West Coast Connection Forum
DUBCC - Tha Connection => West Coast Classics => Topic started by: Myrealname on October 18, 2002, 01:15:10 PM
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California hip-hop radio station Power 106(KPWR) has come under fire as rapper Shade Shiest has garnered generous amounts of airtime on the station where the executive producer of his album, Damion Young, also works as a senior programming and artist relations executive. In a report in the L.A. Times by Chuck Phillips, the reporter explores the business relationships of those involved.
The company that owns Power 106, media conglomerate Emmis Communications, financed a company called Baby Ree Entertainment that was responsible for recording Sheist’s album Informal Introduction. And Young, also known as Damizza, produced several tracks for the album; in addition he has a label deal with MCA Records distributed by Vivendi Universal, the largest distributor of music worldwide. So with each spin, the record receives free promotion for the album and the more albums sold, the more money Young, Power 106 and Emmis Communication make.
The lead single from the album Informal Introduction titled “Money Owners,” has received triple the spins on Power 106 as compared to other radio stations, according to the report.
Peter Art, who works for a media watch group organization, is not pleased by what he views as a conflict of interest for Emmis Communications. In the article he is quoted as saying, “Listeners should know that the station has a financial stake in the programming. It calls for disclosure. This doesn’t sound like radio programming. It sounds like a commercial for a company tied to the owners of the station.”
The president of Emmis' radio division Rick Cummings says there is no conflict of interest as he says Young has been removed from the station’s decision-making process for Shade Shiest. He went on to note that Sheist’s song tested well with Power 106 listeners and listeners from two other Emmis-owned stations. "KPWR is No. 1 in this market out of 80 stations," Cummings said. "Emmis can't afford to play music that doesn't test well with our listeners.”
Young, who has appeared in Ja Rule’s video “Between Me and You,” could not be reached for a comment by the newspaper, and according to officials at the radio station, he is prohibited from discussing his artist at programming meetings.
(ahh)
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This was a nice try by someone trying to damage his career, but all it did was expose Shade's power. His partnership with Damion Young is old news, and his deal with Baby Ree was one of the most talked about in the industry. It was also FCC APPROVED. Anyone that knows Shade then already knows about his business savvy, and his infamous ties to Hip-Hop's leading figures. Chuck Phillips is a reporter more than he is an editor, which means his information is only as credible as his sources. And his Tupac story sure did tank.
In related news, Shade Sheist continues to slap the faces of his critics as he jumped on the air (KPWR) this afternoon to debut the first single from his first signing (PaperWork Entertainment) N.U.N.E. called "Hard in The Paint" which features Caz and Knoc-Turn'Al. Shade doesn't appear on the record, but his words do ("The Bullshit Stops Here" carries the hook). He mentioned on the air that "The New WestCoast has emerged, period."
Shade has also responded to his allegations in the form of a song "Wake Up- The Reemix" which features Butch Cassidy and interpolates the music of Mobb Deep's "Shook Ones." In one line he states "I've never walked a line anything but straight" and is said to come clean about his "affiliations."
What can we really say to homie except, Keep bustin ya Guns?
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This was a nice try by someone trying to damage his career, but all it did was expose Shade's power. His partnership with Damion Young is old news, and his deal with Baby Ree was one of the most talked about in the industry. It was also FCC APPROVED. Anyone that knows Shade then already knows about his business savvy, and his infamous ties to Hip-Hop's leading figures. Chuck Phillips is a reporter more than he is an editor, which means his information is only as credible as his sources. And his Tupac story sure did tank.
In related news, Shade Sheist continues to slap the faces of his critics as he jumped on the air (KPWR) this afternoon to debut the first single from his first signing (PaperWork Entertainment) N.U.N.E. called "Hard in The Paint" which features Caz and Knoc-Turn'Al. Shade doesn't appear on the record, but his words do ("The Bullshit Stops Here" carries the hook). He mentioned on the air that "The New WestCoast has emerged, period."
Shade has also responded to his allegations in the form of a song "Wake Up- The Reemix" which features Butch Cassidy and interpolates the music of Mobb Deep's "Shook Ones." In one line he states "I've never walked a line anything but straight" and is said to come clean about his "affiliations."
What can we really say to homie except, Keep bustin ya Guns?
Right on...
Is it that big of a deal that he made some fresh ass buisness moves?
Plus perhpas it got 3 times the spins than on other stations cause Power 106 is on the WESTCOAST, and Shade shiest is a WESTCOAST artist (with universal appeal)
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A #1 (in the country) station can't afford to just play what they want. That's the quickest way to lose an audience. Shade is receiving major play at Power because California loves the young soldier. But believe it or not, Hot 97 in New York is spinning the the hell out of his records (and buying them!) as well. Let the man make his moves, and stop trying to dim a positive individual's light. Go see him in concert and then tell me he isn't earning his airplay.
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Haha, so what? His music is dope enough, it deserves all the airplay. Chuck Phillips is an ass.
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...from the L.A. Times:
"Airplay Raises Disclosure Issue
Some say FM station Power 106 should tell listeners about its ties to a rapper receiving heavy exposure. The station's owner denies conflict of interest."
*Shade Sheist is a hot act on Power 106, the most popular rap radio station in Los Angeles.
Over the last month, KPWR-FM has launched three singles by the little-known rapper and played them more than any station in the nation.
One reason, critics suggest, is that the man credited with producing Sheist's "Informal Introduction" CD is a senior programming and artist relations executive at KPWR named Damion Young. And Baby Ree Entertainment, the company that recorded Sheist's CD, is financed by Emmis Communications, an Indianapolis-based conglomerate that owns KPWR-FM. Sheist's music is then distributed by MCA Records, an arm of Vivendi Universal, the world's largest record corporation.
Power 106, well-known to locals because of its ubiquitous billboards touting its morning deejay Big Boy, has lured younger listeners with a playlist that is heavy with rap stars such as Eminem, Nelly and Snoop Dogg. But critics question whether it's legal for a broadcast chain to underwrite an artist's recording and then promote his music on its stations without notifying listeners about its business ties.
"This doesn't sound like radio programming," said Peter Hart, an analyst for the New York-based media watchdog group Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting. "It sounds like a commercial for a company tied to the owners of the station. Listeners should know that the station has a financial stake in the programming. It calls for disclosure."
Hart characterized airplay of Sheist's music on KPWR as a "dramatic" conflict of interest for Emmis.
Rick Cummings, president of Emmis' radio division, disagreed. "Before setting this record up, we cleared it with our legal counsel and [Federal Communications Commission] attorneys. They said, 'Look, make sure this thing passes the smell test. Remove Damion from the decision-making process on the [Sheist] record.' And that's exactly what we did."
Federal law prohibits radio stations from accepting money or anything of value for playing songs without disclosing that information to listeners. Officials with the FCC declined to comment Tuesday.
The flap over Sheist's airplay is the latest in a series of controversial issues plaguing the radio industry. Recently, legislation was proposed in Congress to limit the number of stations that radio giants can own and to ban deals that stations have with independent record promoters, contending that they violate payola laws.
Clear Channel Communications Inc., the nation's biggest radio company, has come under criticism in San Diego for sidestepping rules that limit it from owning more than eight stations in a single market by controlling the programming of five additional radio stations just across the Mexican border.
In other entertainment industries, the government does not necessarily frown on media conglomerates owning content and distribution. In the last decade as federal rules were relaxed, Walt Disney Co. and Viacom Inc. were allowed to acquire ABC and CBS respectively, and fill their networks with their own movies, sitcoms and cartoons.
In the music business, however, record companies want listeners to believe stations play songs because they are popular, not because they are paid advertisements. Although record companies collectively spend more than $100 million a year behind the scenes to lobby broadcasters for airplay, the labels go to great lengths to avoid on-air identification tags.
Some record labels sign deejays to artist's contracts and also pay thousands of dollars in fees to programmers and other radio station personnel to remix singles by other musicians. Privately, music executives say such deals sometimes allow record labels to develop closer relationships with broadcast employees who can influence airplay of the remixed song.
KPWR's Young, who is considered one of the most influential radio executives in the country, has remixed tracks for record labels ranging from Def Jam to Columbia, Atlantic and London-Sire before cutting his current distribution deal with MCA. Young did not return calls for comment.
Representatives for MCA say the label signed its deal with Young solely on the merits of Sheist's music.
KPWR program director Jimmy Steal said the only reason he added Sheist to the station's weekly playlist was because it rated high in listener tests used to judge audience response to all new music. Emmis' Cummings said Sheist's songs tested well at two other stations in the radio chain, which also added the songs to their playlists.
Cummings said Young has been prohibited from discussing Sheist's music during KPWR's weekly programming meetings. He also said that no Emmis employee asked its stations to air Sheist's music.
Over the last five weeks KPWR played Sheist's first single, "Money Owners," about 380 times, nearly triple the amount of the 30 other stations across the nation that aired it, according to Broadcast Data Systems. The song aired 106 times on an Emmis-owned station in New York and 97 times on another company station in Phoenix. Only two non-Emmis stations played "Money Owners" more than 50 times.
"KPWR is No. 1 in this market out of 80 stations," Cummings said. "Emmis can't afford to play music that doesn't test well with our listeners."
Despite the heavy airplay at some Emmis stations, Sheist's CD is a commercial flop, selling fewer than 10,000 copies since its Sept. 10 release, according to Nielsen/SoundScan."