Longtime KJLO/KLIP Morning Host John Reynolds Passes Away
The Radio People Monroe LA is mourning the loss of longtime personality John Reynolds, who passed away on Monday at the age of 55. […]
The Radio People Monroe LA is mourning the loss of longtime personality John Reynolds, who passed away on Monday at the age of 55. […]
Today FM has launched a new advertising campaign that will see the station promoted heavily on TV and online.
The campaign consists of a suite of 15 second vignette-style ads and features a mix of retro and contemporary visuals set against audio clips to showcase each show within Today FM’s prime time line-up.
Today FM says the audio within each ad reflects real life content from the respective shows from Ian Dempsey reacting to a hilarious Waffle contestant and Dave Moore sharing one of his best (or worst!) Dave’s Bad Jokes.
Louise Cantillon discusses the ‘travesty’ of not receiving a ‘surprise from the shop’ while Ray Foley admits to being an open-eyed kisser. Meanwhile, The Last Word with Matt Cooper, showcases the breadth of topics discussed on his Today FM drive-time show.
The AV campaign is supported by a nationwide brand-led out-of-home campaign, highlighting key tune in times throughout the day with clever copy pointing to morning, lunch and commuter listening.
Commenting on the brand campaign, Stephen Gorman, Today FM Marketing, said: “We are all really excited about our latest brand campaign here in Today FM. The motion graphics design does an excellent job of bringing our presenters stories to life in such a fun and engaging way.
“There’s something new to laugh at every time you watch. For this campaign, we wanted to showcase the variety of offerings each of our prime time shows has for our national audience and these videos do an excellent job of doing so.
“A huge thanks to Aidan Dowling and Una Herlihy in the Indie List for crafting the creative concept, Gavin Kelly and Emily Brady in Piranha Bar for the bringing the creative concept to life via vibrant animation and of course to our show teams for going through hours of audio files to highlight key moments of their respective shows that best show off their unique personalities.”
Una Herlihy, Co-founder of The Indie List said: “We are incredibly proud to have collaborated with such an exciting national brand like Today FM on this campaign. Roisin Reilly and Stephen Gorman were deeply involved in every step of the creative process which made it a very rewarding experience.
“The collaboration with the brilliant creative and production talents of Aidan Dowling, Gavin Kelly, and Emily Brady brought the vision to life seamlessly. The entire process was a joy – and a lot of fun – from start to finish.”
Emily Brady, Head of Production at Piranha Bar said: “We had a blast in Piranha Bar working with creative Aidan Dowling, the wonderful Una Herlihy and our old friends Today FM. It was lots of fun visualizing the controlled chaos and absurd anarchy from five of the station’s top presenters.
“We translated the on-air banter into crazy collaged visuals featuring butt-shaped fruit, dancing toothbrushes, a pyjama-suited horse from the seventies and a crazed demon in a hatchback to pick just a few. Hopefully people will find the visuals as entertaining as the Today FM shows which spawned them.”
Creative Director Aidan Dowling and The Indie List developed the creative concept while Piranha Bar produced the animated suite of ads and Mindshare managed media planning and buying.
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Cumulus Media and TuneIn have announced a renewal and expansion of their content partnership. […]
Original 10STIX is being launched by Original 106 for North-East Scotland pet owners to help keep them calm during the fireworks.
This comes after pet owner listeners to Original 106 contacted the station following it mentioning firework displays taking place across the area.
The new station will soft launch on 1st November, with the official launch on Monday 4th November and will be on-air until Sunday 10th November, playing “chilled canine favourites to relax Aberdeen’s doggie population”.
Original 106 Programme Controller Craig Lumsden said: “As Aberdeen’s local radio station, we always make a point of pointing our listeners to the many properly organised displays around the city and shire. However, pets owners call Original 106 asking us to spare a thought for dog owners and to be aware of the stress Guy Fawkes night can cause.
So we thought we’d go one better and launch a radio station playing non-stop soothing songs for dogs, by dogs.
“We’ve even managed to recruit some of our listeners own dogs to send in recordings of their dogs talking to play between the songs – yes! A radio station presented by dogs.
“It’s going to be a must listen for all North-East dogs this firework season.”
Original 106STIX will be available to stream on smart speaker and via the Original 106 app from 4 – 10th November .
Radiodays Europe is happening in March 2025 – use code RTY25ATH to get a discount and join us in Athens! More..
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This is the fifth report in Steve Ahern’s series on new trends at IBC24 in Amsterdam.
Electronic watermarking has been around for a while. It has been used to track pirated copies of music and video using digital rights management (DRM) techniques since CDs were introduced and digital content piracy proliferated across the internet.There are a range of techniques used to watermark content which range from visible watermarks such as transparent logos in films and tv shows, to invisible metadata code insertion in audio tracks and video files. There is even a new cryptographic based embedded blockchain code developed by South African company Custos, using Amazon Web Services, that alerts a user to piracy and offers them a bitcoin reward for reporting it.AI generated content has just increased the stakes for content creators in three main areas:
Tracking the original content that has been used to train AI.
Identifying content created by AI.
Verifying the authenticity of news content.
Content creators will want to track how much of their original works have been used by AI to create new pictures, videos, songs, news reports and books, with a view to trying to get some revenue for the part their work played in training the AI.Authentication is going to be needed in years to come as more and more content on the internet is created automatically by AI, leading to inaccuracies and hallucinations that will get out on the world wide web and be used as the basis for more AI tools to develop more inaccurate content. Evaluating whether something is true will become more difficult without the ability to authenticate sources and trace claims back to their source.With deep fake editing now so easy, it takes very little effort to hijack a tv news report and manipulate it using deep fake pictures and synthetic voices. A credible report can be manipulated to feed misinformation, so verifying whether the report was changed will be crucial to maintaining trust in responsible media publishers.
These trends may undermine the financial viability and the credibility of responsible media companies if regulations and technological tools don’t keep up.At IBC a range of technical and policy papers tackled the issues of verification, especially using different types of watermarking techniques.Technology companies such as Google, one of the major players developing AI systems, are planning to embed watermarking technology into AI created music tracks so that AI and original content can be identified.Tracks made with YouTube’s impressive new Lyria generative music tool will be watermarked.Deep Mind says: “Our team is also pioneering responsible deployment of our technologies with best-in-class tools for watermarking and identifying synthetically generated content. Any content published by our Lyria model will be watermarked with SynthID, the same technology toolkit we’re using for identifying images generated by Imagen on Google Cloud’s Vertex AI.”Verifying the authenticity of News Content was brought home to delegates by Laura Ellis, the BBC’s Head of Technology Forecasting (main picture), who described an ‘Aha moment’ at the BBC.In April 2022 a BBC news report claimed that Ukraine was behind a missile attack on a Donbas station that killed 57 people. The video opened with a BBC logo and had the broadcaster’s watermark in the corner. It was a fake, as a BBC Verify journalist pointed out on X but it was also a wake-up call to the broadcaster to do something about rising deepfake disinformation.“Everyone was horrified to see the fake video but the only thing we could do was tweet denials. For some it was the ‘Aha!’ moment when they fully realised we needed to do more.” Read a full report here.John Simmons and Joseph Winograd from Verance Corporation in a Technical Paper on interoperable provenance authentication explained:Any attempt to address false information on the web must proceed from an understanding of how people come to place trust in information.The prevalence of information ‘bubbles’ demonstrates that people primarily place trust in specific sources of information. If information appears unaltered and from a trusted source, we often consider that information to be factual. In other words, most of us judge what is factual based on the provenance and authenticityof the information, where provenance refers to the origin, history, and chain of custody of a piece of audio-video content, and authenticity refers to whether the content has been manipulated or altered in a way out of the control of the trusted source of the information.There are two general methods for conveying provenance and authenticity metadata in association with audio-video content. Metadata can be cryptographically bound to the audio-video content, perhaps stored at the audio-video container level. Metadata can also be embedded as a watermark in the audio-video elementary stream. Read the full paper here (free registration required)Blocking content is also another way of limiting piracy. Reporting on blocking trends for IBC, David Davies wrote:“The rise of blocking is more recent and has attracted some controversy because of perceived drawbacks like the possible inadvertent obstruction of legitimate services. For instance, the recently launched Pirate Shield project in Italy, which aims to protect the big sports rights holders – such as DAZN, Sky, Prime Video and Infinity – by blocking unauthorised viewing of live events has attracted criticism from some ISPs, VPNs and consumers. At the least, further refinements would seem to be inevitable.”“Pirates are really well-organised now, and there is potentially a lot of money for them to make – as well as a lot for the media industry to lose in terms of attacks on its revenue. That’s why you really need solutions such as watermarking, in particular to protect against the live redistribution of content,” said Mélanie Langlois, Product Manager, Anti-Piracy Services at Viaccess-Orca. Read the full report here.As many thought leaders and technology suppliers told me, “it’s a game of whack-a-mole… an arms race… we find a way to watermark or verify then the bad actors think of something else.”The race continues.Related IBC Trends Articles
IBC Trends 1: Artificial Intelligence
IBC Trends 2: The Cloud
IBC Trends 3: Automated Content Detection
IBC Trends 4: Using AI to make talkback and reporting more efficient
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It’s a milestone day for one of Sydney’s most enduring Breakfast radio hosts, as Bogart Torelli celebrates 12 years with the Smooth network.Alongside respected newsreader Ron Wilson, Bogart helps Sydneysiders ease into their mornings, co-hosting the More Music Breakfast Show.Bogart began her radio journey at Sydney’s 2SM. Before joining Smooth, she was caring for both… Read More
The post Bogart Torelli celebrates 12 years at Smooth FM by Sarah Patterson appeared first on Radio Today. […]
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