Advertisers forced to use 'Urban' radio format or risk license challenge
- Now the federal government dictates radio advertising buys. Case in point, Mini Cooper radio ad buy.
- Now, all advertisers will be forced to use Urban radio formats or be threatened with license challenge. Some Urban stations carry 'talk' programming which is traditionally the environment clients feared the most (for controversy).
- They'll still be able to exclude non-Urban talk radio, but will be forced to spend on Urban Talk or see an FCC complaint.
- In the current Mini Cooper case, with no proof whatsoever, a business decision was declared racist. Worse, instead of examining numerous qualitative aspects of the buy, history of advertisers' use and avoidance of radio formats,
- someone apologized.
- broadcast nondiscrimination rule that was part of a 2008 FCC report and order on broadcast diversity.
- That rule was intended to do away with "no urban/no Spanish" dictates from advertisers or agencies that seek to exclude minority-targeted broadcasters from their campaigns.
In the letter, MMTC President David Honig asks
FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski to name a compliance officer "promptly," saying, "MMTC has calculated that minority broadcasters lose at least $200 million a year to NUDs(No Urban Dictates) and NSDs (No Spanish Dictates), compounding the financial difficulties these broadcasters face in the current economic climate.
Minority broadcasters earned these revenues, but they never collect them."
Agency E-Mail
Attached with the MMTC's letter is a copy of an e-mail, dated August 5, apparently from an employee of the agency Palisades Media in Los Angeles. The e-mail requests rates for a Mini Cooper campaign in the Boston; Houston; Washington, DC; and Baltimore markets, asking about 30s in several radio formats and adding, "No combos or urban formats."
Honig writes, "The rule requires broadcasters renewing their licenses to certify on Form 303-S that their advertising contracts
do not discriminate on the basis of race or gender and that they contain nondiscrimination clauses."...
Therefore, to remain in compliance with the rule,
every radio station in the Boston, Houston, Baltimore, and Washington markets should decline to broadcast Mini Cooper spots."
Kizart Addresses The Issue
Kizart Media Partners' Sherman Kizart obtained the original Palisades Media e-mail, and he has written to agency CEO Roger Schaffner concerning the matter, saying the directive is "crystal clear" and "minimally very disturbing and troubling.""...
Palisades Media declined to comment to Radio Ink on the matter." "MMCC Cites 'No Urban Dictate' from Mini Cooper Agency" 8/12/09
Reference: Inside Radio, 8/14/09, "Mini USA Apologizes for NUD (No Urban Dictate)"
Labels: Urban Radio Dictated for all including Mini Cooper
Tweet Stumbleupon StumbleUpon
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home