I'm nowhere near 70 (or 55-60) and I know and like the sounder.I don't think the sounder has any relevance to people under 70.
Of course, I'm an outlier, so I'm hardly representative of much of anyone other than myself.
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I'm nowhere near 70 (or 55-60) and I know and like the sounder.I don't think the sounder has any relevance to people under 70.
WDCB-FM 90.9 Glen Ellyn, IL takes it as NBC and the two-minute version, though not every hour. It’s Chicagoland’s leading jazz station.That is really interesting. For the last few years, iHeart didn't seem to want its 24/7 News associated with NBC News anymore. I even thought the licensing of the NBC News Radio name either lapsed or was about to. The company launched the service in 2016, very proud it could take audio clips from NBC and use well-known NBC correspondents, while anchored by iHeart employees. But the NBC connection later seemed to go by the wayside. However, things changed earlier this month with CBS's decision to end its radio network.
With no more CBS News Radio in a few weeks, iHeart is promoting its NBC brand again. The ad says you can have national newscasts on your station with either the NBC news sounder or with the cold opening and "white label" format. The anchors only tells us their names. They never say NBC or iHeart or 24/7.
The large majority of iHeart talk stations are Fox News Radio affliliates. But for some reason, the 24/7 white label newscasts are heard on a handful of iHeart talk stations:
KNRS-AM-FM Salt Lake City
WLAC Nashville
WKRC Cincinnati
KFBX Fairbanks
But I don't know any station, whether owned by iHeart or not, that takes the NBC News sounder to start the newscast. These are all white label affiliates.
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I don't think the sounder has any relevance to people under 70.
You brought up the debt in your post #6It's really off the topic being discussed here, which is NBC News Radio. In this case, it's about the value of the brand, rather than the content.
Is there a sounder before SNL? If so that would be the sounder I would use.
You brought up the debt in your post #6
Which NBC news sounder. I know of at least two different news sounders that the network used during different periods of its existence.
IIRC channel 11 in used Atlanta had a chime and the NBC logo before the cold opening. I haven't watched latelyWhich part? The show begins with what they call a "cold open," which means there's no theme. The music in that show isn't licensed by iHeart.
KSHB does the same.IIRC channel 11 in used Atlanta had a chime and the NBC logo before the cold opening. I haven't watched lately
WMAQ-TV Chicago used it for its Newscenter 5 opening back around 1975 or '76, back in the Floyd Kalber/Jane Pauley days.
Had no idea that was on radio too! I thought it was mainly for the local NBC TV O&O's like KNBC and WNBC.
I've been hearing a bird that makes me think of the old music for news bulletins. I think they've replaced it with a classical work of some kind.It doesn't use the TV theme, which was written by John Williams. That is specific to TV news.
Me too. I figured they were going to let the branding lapse and just focus on the unbranded news. We discussed this a bit in the CBS News Radio thread, and I said I couldn't find an offering for the NBC Radio service. I guess last week's announcement revived their interest in offering the branded news. As we've previously discussed, iHeart basically picked up the NBC Radio brand from the NBC Services division of NBC Universal. This is what Westwood One had a few years back after their 25 year deal with NBC ended. At the bottom of the offering linked above is this copyright info:
So that explains the relationship. iHeart has use of the name, the 'N-B-C jingle," and access to certain TV audio that it's offering to stations as part of its Total Traffic & Weather networks. Could someone do that with CBS News? It's up to them.

Mmmmm.... Let's just say..."unusual forces".....Why would they do that?