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| NORMAN PATTIZ | |
January 2003 |
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Norman Pattiz, chairman and founder of radio giant Westwood One, talks about the success of Radio Sawa, the broadcast he helped create, and his future goal to reach Arab audiences through a U.S.-funded television network. The NewsHour Media Unit is funded by a grant from the Pew Charitable Trusts
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TERENCE SMITH: Where did the name Radio Sawa come from? NORMAN PATTIZ: Radio Sawa -- "Sawa" is the Arabic
word for "together." TERENCE SMITH: And it's been on the air since March? NORMAN PATTIZ: March 23rd. TERENCE SMITH: How is it going? NORMAN PATTIZ: It's going fabulously well. All of the research that we've been conducting now since June has indicated significant and continuous up-trends. The latest research that I just saw before I came in here, from Amman, Jordan, which is an area that's 60 percent Palestinian, either by ancestry or birth, indicates that 52 percent of our target audience, which is primarily the 15 to 30-year-old audience, 52 percent indicate that Radio Sawa is their favorite radio station. Over 90 percent indicated that they listened to Radio
Sawa within the last week. And what's most impressive, I think, is that
43 percent indicate that they listen to Radio Sawa mostly for news,
and 39 percent -- and that's the last figure I'll burden you with --
indicate that they believe that Radio Sawa has the most reliable and
trustworthy news of all the news that they see in the region. TERENCE SMITH: Where are you broadcasting, and, in round
numbers, how many listeners do you have? NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, we're broadcasting throughout the region. We have FM frequencies in Amman, [Jordan] -- which covers Amman and the West Bank. We are broadcasting throughout the Persian Gulf, with stations in Abu Dhabi, Dubai, Qatar, and soon Bahrain. We're broadcasting to Iraq. Some of the anecdotal information
from the Iraqi press indicates that Radio Sawa is the number one youth
station in the market, larger even than Saddam Hussein's son's radio
station. So we're thinking of having some tee-shirts printed saying
"No. 1 in Baghdad." We also broadcast from a powerful medium wave, or AM facilities, out of Cyprus -- that covers Egypt, Lebanon, and Syria. Soon we will be broadcasting out of Djibouti, which will cover the Sudan and Yemen. And we are also on digital audio satellite, which really
blankets the entire region via Nilesat, Arabsat, and Utelsat. TERENCE SMITH: In a ballpark sense, can you give me a
number of listeners? NORMAN PATTIZ: I can't give you a number of listeners
yet because that research is ongoing right now. But we should have that
shortly. But in terms of the entire region, you're talking about a potential
audience of 250 million Arabic-speaking people. And when you take a
look and you start extrapolating the kinds of shares that we're delivering
in our target audience, you're talking about multimillions. TERENCE SMITH: Multimillions? NORMAN PATTIZ: Absolutely..[and with a potential for growth].
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| A profile of the target audience | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: What sort of sense of this audience --
you spoke of a very young target audience -- give me a portrait of the
audience, as best you can. NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, we're talking about an audience that
is, generally speaking, under the age of 30. We're talking about an
audience that likes our mix of Western and Arabic pop music. You're
talking about an audience that when we researched the kind of feature
programming that they would like to hear on a radio station, they want
to hear features about health, they want to hear features about marriage
and dating, and the Internet, and finance, and entertainment. They're
pretty much like the under-30 audiences that you would find almost anywhere
in the world. TERENCE SMITH: Of course, there's a great range of cultural
traditions in the areas in which you're broadcasting -- say on the issues
of marriage and dating. How do you bridge all that? NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, a lot of it is by having dialogue with our listeners. We have a feature which we have begun recently, called "Sawa Chat," where we let listeners as questions and then we let people in the street answer those questions. We have a saying on Radio Sawa, which is "You listen to us and we'll listen to you." We're very different than the way U.S. international broadcasting
has been traditionally. We don't talk at our audience. We want to create
dialogue with our audience, and we want our audience to become an integral
part of the radio station listening experience -- which is how radio
is most effective and most valuable wherever it's broadcast around the
globe. TERENCE SMITH: You identify it as U.S radio? NORMAN PATTIZ: Absolutely. Very transparent. TERENCE SMITH: How do you deal with that? NORMAN PATTIZ: At the bottom of the hour and -- I believe, also at the top, but quite certainly at the bottom -- we identify ourself as a service of U.S. International broadcasting. And of course all of our newscasts, and we do two newscasts an hour, one at 15 past the hour, another at 45 -- of varying lengths, anywhere from 5 to 10 minutes in length -- those newscasts are always coming from Washington. So there's really no doubt on the part of our listening
audience that we are the Americans. TERENCE SMITH: Coming in part from this room? NORMAN PATTIZ: Absolutely. There's a whole lot of stuff
that's coming from this room. By the same token, we have bureaus and
stringers throughout the region. And we like to think that we fulfill
our mission. And our mission is quite simply to promote freedom and
democracy through the free flow of accurate, reliable, and credible
news and information about America in the world audiences overseas. NORMAN PATTIZ: In so many words, [we want to] be an example
of a free press in the American tradition. TERENCE SMITH: Do you have any sense of how the listeners
regard the news that they hear -- whether they consider it straight
news or news with a U.S. angle, or propaganda? NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, we do. It's interesting, because
this is a music-driven format and we do a lot of music research so we
know what our target audience wants to listen to -- much like a U.S.
radio station would do before its launch. And a lot of people had been saying, well, your audience
will tune in to hear the music, but when the news comes around, they're
going to tune right out. So when we do our weekly music research, we ask a lot of questions about our news. And when we started asking the question, "What radio station do you listen to most for news," when we started doing the research many months ago, our target audience indicated Sawa, one percent. Now our target audience is indicating Sawa, 43 percent. And when we asked the question "What radio station
do you think has the most reliable and trustworthy news," they
say Sawa 39 percent, which is 20 points higher than their local radio
station, Amman FM in Amman, and probably 30 points higher than the BBC. So I think we have a pretty good idea that our news is gaining traction among our listeners in the region. |
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| Dealing with resistance from Arab governments | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: Are you encountering, or have you encountered,
resistance from the government or the other broadcasters in the region? NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, we have certainly encountered a great deal of cooperation from many of our moderate Arab government friends. In places where they have given us permission to utilize FM frequencies, that requires the permission of the local government. So in the place where we're broadcasting on FM, which are now numerous, we're getting very good cooperation. In the places where we don't get the kind of cooperation
where we would hope for -- in places where there's just no chance we
could get transmission inside the country and in some of the places
where we've been disappointed that we haven't been able to get distribution
from some of our friends -- then we broadcast from outside the region
into the region, from places like Cyprus and Djibouti and other places,
so that the message gets across. As far as the competitive media is concerned, I think
that the competitive media in some respects is happy to have us there
because I think that we give them a level of broadcasting that has not
existed in the region and something to shoot for. TERENCE SMITH: Have you encountered any interference or
jamming? NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, we have experienced some intermittent jamming in Baghdad, which is probably not surprising and also indicates the impact that we are having in Baghdad. But generally speaking -- throughout the region -- they don't have a history of jamming. You know, as a matter of fact, even Kol Yisrael [Israel's official radio station], where it's broadcast throughout the region is generally the number two or three radio station in the market from the local Arab audience -- because they're interested in hearing what the Israelis have to say. |
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| Planning the next project in television | ||||||||||||||||||||
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TERENCE SMITH: So now the notion is to turn to television? NORMAN PATTIZ: Well, television is definitely on our radar screen. There's no question that the primary medium for delivering news in the region is television. The success of government-controlled media as well as
services like Al-Jazeera certainly indicate that we need to engage in
that medium. We think that it's important for the U.S. to have a satellite
television channel so that we can present our views and an image of
America from our own lips and from our own perspective, because I can
assure you it's not being presented from that perspective throughout
the region. TERENCE SMITH: And so you are going to Congress, or will
be going to the next Congress to get funding? NORMAN PATTIZ: We are talking with the administration and with Congress right now about finding funding so that we can become operational in next year, in the '03 budget. And everybody that we have presented this notion to has been very supportive of it. I haven't come across anybody, and I've been presenting
this to just about anybody who will listen, and nobody has said this
is not a good idea or it's something that we shouldn't do. Budget restraints
are certainly a consideration. It's not in the '03 budget because we
didn't get this project started quickly enough and the budgeting process
started well over a year ago. But we're hopeful that we will find the funding to at
least get the project started this year and be in the '04 budget for
complete funding by October of next year. TERENCE SMITH: And in round figures, what would it cost
to have a real television presence in the area you're talking about? NORMAN PATTIZ: Our first year of full funding would be
about $65 million, which would include about $25 million of one-time
costs and about $40 million of continuing operational costs. We look at this as being a pipeline from the United States into the region, and that will be heavily news and information-oriented, which will obviously be produced internally. But it's also a method of distributing programming throughout
the region from outside producers, from producers that we may subcontract
with, and from other sources, that will give them access to a region
that is controlled by government media, where they probably haven't
had sufficient access in the past.
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