Plus Pages

Friday, February 6, 2026

Good Morning! Let's Check The Pulse for Friday, Feb 6


Radio Broadcasting

The U.S. radio broadcasting industry is showing signs of resilience:  Amid broader media challenges, with a focus on digital integration, audience measurement improvements, and regulatory debates. The sector is projected to experience a modest decline of just 0.9% in overall ad revenue, while streaming audio surges ahead with 9.2% growth, highlighting radio's pivot to hybrid models. Public radio, despite federal funding cuts of $500 million in 2025, has largely avoided station closures, with audience ratings rebounding due to increased commuting and listener contributions—Morning Edition, for instance, added over a million listeners in spring 2025. 

One-Year Update on Nielsen's 3-Minute Qualifier: Nielsen implemented its 3-minute qualifier (3MQ) for Portable People Meter (PPM) radio ratings in January 2025, reducing the quarter-hour listening threshold from five minutes to three. A full-year review (January-December 2025 vs. 2024) shows substantial gains: average audiences rose 14% across all demographics, daily cume expanded, and time spent listening increased by 12%. This modernization captured 23% more listening occasions (three to four minutes) that were previously uncredited, leading to higher ad impressions and improved stability for stations. Nielsen executives expressed satisfaction, noting it provides a more realistic view of radio consumption, with benefits across formats, dayparts, and demographics—ranging from 13-15% audience lifts. Spring 2025 results alone showed a 19% AM/FM audience increase, validating the change's impact on inventory value and advertiser appeal.

SiriusXM's Subscriber Demand for On-Demand Content:  SiriusXM reported a surprise uptick in self-pay subscribers in Q4 2025, adding 110,000 net users—its first quarterly gain after three periods of losses—fueled by demand for exclusive on-demand content, including sports, podcasts, and shows from high-profile hosts. This reversed analyst expectations of a 30,000-subscriber drop, boosted by features like "Continuous Service" auto-renewals and "Companion Subscriptions" for family sharing. Podcast ad revenue jumped 41% for the full year, with programmatic demand up 92% in Q4, reflecting strong appetite for on-demand audio amid a portfolio reaching 170 million monthly listeners. However, annual self-pay subscribers declined by 301,000 overall in 2025, ending at 31.3 million paid users, with churn improving slightly to 1.5%. The company emphasized refocusing on core in-car audiences and expanding its ad network, positioning on-demand as a key growth driver in a competitive landscape.

Radio Programmer Responds to Gene Simmons' 'Pay for Play' Op-Ed: Gene Simmons, KISS co-founder, published an op-ed in the Los Angeles Times on January 30, 2026, advocating for the American Music Fairness Act (AMFA) to require AM/FM radio to pay performers royalties for airplay, calling the current loophole "criminal" and worse than slavery-era treatment. He highlighted radio's $14 billion in annual ad revenue while artists like Elvis or Taylor Swift receive nothing for broadcasts (unlike songwriters), drawing from his December 2025 Senate testimony. In response, radio programmer and industry commentator Mike McVay (of McVay Media) critiqued Simmons' stance during a February 2026 webinar on Nielsen changes, arguing that mandating payments could cripple smaller stations already facing ad declines, and that airplay provides invaluable promotion—potentially harming emerging artists more than helping.

Media Industry

Broadcast Ownership and Regulation:  The Senate Committee on Commerce, Science, and Transportation, chaired by Sen. Ted Cruz, announced a February 10, 2026, hearing titled "We Interrupt This Program: Media Ownership in the Digital Age." It will examine FCC broadcast ownership rules, including the 39% national TV household reach cap, in light of streaming and social media dominance. Discussions may address whether rules need updates for competition and diversity, or if statutory changes via Congress are required. Concerns include potential impacts on local voices and conservative media representation.

Layoffs and Media Business Pressures:  The Washington Post announced layoffs of more than 300 journalists in early February 2026, affecting local, international, and sports coverage and reducing the workforce by about 30%. This reflects ongoing challenges in legacy media amid digital shifts and cost pressures.

Advertising and Super Bowl Trends:  Media executives noted declining celebrity pay for 2026 Super Bowl ads, with VaynerMedia CEO Gary Vaynerchuk calling it "good" due to AI's growing role in creative production. Broader ad trends highlight AI integration and creator marketing events like the ANA Creator Marketing Conference (Feb 23-25).

U-S News

Nuclear Talks Commence in Oman Amid Heightened Tensions:  U.S. and Iranian delegations began negotiations in Muscat, Oman, centered on Iran's nuclear program, following weeks of brinkmanship including U.S. warnings for citizens to leave Iran, a military buildup (with the USS Abraham Lincoln carrier group in the region), and Iran's nationwide protests. Secretary of State Marco Rubio described the talks as exploratory in a "certain format," with the U.S. pushing to prevent Iran from reconstituting nuclear capabilities while criticizing the regime. Analysts view this as a critical effort to avert potential conflict, though skepticism remains high due to "maximalist demands" and recent incidents like Iran intercepting tankers in the Strait of Hormuz.

Search for Nancy Guthrie (Mother of NBC's Savannah Guthrie) Enters Sixth Day: Investigators released a detailed timeline of 84-year-old Nancy Guthrie's disappearance from her Tucson-area home on January 31, 2026, including evidence of foul play (blood on the porch matching hers, missing front door camera), and an apparent abduction. Pima County Sheriff Chris Nanos held a press conference emphasizing belief she is alive despite no suspects identified yet; she lacks critical medication. The FBI announced a $50,000 reward and addressed a ransom note (with deadlines passed or upcoming), plus an arrest tied to an "imposter ransom demand." Family pleas continue, drawing widespread attention due to the celebrity connection and the case's emotional stakes, featured prominently on CNN, Fox News, and PBS.

No comments:

Post a Comment

Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.