Ever wonder why you hear the same songs on the radio over and over and over again? Do you ever feel if you hear a certain song one more time, you’ll pull your hair out? Yeah, me, too.
Who picks the songs we hear on the radio? Who decides which songs get played? How are these decision made? That, dear readers, took some research. I remember reading about Eliot Spitzer, the Attorney general of New York State, bringing payola charges against several record companies. Payola is a word from the 50’s.
From Dictionary.com:
pay•o•la n.
1. Bribery of an influential person in exchange for the promotion of a product or service, such that of disc jockeys for the promotion of records.
2. A bribe or a number of bribes given to an influential person in exchange for a promotion of a product or service: “I do not mean to imply that most Wall Street analysts typically receive payola for touting particular stocks” (Burton G. Malkiel).
I was going to put the following in my own words, but I found this on freepress.net, and they said it better and more succinctly than I could. Check them out.
Ten Things You Need to Know about Payola
Ever get the feeling that the same terrible Celine Dion song is on the radio every time you turn it on? It’s not your imagination. The rapid concentration of radio ownership has ushered in a new age of “payola.” Major recording labels now shower radio station owners with money and prizes to plug and play their most bankable stars, securing spins of Dion, Ricky Martin and Ashlee Simpson at the expense of struggling local acts.
There’s a catch: Payola is against the law. The New York Attorney General’s Office, Federal Communications Commission and members of Congress are investigating radio industry corruption. There’s no better time than now for music lovers to protect the radio airwaves from insatiable corporate greed and end payola once and for all.
1. What is radio payola?
For decades, radio payola has been an unpleasant fact of American music. Radio stations hold valuable broadcast licenses and are the main drivers of 75 percent of sales for the record industry. All a record exec has to do is convince popular DJs to put their artists in heavy rotation. Money has long proved the elixir of persuasion. In 1960, disc jockey Alan Freed, was indicted under commercial bribery laws for accepting $2,500 to play certain songs; he claimed the money was a “token of gratitude” that did not affect airplay. But the FCC disagreed, passing regulations that ban payola in broadcasting. The playing of music or other programming in exchange for payments is now against state and federal laws, punishable by as much as $10,000 in fines and a year in prison. To date, no one has served a day in jail on payola charges.
2. Is payola still a problem?
In many ways, it’s much worse. Shadowy independent promoters are hired by the recording industry to launder hundreds of millions in cash and prizes each year, lining the pockets of big radio broadcasters who agree to add label “hits” to playlists nationwide. Last summer, Clear Channel and Infinity Broadcasting — America’s two largest radio owners, controlling 42 percent of listeners — were implicated with other major radio owners in a multi-million dollar payola scheme. Investigators called this single payola case the “tip of the iceberg.”
3. How does payola work?
Payola involves the flow of money and other perks from music labels to radio stations, and, through resulting record sales, back to the labels themselves. It’s a closed loop that shuns local talent, artistic merit and listener preferences. Once involving envelopes stuffed with cash and, even, drugs, payola in 2005 has taken on new forms, including back stage passes to Michael Jackson concerts, first-class tickets to Miami, Las Vegas hotel rooms and, even, Adidas sneakers. By law, radio disc jockeys must fully disclose to their listeners whether airplay of a chosen song was paid for by promoters. They never do.
4. Do big media companies really control airplay?
The 1996 Telecommunications Act eliminated national limits on station ownership. Prior to 1996, no one radio owner held more than 65 stations; now, radio colossus Clear Channel boasts some 1,200 stations. More than 75 percent of radio market share nationwide is controlled by companies owning more than 40 radio stations. In a consolidated radio marketplace, recording labels have fewer palms to grease to get their acts on the air, even if listeners don’t want to hear them.
5. Does radio play really affect sales?
These conglomerates use redundant playlists to air a limited choice of artists, even in the same markets. Commercial airwaves are flooded by only those artists that are acceptable to the corporations that profit from their sales. And more than 80 percent of the $12 billion in annual music sales are controlled by the four largest labels — Sony BMG, EMI, Universal and Warner Music Group. When consolidated radio and recording labels control the music industry, musical diversity suffers.
6. Doesn’t payola help musicians?
On average, performers see only $1 out of the $16 retail price paid by consumers for a CD. The bulk of sales revenue returns to the record labels, and through them to the promoters and big radio. This closed loop feeds the insatiable appetites of greedy recording labels and radio broadcasters. Big label artists see little of these profits. Independent musicians are even worse off. The corporate control of promotion, sales and airplay almost entirely prevents local artists from competing in the mainstream.
7. Aren’t big radio companies and labels just giving listeners what they want?
In a 2002 survey by the Future of Music Coalition, 78 percent of listeners said they want more variety on the air. More than half of survey respondents (51 percent) said that, at most, they only occasionally hear the music they enjoy the most when listening to the radio. Yet the radio behemoths continue to force feed listeners a mind-numbing stew of focus-group tested “urban,” “classic rock” and “easy listening” formats.
8. Don’t stations have a right to play whatever they want — even if it’s bland corporate tunes?
The airwaves belong to the public, not to media companies with the fattest wallets. The vitality of radio is sapped when music is selected based on bribes rather than merit. Big media owe it to the American public – and especially the music lovers and creative artists who are hurt most by payola — to end this deception. Radio stations receive free licenses to broadcast on public airwaves in exchange for an agreement to serve their communities’ best interests. They are supposed to put the public’s needs before their bottom line. Unfortunately, none do.
9. How can payola be stopped?
While anti-payola statutes have been in place for 40 years, recent developments offer the best chance in years to throw the book at payola once and for all.
• In July, New York Attorney General Eliot Spitzer reached a multimillion-dollar payola settlement against Sony BMG. Spitzer’s office is now investigating reported payola deals between other large recording labels (including EMI Group, Vivendi, Warner Music and Universal) and the nation’s biggest radio station chains (including Infinity Broadcasting, Clear Channel Communications, Emmis Communications and Cox Radio).
• In August, the FCC launched an investigation into payola allegations involving stations owned by Clear Channel, Infinity and other radio giants. FCC Commissioner Jonathan Adelstein has called for an overhaul of toothless payola rules.
• In November 2005, Sen. Russ Feingold (D-Wis.) introduced legislation, the “Radio and Concert Disclosure and Competition Act of 2005,” expanding the definition of payola to eliminate the inside dealing and structural abuses in consolidated radio, which have locked local and independent artists off the airwaves for years.
10. How can I make a difference?
Visit this freepress website for more information.
Related Tags: Radio, Eliot Spitzer, Payola, FreePress, Celine Dion, Ricky Martin, Ashlee Simpson, Alan Freed, Clear Channel, Infinity Broadcasting, Michael Jackson, 1996 Telecommunications Act, Sony BMG, EMI, Universal, Warner Music Group, Radio and Concert Disclosure and Competition Act of 2005
Monday, June 05, 2006
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