SirRoxalot said:
Your definition comes up quite short, David. Try this one:
Payola, in the American music industry, is the illegal practice of payment or other inducement by record companies for the broadcast of recordings on music radio, in which the song is presented as being part of the normal day's broadcast. Under US law, 47 U.S.C. § 317, a radio station can play a specific song in exchange for money, but this must be disclosed on the air as being sponsored airtime, and that play of the song should not be counted as a "regular airplay".
What you are describing is the lack of sponsor ID, a totally separate issue. A station can legally take money to play a song, but a staff member can not do so without the knowledge can consent of management and proper logging and sponsor ID.
So, a licensee CAN take payola. If you'd like to refer to the FCC website, here's the link:
The second link shows clearly that the licensee would be in violation of sponsorship rules if running a pay for play song, while an individual would be in violation of taking payola, defined as a payment taken under the table.
Up until Spitzer's crusade, a lot of money was going to stations via "indie" promoters to push new songs or new artists.
That is absolutely not how it worked. The indies substituted for or supplemented label promotions departments (many small labels don't or didn't have promo departments), and were compensated for reporting adds. The stations did not get money for individual songs, but, rather, got some kind of compensation for doing all their add reporting via the indie, and not directly to the trades.
And this practice only affected some formats (current based ones) in some major markets. 95% or more of stations did not get in on this. And with the advent of BDS, MediaBase, MediaMonitors, labels did not need "reports" to the trades since adds were discovered by detection, not reporting.
Once that practice ceased, radio stations became less valuable to the recording companies as a means of promoting new artists.
Oh, so wrong again. The labels worked with indies because other labels worked with indies, and they were afraid of losing the insider position. Once electronic reporting of adds based on detections became the basis for charts, the indie promoter became far less important.
PPM certainly hasn't caused any expansion of playlists, or promotion of new artists by radio stations.
True, because it shows how truly damaging new, unfamiliar songs can be.