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Op-Ed by Michael Huppe, President and CEO of SoundExchangeOn Monday, a group of radio broadcasters penned a letter in support of the National Association of Broadcasters' (NAB) push for deregulation of the $14 billion radio industry. Their letter was based on the NAB's petition to the FCC this past June, in which the NAB sought to allow expanded broadcaster ownership of radio stations (i.e., increased consolidation) throughout the country. The NAB's justification: broadcasters must adjust their business model to the realities of the new streaming world. As a representative of the many creative parties who help craft music, we are frequently on the opposite side of issues from the NAB. And while I can't comment on NAB's specific requests, I was delighted to find so much common ground in their FCC filing in June. For background, traditional radio benefits from the biggest sweetheart deal in U.S. copyright law that allows broadcasters to play every recording in the world without paying artists a dime. As everyone knows, these tracks "draw the crowd," which allow radio stations to sell billions of dollars in advertising every year, but radio pays exactly "nothing" to the creators that drive their programming. And yet, all of radio's competitors do pay the recording artist. Making matters worse, radio's special exemption doesn't exist anywhere else in the developed world; it's an injustice found only in the United States. However, with the NAB's filing at the FCC this summer, I was pleased and heartened to see that big radio is now looking to adjust their rules to today's circumstances. We support the updating of radio's business model and agree with much of the NAB's perspective.Radio Issues An Ironic Plea For Fairness [Op-Ed]
In a welcome twist, a group radio broadcasters recently got together and penned a letter supporting the national Association of Broadcasters' goal of deregulating the radio industry.