Radio
broadcast settlement may stem 'payola'
Indie
labels to get increased radio play with
broadcast deal
By
JOHN DUNBAR Associated Press
WASHINGTON
- Exasperated listeners weary of hearing
the same songs over and over on the
radio may have something to cheer about:
a pair of innovative deals that could
shake up the music playlists of some
of the nation's largest radio-station
chains.
Four
major radio broadcast companies have
tentatively agreed to pay the government
$12.5 million and provide 8,400 half-hour
segments of free airtime for independent
record labels and local artists in separate
agreements aimed at curbing the persistent
practice known as "payola,"
according to sources.
Payola
generally defined as radio stations
accepting cash or other consideration
from record companies in exchange for
airplay has been around as long as the
radio industry and was made illegal
following a series of scandals in the
late 1950s.
Two
Federal Communications Commission officials,
who spoke on condition of anonymity
because final language has not been
approved by the full commission, said
the monetary settlement is part of a
consent decree between the FCC and Clear
Channel Communications Inc., CBS Radio,
Entercom Communications Corp. and Citadel
Broadcasting Corp.
The
settlement between the government and
the four broadcasters was reached at
the same time as a separate deal designed
to lead to more airtime for smaller
record companies and their lesser known
artists as well as local musicians.
The
American Association of Independent
Music, a group of independent record
labels, has received a commitment from
the same four broadcasters for the free
airtime, the officials said.
In
addition to airplay, the broadcasters
and the independent labels have also
negotiated a set of "rules of engagement"
that will guide how record company representatives
and radio programmers interact.
The
free airtime would be granted to companies
not owned by one of the nations four
dominant music labels - Sony BMG Music
Entertainment, Warner Music Group, Universal
Music Group and EMI Group
The
practice of payola, or "pay-for-play,"
has evolved over the years and became
more difficult to track.
In
recent years, independent record promoters
have acted as middlemen to deliver payments
to radio stations in exchange for airplay.
Other forms of inducement include lavish
prizes meant for listeners that wind
up going to station employees; promises
of record companies of concerts by well-known
artists in exchange for airplay; and
payments for promotional expenses and
station equipment.
Under
the FCC consent decree broadcasters
would agree to closer scrutiny in their
dealings with record companies, including
limits on gifts, a promise to keep a
database of all items of value supplied
by those companies, the employment of
independent compliance officers to make
sure stations are following the rules
and even a new "payola hot line"
for employees to report infractions.
Broadcasters
admit to no wrongdoing under the three
year settlement, which has not been
made public.
Under
the separate private agreement, the
new "rules of engagement"
are aimed at requiring equal access
to radio music programmers for all record
companies as well as transparency in
their dealings, said Peter Gordon, who
has been leading the negotiations on
behalf of the independent music group.
Gordon is president of Thirsty Ear Recordings,
an independent record label, and has
been in the music business for 31 years.
"It's
absolutely the most historic agreement
that the independent community has had
with radio," he said. "Without
a doubt nothing else comes close."Commissioner
Jonathan Adelstein, himself an amateur
musician, has been in the forefront
of the' payola fight and has been credited
with working out the settlements. "I
love music and I want radio to sound
fresh, dynamic and real. But payola
gets in the way of authenticity because
money drives the music, not its quality,"
he told the Associated Press.
Federal
law and FCC rules require broadcasters
to inform listeners if a station is
being paid to play a song. The FCC can
fine its licensees, but any :criminal
investigation would be undertaken by
the Department of Justice.