Friday, March 14, 2008

IBS 2008 at NY Pennsylvania Hotel March 7-9


Legendary Radio Convention Celebrates 68th Year

Norm Prusslin, IBS President, and author Wayne Robbins
pictured at IBS 2008 All photos on this page by Robert Barry Francos/Ffanzeen
(C)2008 Robert Barry Francos (except Len Mailloux photo)




The success of the regional Intercollegiate Broadcasting System events in Chicago and Boston in 2007 helped make the 68th annual radio event one of the best in modern times. The star power of Planet Enemy's Chuck D was only one reason why some of the rooms were packed to capacity, many in attendance kicking themselves for missing Chuck D's engaging speech.

As the event changes with the times so too the attendees appear more proactive in recent years, D.L. Chandell of DLC Industry Watch holding down the fort at
WIBS radio, the broadcast from the sixth floor of the NY Pennsylvania Hotel which airs all year on the Backbone network. A variety of disc jockeys from around the country signed in and ran thirty and sixty minute shows giving WIBS a solid cross section of college radio from around the U.S.A. broadcasting while the convention was in motion.








Indy Music Panel




This year saw the Public Access Television / College TV panel bringing some excellent ideas to the conference: broadcasting college radio on the bulletin boards of access TV stations, integrating video footage of DJs live on college radio and audio to feeds of both college television and public access. The record label panel also went smoothly with both artists and label representatives speaking to a variety of college programmers and on-air jocks. One of the big surprises came on Saturday afternoon when the conference merged two artist panels into one. The ability for recording artists to meet radio people, interact with them, connect, and give CDs to the djs on the spot was great. Our attendees get discs, the artists displayed their personalities and, at one point, when . What was interesting was when the artists on the panel were asking questions of the djs (it is supposed to be the other way around) and the room became the "panel" and the panel became the audience.





Keri Fico, co-moderator of Artists panel Photo by Robert Barry Francos/Ffanzeen



This made our DJs very proactive and really part of the convention - more
so than being an attendee in a sea of faces, they had a voice. We intend to expand this interaction at the Autumn 2008 events and at the 2009 IBS in New York.
Having new artists and established personalities like Chuck D meeting the jocks and programmers face to face is truly as essential as the informative panels on Carrier Current and FCC law.

Allen Meyers, formerly of the FCC, gave an excellent talk to a room in an almost one-on-one fashion, giving each college radio rep an opportunity to speak to him personally about FCC issues.

Chairman of the Board and IBS Executive Vice President Len Mailloux stated:

“Regardless of what we may hear and read about media content becoming more controversial, unprofessional and lacking in serious content, events such as this year’s IBS National Conference offer an encouraging reassurance that there is a whole group of young college and high school students dedicated to creating informative, substantive and ethical broadcast product.”




“This year’s participants seemed more eager than ever to learn. They want to know how to get better at their craft and how to make their product more appealing to their audience. It is clear to me that we have a fine group of up and coming young professionals who take the responsibilities of media very seriously and want to become positive contributors in the broadcast industry.


Photo of Len Mailloux

It’s exciting to see students and educators from around the country sharing ideas, information and advice. Our members were able to take part in some fantastic sessions on new technologies, programming trends, news and information, the music industry, FCC law, ethical issues and many more subjects that are so very important to the broadcasters of today and tomorrow. We had some of the top people in their respective industries as guest speakers. As one student commented to me, “I learned more in a one-hour session than I have from many of my textbooks.” But just as exciting were the conversations in the hallways. It was student helping student, educator helping educator. Students and teachers from many participating schools and radio stations have now come together and will be sharing ideas and resources in the weeks and months ahead. It was the kind of event that will pay off in many ways over a long period of time.”

We're going to ask Michael Nevradakis to give us his thoughts on the convention as well so stay tuned for updates.

Joe Viglione,
Administrator of Marketing, Public Relations
Intercollegiate Broadcasting System

Additional blogs on Intercollegiate Broadcasting System



Official IBS Blog http://ibsradio.blogspot.com/


2006 IBS Recap

http://ibs2006review.blogspot.com/



http://spinningindie.blogspot.com/2008/03/ibs-conference-for-college-radio-in-nyc.html




http://waynerobins.blogspot.com/2008/03/ibs-convention-special-edition.html



A veteran rock critic tries cutting out the middle man, offering opinions on pop music, culture, media and society.


http://wrajradio.com/wraj_blog/128/detail.html











Artist Ramona Pickett and co-moderator Anthony "Dob" Dobrini at the Musician's Panel

Saturday, October 27, 2007

IBS Conference Chicago Regional October 27, 2007

Intercollegiate Broadcast System's fourth Chicago Regional Conference Huge Success - National event set for March '08

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

The Intercollegiate Broadcasting System (IBS)
68th
International radio, TV, webcasting, podcasting, conference!

is scheduled for Friday - Sunday, March 7-9, 2008,
Hotel Pennsylvania (Across from Madison Square Garden),
New York City, NY.


The IBS has held a national conference for 67 years at the New York Penn Hotel and the 68th annual event should be one of the best yet due to the tremendous response IBS had to the regionals in Boston and Chicago this past October, 2007.

There's been a perception that these legendary conferences are exclusively for radio insiders, but the door is open to everyone - radio students, radio professionals and radio fans - these gatherings continuing the tradition started by the IBS almost 7 decades ago.

Along with the big October radio show developed by our IBS colleagues at College Media Journal, the CMJ Convention, these IBS meets - attended by students of radio with professional panelists from commercial radio, the media, college teachers/professors/instructors/faculty and other knowledgeable individuals - help fill a void left by the the much-missed "New Music Seminar" that New York's Rockpool promotions ran in the 1980s.


OCTOBER 27 at COLUMBIA COLLEGE, CHICAGO:

The "Keynote Speech" was given by John Gehron, the General Manager of Harpo Radio, Inc. - overseeing the operations and programming for "Oprah & Friends", a lifestyle talk radio channel that airs nationwide exclusively on XM Satellite Radio. Gehron recently was Regional Vice President and Market Manager for Clear Channel Chicago's seven stations. The beauty of these regionals is that along with national figures volunteering their time to speak, notables from each area of the country visited by the IBS get an opportunity to speak to those who attend - and consider participating in the national three day affair in March.

=================================================================
AN OVERVIEW OF CHICAGO IBS OCTOBER 27, 2008

(a work in progress - more information will be added on Sunday night; it's 11:27 AM EST,
10:27 Chicago time and the writer is about to catch a plane)

Deb is a success story of Columbia College - and she's thankful that some of the things that were arduous at WCRX, the college radio station at the Illinois educational institution, are now paying off; she has the technical skills to go along with her management role at WKKD, Aurora Illinois. "Stuff that I took for granted that I didn't think was important I understand is a huge necessity now. What I learned at Columbia really has transferred to where I'm working now - mainstream radio." She says about her position at commercial radio "I feel very very comfortable wearing so many hats at WKKD because of the education and hands-on experience I received at Columbia."

The station is amazing. You walk through the glass doors off Wabash and Congress in Chicago and the radio station is visible from the lobby of the university. It's big, it's comfortable, it looks and sounds like major radio. Columbia College is serious about students learning their craft and being able to take those skills right into the marketplace. The 4 PM session, "Future Stars: Obtaining and Maintaining Your First Full-Time Radio Position" has 5 graduates of Columbia College Chicago, all now working at stations from WTMT, KFMW, WSCR, WGN to Weiner's programming position at WKKD. Earlier we listened to Weiner's colleague, Ashley Davis, play us her aircheck WTMT Asheville, North Carolina. The alumni of "Chicago 's Underground", WCRX, impressed adjunct faculty member Burt Burdeen who critiqued the WTMT tape with a thumbs up - or perhaps more with pride that the college graduate was so very good on the air, neither D.J. at WTMT stepping on toes as the shows crossed from afternoon to evening.

Tony Kwiecinski is the Operations Manager of WCRX, 88.1 FM, and his business-like approach to college radio is refreshing if one has ever visited a radio station at a school were communications is not a top priority. But if a station has an FCC License and broadcasts to a city as big as Chicago, those who tune in to these "public airwaves" deserve quality on-air product.

The theme of this year's conference seemed to be taken right from Harpo Radio General Manager John Gehron's keynote speach: The Future of Radio. The five morning sessions actually made a good thread to Gehron's talk as those panels were built on the fundamentals of radio's future - IBS Chief Operating Officer Fritz Kass appearing with the New England Art Institutes radio veteran, Len Mailloud, Scott Vyerman from WDRP and the aforementioned Tony Kwiecinski from WCRX all discussing starting a radio station from scratch. Well-known blogger Craig Bonnell and Fundamental Records owner Tim White were in another room discussing Indie Music on college radio as well as utilizing public access airwaves as an additional boost to college radio's potential audience - the true future of college radio's expansion into the everyday lives of radio listeners. Barbara Calabrese of Columbia College joined in on the conversation as did Gershon Indiana's faculty advisor to WGCS - Globe Radio.org.



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