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Disney Nears $22 Million Deal for Country Music Association Awards (Exclusive)

Meanwhile, the same publication reports that CBS has "balked" at a similar $22 million price for the ACM Awards. They say show producer Dick Clark Productions is shopping the show to NBC:


DCP also produces The Golden Globes for NBC, and that awards show may not happen next year.
 
Today it was announced that the CMT Music Awards will air on CBS in 2022. CMT's parent Viacom merged with CBS last year:


This makes it even less likely that CBS will continue its relationship with the ACM Awards.
 
Today it was announced that the CMT Music Awards will air on CBS in 2022. CMT's parent Viacom merged with CBS last year:


This makes it even less likely that CBS will continue its relationship with the ACM Awards.
Let the bidding begin. I'm sure there's no shortage of interest among OTA and cable networks in picking up the ACMs, which traditionally have been regarded as the No. 2 industry award show behind the CMAs -- and have a reputation for being somewhat more adventurous and edgy than the CMAs without abandoning more traditional country sounds. In fact, with the current "edge" of mainstream country moving back in the traditional/Americana direction, the ACMs on CBS could move the careers of artists on the verge of major breakthroughs ahead more than the CMAs would.
 
Let the bidding begin. I'm sure there's no shortage of interest among OTA and cable networks in picking up the ACMs,

Earlier articles in this thread have identified NBC as being interested. NBC has had an interest in country specials because of the success of Blake Shelton on The Voice. Dick Clark Productions does the ACM Awards, and they're looking for something to replace the Golden Globes (which they also produce for NBC) next year. The sticking point may be the price, since the ACMs are a lot more expensive.
 
Earlier articles in this thread have identified NBC as being interested. NBC has had an interest in country specials because of the success of Blake Shelton on The Voice. Dick Clark Productions does the ACM Awards, and they're looking for something to replace the Golden Globes (which they also produce for NBC) next year. The sticking point may be the price, since the ACMs are a lot more expensive.
When I started following country music, there were the CMAs and the Music City News Awards and that was it, other than the country categories in the Grammys. Everything exploded in the '90s.
 
When I started following country music, there were the CMAs and the Music City News Awards and that was it, other than the country categories in the Grammys. Everything exploded in the '90s.

BTW the CMT Awards are basically the latest incarnation of what was once the Music City News Awards when they merged with TNN in the 90s. Now they're both gone. They were a fan-voted award, rather than an industry award.
 
Well, they probably couldn't put the ACMs on Fox because one: Disney, and two: Fox only programs 8-10PM, and not clear to 11:00 like what the ACMs normally are. Unless it was scheduled for Sunday and preempted The Simpsons and other adult cartoons.
 
Well, they probably couldn't put the ACMs on Fox because one: Disney, and two: Fox only programs 8-10PM, and not clear to 11:00 like what the ACMs normally are. Unless it was scheduled for Sunday and preempted The Simpsons and other adult cartoons.

Today the ACM Awards announced their 2022 show will air exclusively on Amazon Prime. It will be the first major awards show to be streamed exclusively with no broadcast outlet.

Which means that they couldn't come to terms with NBC or Fox.
 
Today the ACM Awards announced their 2022 show will air exclusively on Amazon Prime. It will be the first major awards show to be streamed exclusively with no broadcast outlet.

Which means that they couldn't come to terms with NBC or Fox.
The labels will love that! People will watch the show, like the music they hear, stay on Amazon to buy more of it. Maybe won't get many casual viewers, and the total audience will be far short of what it would be on a TV network, but as a long-term strategy this may pay off. Just hope they haven't committed to too many years with Prime exclusively. You never know what the next big thing is going to be in new media. While it's unlikely that Amazon will turn into Myspace or Netscape, there's always the chance that anything currently hot online will go cold, very cold.
 
Assuming that people "buy" music any more. However, Amazon also has a music streaming service.
From which who benefits, besides Amazon? What's the split regarding royalties and other fees for artists, songwriters, musicians, producers and labels?

As far as buying music, obviously people still buy music, but in greatly reduced numbers. If Garth and Trisha, for instance, appear on the telecast, I can see viewers new to country music liking the song(s) and not only streaming them, but looking into the vast catalog of both singers and buying (in some form) music from that selection. Of course, with Amazon, there's always the possibility that the music seeker could choose to buy a used disc from a third-party seller, in which case everyone but Amazon and the seller gets nada, right?
 
From which who benefits, besides Amazon? What's the split regarding royalties and other fees for artists, songwriters, musicians, producers and labels?

That's a complicated question, but the CEO of the ACM addressed that in the press release:

“This partnership, which reinforces our position as an innovative, progressive awards show, will deliver the broadest possible audience and, simultaneously, deliver massive value to our artists whose music lives inside this ecosystem, enabling fans to discover and stream music as they watch,” Damon Whiteside, CEO of the ACM, said in a statement.

While he's correct that music lives in the streaming ecosystem, the fact is more people stream music on Spotify and Pandora than Amazon. Neither of those sites are in the video streaming business.

If Garth and Trisha, for instance, appear on the telecast, I can see viewers new to country music liking the song(s) and not only streaming them, but looking into the vast catalog of both singers and buying (in some form) music from that selection.

Garth & Trisha actually have an exclusive deal with Amazon, so its very likely you'll see them on the show.
 
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