FCC Announces Radio Payola Deal
The FCC announced today that four giant radio broadcasters have agreed to settle an investigation into charges they took "payola" from major record labels. The radio companies — CBS, Citadel, Clear Channel and Entercom – will pay a combined $12.5 million into the U.S. Treasury and promise to implement detailed "compliance plans," including the training of staff on the illegality of offering goods and services in exchange for airplay. The companies also have agreed to help independent musicians by playing more than 4,000 hours of local and indie music. "Who knows, if this works well a listener driving coast-to-coast might actually hear some good local and regional music along the way instead of the same 20 songs," FCC Commissioner Michael Copps wrote in a statement released today. THE BLOTTER RECOMMENDS Pay to Play: Music Industry’s Dirty Little Secret Primetime Video Music’s Dirty Little Secret Click Here to Check Out Brian Ross Slideshows His fellow Democrat, Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein, agreed, "Nearly every American music genre began with local artists getting played on local radio shows. Motown, grunge, Elvis and rock ‘n’ roll, hip hop, country, bluegrass, and the Nashville sound began as local music being promoted by local, independent musicians and labels on local radio. While each began in a different region of the United States, they all succeeded because they started getting heard on local radio and then broke out nationally and internationally." The FCC settlement follows settlements by four major record labels — EMI Music, Warner Music Group, Sony-BMG and Universal Music Group — and two radio conglomerates — Entercom and CBS Radio — in a second payola investigation by the New York Attorney General’s Office headed at the time by then-Attorney General Eliot Spitzer, who is now the governor of the state. Click Here for Full Blotter Coverage. Chief Investigative Correspondent Brian Ross first reported on the allegations and investigation by then-Attorney General Spitzer’s office on ABC News’ Primetime. Read the FCC’s complete statement.
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Finally our local and talented musicians will get a fighting chance! That’s why I stopped listening to radio a long,long time ago!
Posted by: sg | April 13, 2007, 3:16 pm 3:16 pm
Local artists now have a chance due to the global reach of the internet, and the digitization of music, NOT because major radio corporations just paid a small fine. Your band that has 4 shows a week in Raleigh NC still won’t have a shot at getting airplay on Clear Channel, but they CAN establish a global fanbase and earn a living through MySpace and other new channels. Commercial radio will still suck…
Posted by: Jazz | April 13, 2007, 5:23 pm 5:23 pm
Yeah, but maybe it’ll suck a little less. And the music is better in Chapel Hill anwyay.
Posted by: K | April 15, 2007, 12:01 am 12:01 am
They could start by removing MTV and putting a real music channel on……. one that introduces new music instead of some of the wasted air that now occurs
Posted by: Reverend Leroy | April 20, 2007, 10:17 pm 10:17 pm