CD-quality sound, while virtually eliminating the static and hiss often associated with analog radio. The system allows delivery data information such as song titles, artist names and more. The RX-V4600 is also capable of receiving multicasting channels and increasing the variety and number of available broadcast channels. The RX-V4600 carries an MSRP $1,899.95 and will be available in June.


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Radio's Long Reach to Hispanics, Blacks
   A study into how Hispanics and Blacks use radio indicates the medium is far and away their top media choice. Data collected by Arbitron's RADAR service show that in a typical week, radio reaches 95% of Blacks 12 years and older and 96% of Hispanics. Collectively, more than 59 million Hispanics and Blacks listen to radio each week.
   The additional data yielded valuable
consumer spending information. For instance, 32% of the Black population 18+ has an annual income above $50,000, and Blacks spend $47.7 billion annually on cars, trucks and related services, and $22.9 billion on apparel, products and services.
   H
ispanics are 81% more likely to see a movie on opening weekend than others in the market. Additionally, more than 11.6 million Hispanics are homeowners, and nearly 3 million homes owned by Hispanics are valued at $250,000 or more.
   While previous studies indicated that radio appealed to every age group and demo, it also reaches more than 90% of ethnic listeners in each age group. But the more-in-depth data show that radio reaches Blacks and Hispanics everywhere: at home, at work and in the car, and that both groups use radio differently from the total population, listening more at home and less in the car.
   Arbitron defines "the black community" to include African-Americans, Bahamian, Canadian, Caribbean, Haitian, Jamaican and others.
      Mike Klein, vice president of Arbitron's RADAR Client Services, said, "Along with increased sample sizes we've introduced to RADAR the past three years, these new data give national advertisers and radio networks a more complete profile of these important segments of the national radio audience."

Did ' Ya Know...
Mason: Catch the HD Radio Wave
Dan Mason has heard the future, and it sounds very much like HD Radio. The former CBS Radio president, Mason predicts that by next year, 1,300 radio stations will be broadcasting iBiquity HD Radio signals covering 80% of the U.S. population. FM stations will be carrying two, three, four or more audio channels. The first multi-stream capable radio will be introduced this spring. And if that's not good enough, the HD Radio system is designed to carry eight unique products on one frequency, notes Mason, who adds that there is a likelihood that some of these HD Radio channels could be commercial free.
There are at least 15 receiver manufacturers that will have HD Radio products coming on the market this year, and specialty retailers are already stocking their products. Mason says that over time, secondary channels that began as Internet radio streams will migrate to the new HD Radio channels. As for advertising, every radio commercial will be accompanied by a scrolling text message. Each station will have the ability to pump reams of data across the screen, information never before available to the radio audience. "AM and FM radio is changing before your eyes," says Mason.


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