Larry Rosin |
According to the Nashville Tennessean, the time has come,
Rosin said, to talk about the “hardware problem” facing country music.
Gone are the days when a majority of people listen to music
on radios when they are outside of cars. Instead, they reach for cellphones and
other mobile devices, such as laptops and tablets that don’t deliver a
terrestrial radio signal.
Country radio needs to make sure that it is “easily
available and top of mind” for people on those devices, too, Rosin said.
Providing access to radio on smartphones would be a “game changer for our industry,” said Jeff Smulyan, CEO of Emmis Communications, in a keynote address to open the conference Wednesday.
“Today, the only portable device that matters is the
smartphone,” Smulyan said. “We need to be there.”
Earlier this year, Emmis represented a group of radio
companies in a negotiation with Sprint Nextel that yielded a three-year deal
that would make local FM radio signals available on some of the carriers
smartphones through an app that Emmis would design. Smulyan said the goal is to
get radio access on 300 million phones. The deal would require an annual
investment of $15 million a year from radio, as well as an investment from
Sprint, which would get a 30 percent share of revenue.
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