SU2610BOOTH
transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine, Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention CenterNAB Show Exhibit Hours: Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 3Wednesday
April 15, 2015
IP Transition‘A Big Deal’
BY GEORGE WINSLOWBROADCASTING & CABLE
A number of top technologists highlighted the potential of IP to revolutionize the TV indus-try during Tuesday’s Super Session “Television’s Transition to an All-IP Future — Why It’s a Big Deal.” Moderator Deborah McAdams, the exec-utive editor of TV Technology, set the stage by noting that for the first time in nearly two decades of covering the industry “tech issues were the biggest story of the convention” and that “the transition to IP is turning into one of
2015 NAB SHOW
103,042REPORTED ATTENDANCEExhibit space exceeds 1 million net sq. ft.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY JOHN MERLIDIGITAL VIDEO
Oscar-nominated cinematographer Tom Stern, ASC, AFC, key-noted a crowded Tuesday session in the Creative Master Series and anecdotally discussed his decades of working in tandem with director/actor Clint Eastwood — most notably their collabora-tion on last year’s “American Sniper,” which was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture.Stern began his career in film as a gaffer, where he said he could stand off to the side and observe interactions on the set among actors, the director and the cinematographer. He de-scribed that job as quite different from being a director of pho-tography, a position to which he transitioned and where he be-came responsible for calling the shots, so to speak. He served as
Shooting Blockbuster ‘American Sniper’
10STYLECreative Master series ends with a look at the creative process and online video distribution.
18HACKS AND BREACHESSuper Session explores cybersecurity and how to make systems secure.
38TECH LUNCHEONJohn McAfee keynotes, and the NAB Engineering Achievement and Digital Leadership Awards will be presented.
Session Gets to The Heart of ‘The Walking
Dead’BY CRISTINA CLAPP
DIGITAL VIDEO
Introducing Tuesday morn-ing’s session, “More of What
You Crave: The World of ‘The Walking Dead,’” to a stand-ing-room-only crowd, NAB President and CEO Gordon
Dead continued on 3 ❱
Steven Yeun as Glenn Rhee in “The Walking Dead”
Phot
o by
Gen
e Pa
ge/A
MC
IP continued on 84 ❱
Sniper continued on 83 ❱
Cinematographer Tom Stern (left) and David
Geffner, Executive Editor of ICG Magazine
1.3.5.6.83.84_NABDN15_D3.indd 1
4/14/15 8:05 PM
SU2610BOOTH transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine,
Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor
News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.comDAY 2Tuesday
April 14, 2015 Up and Over: OTT Hits Its Stride
BY SUSAN ASHWORTH
TV TECHNOLOGY
An influential mix of cord-shaving, viewer
expectations and mobile adoption has pushed
the programming market into an entirely new
space; one where the traditional broadcast and
cable model is being augmented, and in some
cases, replaced by a segmented, niche-oriented,
targeted viewing market.
That was the focus of the Super Session
“Constant Cravings — Using OTT to Win the
76CONVERSATIONMel Karmazin shares his
insights on the current
and future state of
media.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64
Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY MIKE MALONE
BROADCASTING & CABLE
Broadcasters are up against an ever-widening sea
of competitors; yet their role in the communi-
ties they serve has never been more important,
said Gordon Smith, NAB president and CEO, in
his opening address at NAB Show.
Partisan shouting matches and celebrity mis-
deeds characterize cable television and the vast
Web universe, Smith said. Newspapers are op-
erating in a severely weakened state. Meanwhile,
broadcast television and radio, he said, remain
trusted sources of content.
“While citizens may be feeling bombarded by
BY JOHN MERLI
DIGITAL VIDEO
Award-winning cinematographer Rob-
ert Yeoman, ASC, told a Monday ses-
sion of the Creative Master Series that
one of the more gratifying and chal-
lenging aspects of working with Wes
Anderson on “The Grand Budapest
Hotel” was dealing with no fewer than
three aspect ratios — 1.37:1, 1.85:1
and anamorphic.
Film over digital continues to be the
preference of choice for both Yeoman
and Anderson, who have collaborated
on seven motion pictures, including
“Budapest,” which was nominated for
the Best Picture Oscar for 2014. In a
conversation with host Jon D. Witmer,
managing editor of American Cinema-
tographer, Yeoman said it was Ander-
son who came up with the concept of
using different aspect ratios to indicate
different time periods in the film, in-
cluding the older 1.37.1, which was a
favorite aspect ratio for motion pic-
tures until the early 1950s.
While filming most exterior and
some interior scenes for “Budapest”
in Dresden and other locales in Ger-
many (to represent the fictitious Re-
Robert YeomanChecking Into ‘Grand Budapest Hotel’
10THE ARTCreative Master Series
delves into sound and
artistic approach.
32RADIO LUNCHEON
Marilu Henner keynotes
and Kevin Ryder and Gene
“Bean” Baxter are inducted
into the NAB Broadcasting
Hall of Fame.
Opening continued on 3 ❱
EXTRATuesday
See pages E1-E16
Evolve or Lose Relevance,
Smith Tells Show Crowd
OTT continued on 83 ❱
Budapest continued on 84 ❱
SU2610
BOOTH
transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine,
Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor
News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Monday 10 a.m.–6 p.m. | Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 1Monday
April 13, 2015
Stations Act
On Viewing
ChangesBY GEORGE WINSLOW
BROADCASTING & CABLE
Worries about cord-cutting and rapid changes
in the way people are viewing TV programming
have roiled the TV industry in the last year,
prompting the launch of a slew of video chan-
nels outside the traditional broadcast and pay-
TV ecosystem.
In the last six months alone, HBO, CBS,
Nickelodeon, Showtime, ESPN and others have
either launched or announced that they were de-
3GROWTH
Smith talks about
some of the issues
facing broadcasters.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64
Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY SUSAN ASHWORTH
TV TECHNOLOGY
The theme of this year’s show is “Crave More,”
a message that reflects the passion of the peo-
ple who make up the spectrum of industries
represented under the media and entertainment
umbrella.
“The people in this business … bring an ener-
gy that is always palpable at th
e NAB Show, and
this is a particularly exciting time
in the industry’s evolution,” said
Chris Brown, executive vice
president, Conventions and
Business Operations for NAB.
“Things are changing rapidly
and that means it i
s more im-
portant than ever to stay ahead
of trends and to be on top of
skills and knowledge.”
NAB Show: A Learning Lab
For Traditional, New Media
BY JON SILBERG
DIGITAL VIDEO
Today’s Creative Master Series presents an eclectic group of panels that examine such
diverse topics as sound design, cinematography and the importance of authenticity in
certain types of storytelling.
The series, described by Dennis Wharton, NAB’s executive vice president of Com-
munications, offers “a comprehensive education experience and provides attendees a
peek at how some of the industry’s leading talents perform their craft.”
For “Fifty Shades of Sound,” Mix magazine’s editor Tom Kenny will speak with
sound design experts Becky Sullivan, Kelly Oxford, Anna Behlmer and Terry Porter to
discuss their work on the worldwide box office blockbuster “Fifty Shades of Grey.” The
Master Series Discusses
Importance of Storytelling
20FCC
Radio and TV
broadcasters are
facing several
regulatory issues.
32HONORS
TV Luncheon honors
several for making
TV part of the
American lifestyle.
81FINANCE
New conference
spotlights opportunities
for investors.
Show continued on 6 ❱
Storytelling continued on 18 ❱
OTT continued on 10 ❱
Owen Wilson as “M. Chuck” in “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”
Phot
o co
urte
sy o
f Fox
Sea
rchl
ight
Pic
ture
s
01-38_NABDN15_D1.indd 1
3/31/15 3:40 PM
2016 Rate Card
and Advertising Information
The Only Official NAB Show Daily Newspaper
1 Color - 0 Cyan / 100 Magenta / 99 Yellow / 4 Black
Drive More Buyers To Your NAB Show Exhibits
Call NOW To Get Started!
SU2610BOOTH transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine,
Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor
News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Monday 10 a.m.–6 p.m. | Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.comDAY 1Monday
April 13, 2015
Stations Act On Viewing Changes
BY GEORGE WINSLOW
BROADCASTING & CABLE
Worries about cord-cutting and rapid changes
in the way people are viewing TV programming
have roiled the TV industry in the last year,
prompting the launch of a slew of video chan-
nels outside the traditional broadcast and pay-
TV ecosystem.
In the last six months alone, HBO, CBS,
Nickelodeon, Showtime, ESPN and others have
either launched or announced that they were de-
3GROWTH
Smith talks about
some of the issues
facing broadcasters.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64
Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY SUSAN ASHWORTH
TV TECHNOLOGY
The theme of this year’s show is “Crave More,”
a message that reflects the passion of the peo-
ple who make up the spectrum of industries
represented under the media and entertainment
umbrella. “The people in this business … bring an ener-
gy that is always palpable at the NAB Show, and
this is a particularly exciting time
in the industry’s evolution,” said
Chris Brown, executive vice
president, Conventions and
Business Operations for NAB.
“Things are changing rapidly
and that means it is more im-
portant than ever to stay ahead
of trends and to be on top of
skills and knowledge.”
NAB Show: A Learning Lab
For Traditional, New Media
BY JON SILBERG
DIGITAL VIDEO
Today’s Creative Master Series presents an eclectic group of panels that examine such
diverse topics as sound design, cinematography and the importance of authenticity in
certain types of storytelling.
The series, described by Dennis Wharton, NAB’s executive vice president of Com-
munications, offers “a comprehensive education experience and provides attendees a
peek at how some of the industry’s leading talents perform their craft.”
For “Fifty Shades of Sound,” Mix magazine’s editor Tom Kenny will speak with
sound design experts Becky Sullivan, Kelly Oxford, Anna Behlmer and Terry Porter to
discuss their work on the worldwide box office blockbuster “Fifty Shades of Grey.” The
Master Series Discusses
Importance of Storytelling
20FCCRadio and TV
broadcasters are
facing several
regulatory issues.
32HONORSTV Luncheon honors
several for making
TV part of the
American lifestyle.
81FINANCE
New conference
spotlights opportunities
for investors.
Show continued on 6 ❱
Storytelling continued on 18 ❱
OTT continued on 10 ❱
Owen Wilson as “M. Chuck” in “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”
Phot
o co
urte
sy o
f Fox
Sea
rchl
ight
Pic
ture
s
01-38_NABDN15_D1.indd 1
3/31/15 3:40 PM
SU2610BOOTH
transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine, Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 2Tuesday
April 14, 2015
Up and Over: OTT Hits Its Stride
BY SUSAN ASHWORTHTV TECHNOLOGY
An influential mix of cord-shaving, viewer expectations and mobile adoption has pushed the programming market into an entirely new space; one where the traditional broadcast and cable model is being augmented, and in some cases, replaced by a segmented, niche-oriented, targeted viewing market.
That was the focus of the Super Session “Constant Cravings — Using OTT to Win the 76
CONVERSATIONMel Karmazin shares his insights on the current and future state of media.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY MIKE MALONEBROADCASTING & CABLE
Broadcasters are up against an ever-widening sea of competitors; yet their role in the communi-ties they serve has never been more important, said Gordon Smith, NAB president and CEO, in his opening address at NAB Show.
Partisan shouting matches and celebrity mis-deeds characterize cable television and the vast Web universe, Smith said. Newspapers are op-erating in a severely weakened state. Meanwhile, broadcast television and radio, he said, remain trusted sources of content.
“While citizens may be feeling bombarded by
BY JOHN MERLIDIGITAL VIDEO
Award-winning cinematographer Rob-ert Yeoman, ASC, told a Monday ses-sion of the Creative Master Series that one of the more gratifying and chal-lenging aspects of working with Wes Anderson on “The Grand Budapest Hotel” was dealing with no fewer than three aspect ratios — 1.37:1, 1.85:1 and anamorphic.
Film over digital continues to be the preference of choice for both Yeoman and Anderson, who have collaborated on seven motion pictures, including
“Budapest,” which was nominated for the Best Picture Oscar for 2014. In a conversation with host Jon D. Witmer, managing editor of American Cinema-tographer, Yeoman said it was Ander-son who came up with the concept of using different aspect ratios to indicate different time periods in the film, in-cluding the older 1.37.1, which was a favorite aspect ratio for motion pic-tures until the early 1950s.
While filming most exterior and some interior scenes for “Budapest” in Dresden and other locales in Ger-many (to represent the fictitious Re-
Robert Yeoman
Checking Into ‘Grand Budapest Hotel’
10THE ARTCreative Master Series delves into sound and artistic approach.
32RADIO LUNCHEONMarilu Henner keynotes and Kevin Ryder and Gene “Bean” Baxter are inducted into the NAB Broadcasting Hall of Fame.
Opening continued on 3 ❱
EXTRATuesday
See pages E1-E16
Evolve or Lose Relevance, Smith Tells Show Crowd
OTT continued on 83 ❱
Budapest continued on 84 ❱
SU2610BOOTH
transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine,
Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor
News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 3WednesdayApril 15, 2015
IP Transition‘A Big Deal’BY GEORGE WINSLOWBROADCASTING & CABLEA number of top technologists highlighted the
potential of IP to revolutionize the TV indus-try during Tuesday’s Super Session “Television’s
Transition to an All-IP Future — Why It’s a Big
Deal.” Moderator Deborah McAdams, the exec-
utive editor of TV Technology, set the stage
by noting that for the first time in nearly two
decades of covering the industry “tech issues
were the biggest story of the convention” and
that “the transition to IP is turning into one of
2015 NAB SHOW 103,042REPORTED ATTENDANCEExhibit space exceeds 1 million net sq. ft.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46 Session Schedule 66
BY JOHN MERLIDIGITAL VIDEOOscar-nominated cinematographer Tom Stern, ASC, AFC, key-
noted a crowded Tuesday session in the Creative Master Series
and anecdotally discussed his decades of working in tandem with
director/actor Clint Eastwood — most notably their collabora-
tion on last year’s “American Sniper,” which was nominated for
six Academy Awards, including Best Picture.Stern began his career in film as a gaffer, where he said he
could stand off to the side and observe interactions on the set
among actors, the director and the cinematographer. He de-
scribed that job as quite different from being a director of pho-
tography, a position to which he transitioned and where he be-
came responsible for calling the shots, so to speak. He served as
Shooting Blockbuster ‘American Sniper’
10STYLECreative Master series ends with a look at the creative process and online video distribution.
18HACKS AND BREACHES
Super Session explores cybersecurity and how to make systems secure.
38TECH LUNCHEONJohn McAfee keynotes, and the NAB Engineering Achievement and Digital Leadership Awards will be presented.
Session Gets to The Heart of ‘The Walking Dead’
BY CRISTINA CLAPPDIGITAL VIDEOIntroducing Tuesday morn-ing’s session, “More of What
You Crave: The World of ‘The Walking Dead,’” to a stand-ing-room-only crowd, NAB President and CEO GordonDead continued on 3 ❱
Steven Yeun as Glenn Rhee in “The Walking Dead”
Phot
o by
Gen
e Pa
ge/A
MC
IP continued on 84 ❱
Sniper continued on 83 ❱
Cinematographer Tom Stern (left) and David Geffner, Executive Editor of ICG Magazine
1.3.5.6.83.84_NABDN15_D3.indd 1
4/14/15 8:05 PM
SU2610BOOTH transforming video delivery
®
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine,
Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor News,
Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Monday 10 a.m.–6 p.m. | Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
April 6, 2015
Tours Reflect Industry Trends
You can’t create tomorrow’s solutions with yesterday’s technology. That’s why Sony
continues to surpass conventional limits in resolution, contrast, color and workflow.
And that’s what keeps Sony solutions beyond definition.
See for yourself at sony.com/nab or stop by NAB Exhibit C11001.
© 2015 Sony Electronics Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited.
Features and specifications are subject to change without notice. Sony and the Sony logo are trademarks of Sony.
Beyond Definition
With more than 1,700 exhibitors the NAB Show
floor can be a bit daunting, not only to first-time
attendees, but to show veterans as well. Back
by popular demand are the NAB Show Floor
Tours, planned and guided by StoryTech.
Identifying industry trends, StoryTech has
planned and mapped physical and audio tours
that allow them to showcase many exhibitors
over a two-hour period.
For trends by crafting stories that reflect
what’s happening in the industry and why it’s rel-
evant,” said Lori Schwartz of StoryTech.
4HONOREES
NAB recognizes the
best in the media
and entertainment
industry.
BY SUSAN ASHWORTH
TV TECHNOLOGY
Excitement, anticipation... As media and enter-
tainment professionals arrive in Las Vegas, many
will ask themselves, “How will I get
it all done?”Attendees will be more than
98,000 strong when they slip out
of the desert sun for the first time
and walk into the convention center.
They’ll realize that there are nearly 1
million square feet of exhibit floor
space with more than 1,700 exhibi-
tors to visit. If this is your first NAB Show
you’ll be surprised at how much
there is to see on the exhibit floor.
If you’re an NAB Show veteran, you
already know what lies ahead. Make
it easier on yourself by planning
ahead.
Scoping Out the Show Floor
BY JOHN MERLI
DIGITAL VIDEO
This year’s Technology Summit on Cinema,
which runs April 11–12, is one of the premiere
conferences signaling the start of the 2015 NAB
Show. As this year’s timely gathering will demon-
strate through moving images, sound, presenta-
tions and discussion, continuing digital advances
have dramatically reshaped the art and science
of cinema in recent years — thanks to pioneer-
ing engineers uncovering breakthroughs and to
the hundreds of millions of moviegoers who
welcome those often-unknowing advances at the
box office.This year’s conference, titled “Building the
Future of Storytelling,” is produced in part-
nership with the Society of Motion Picture &
Television Engineers, which will mark its 100th
anniversary next year.
LASER-ILLUMINATED PROJECTORS
Laser-illuminated projectors hold the prom-
ise of several important benefits, including
lower cost of ownership for theater operators,
PREVIEW
SHOW continued on 3 ❱TOURS continued on 10 ❱
SUMMIT continued on 6 ❱
Experts Consider Impact of
Emerging Technologies
8SUPER
SESSIONS
Explore game-changing
technologies and
emerging business
models and markets.
12PAVILIONS
Tech-focused pavilions
offer more exhibitors
and sessions on the
show floor.
19WORKSHOPS
One- and two-day
workshops offer
deep-dive on specific
topics.
iSto
ckph
oto/
© D
eklo
fena
k
“Building the Future of Storytelling”
April 14, 2015
EXTRA
Tuesday
01_NAB15DN.D2X.indd 1
4/13/15 9:22 PM
NAB SHOW DAILY NEWS AD CLOSE:
MARCH 18 2016
AD MATERIALS DUE:
MARCH 25 2016 Contact
MICHELE INDERRIEDEN at 212-378-0400 x523,
or STEVEN BELL at 212-378-0400 x519,
or Talk to Your NewBay Media Sales Representative
TODAYand Reserve Your Ad Space
in the 2016 NAB Show Daily News.
Get a jumpstart on your NAB Show marketing program by reserving your ad space now in the only official daily newspaper at the NAB Show. The NAB Show Daily News, published under contract to NAB by NewBay Media, is the ONLY Daily with exclusive distribution rights to all NAB Show exhibit venues including the LVCC, the Westgate Las Vegas Resort & Casino and the official show hotels.
From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine, Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor News,
Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Pro Audio Review, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
1 Color - 0 Cyan / 100 Magenta / 99 Yellow / 4 Black
Reach 100,000+ Attendees and Increase Your Leads and Sales by Advertising in the Official Show Daily!
Effective, Affordable Ad Options4
This magazine-sized publication, delivered with Monday’s edition, will showcase your full-page 4/C ad across from a full-page of 4/C advertorial about your hot new product or product line. Get maximum advertising/editorial impact with buyers looking for what’s new at this year’s show. The price for the ad/edit spread: $4,900 net. Space is limited so book now!
Product Preview Guide
PRODUCT PREVIEW GUIDE
A Special Advertising Supplement to the 2015 NAB Show Daily News
PRODUCT NEWS FROM:
2015I
01-16_PPG_NABShow.2015.indd 1 4/3/15 1:36 PM
Draw more eyeballs to your great new product or exhibit with a 1/8th of a page ad in all three editions of the NAB Show Daily News. Supply a photo, 50-word description, URL and booth number and we’ll put it together for you. Cost: Just $1,700 net total! Space is limited so reserve yours now!
Must-See
New product innovations from exhibitors on the show floor
Audio-Technica BP40 Large- Diaphragm Dynamic Broadcast Microphone Audio-Technica introduces the BP40, a large-diaphragm dynamic broadcast vocal microphone that delivers rich, natural, condenser-like sound. The BP40 features patented floating-edge construction for remarkable precision, optimized capsule placement for commanding vocal presence, and a multistage windscreen for superior internal pop filtering. Also includes humbucking voice coil and switchable 100 Hz high-pass filter. U.S. estimated street price $349.
Visit Audio-Technica at Booth C1745
audio-technica.com
Black Box® Unified KVM and SDI Switching
The Black Box® HD Video Matrix Switching System offers unified KVM and SDI switching, instantaneous signal switching, and no-loss video extension up to 4K resolutions. The system supports copper and fiber connectivity between the switch and consoles, CPUs and signal extenders. This family of switches enable non-blocking matrix switching of DVI-D, USB-HID, USB 2.0, RS-232, analog audio or digital audio, and a multi-switch system scales to over 2000 ports.
Visit Black Box at Booth N5316
www.blackbox.com/NAB2
CINEFLEX® Stabilized Camera Systems CINEFLEX® products are now field interchangeable with RED, ARRI and Sony cameras, supporting super telephoto lens options creating the most versatile stabilized camera system in the industry. With advanced capabilities such as GEO+ for Geo-pointing, Geo-location, on-screen display and synchronous metadata. CINEFLEX® advanced feature set expands the user’s ability to capture the perfect shot.
Visit CINEFLEX at Booth C8508
www.cineflex.com
CineMassive Alpha FX Video Wall Platform CineMassive introduces the Alpha FX video wall platform, a groundbreaking video wall processing and software solution for digital set displays in broadcast studios. Alpha FX unites the capabilities of an ultra-high-resolution video wall proces-sor and matrix switch with 3D accelerated graphics, a content management system, pre-programmed show-building, and real-time control. Dynamically place real-time video capture into 3D effects and transitions. The Alpha FX platform is user-friendly, input and display-agnos-tic, backwards-compat-ible, and future-proof. Fully 4K-ready!
Visit CineMassive at Booth N6883
www.cinemassive.com/nab
Cineo Lighting Cineo Matchbox Cineo Lighting is debuting the Cineo Matchbox™, a portable, versatile Remote Phosphor lighting fixture for film, television, and photography. At just 3.25” x 5.25” x 1.5” and 15 oz., Matchbox outputs up to 1,000 lumens of soft, color-accurate light at a variety of interchangeable color temperatures. With a variety of DC and AC power options and a 1/4”x20 tap for easy mounting, Matchbox makes Remote Phosphor technology available within any videographer’s budget.
Visit Cineo Lighting at Booth C11143
www.cineolighting.com
DataPath Advanced Communications Solutions
From Terminals to Teleports, and All the Tools in Between™ – DataPath specializes in advanced communication solutions tailored to the unique requirements of the broadcast market. Designed for communications in remote operating environ-ments, our solutions include:• Satellite Communication Systems • Monitor & Control Software • Cyber Security Solutions • Field Implementation & Service • Custom Integrated Networks Stop by booths N4813 and OE1339 to learn how DataPath can customize a solution to meet your needs.
Visit DataPath at Booth N4813 & OE1339
www.datapath.com
ESE ES-56, ES-71 Converters ESE ‘s Time Code to USB converters offer a simple and quick solution for synchronizing a computer to your existing time code equipment. The ES-56 will convert SMPTE/EBU LTC for computer time synchronization or for obtaining LTC data for editing purposes. The ES-71 will convert real-time SMPTE/EBU LTC. Each unit also converts ESE Time Code, are powered via the USB interface, and various operating modes are selectable by DIP switch or by provided software.
Visit ESE at Booth C7306
www.ese-web.com
Exterity ‘Beyond the LAN’ Exterity’s ‘Beyond the LAN’ range of products launched this year facilitates the distribution of high-quality video content to a wider range of screens across a wide range of networks, including the corporate wired LAN, Wi-Fi, WAN and the Internet. This capability is critical as many organizations look to integrate Bring Your Own Device (BYOD) benefits with their Enterprise IP video solutions.
Visit Exterity at Booth SU6825
www.exterity.com/nab-2015
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Visit Freecast at Booth N7132
freecast.com
40.56.60_NABDN15_D1.indd 40 3/31/15 2:38 PM
Reserve Your Ad Space TODAY in the
2016 NAB Show Daily News!
Featuring full text search, linkable articles and ads, share features and more, watch the NAB Show Daily News come to life with a new iPad app. Ad options include embedded video, full-screen interstitials and product demo videos. Call for pricing.
iPad VersionPublished weekly in the eight weeks preceding the NAB Show, First Look is an electronic newsletter that provides a glimpse at the innovations in technology and new products expected on the exhibit floor. Total weekly distribution 250,000. • Leaderboard (728 x 90) $1,750 per week • Box (300 x 250) $1,500 per week
First Look
A PREVIEW OF THE EXHIBIT FLOOR
Reach buyers before they get to Las Vegas by advertising in the NAB Show Preview Edition, delivered in a digital e-zine for-mat the first week in April to all NAB Show pre-registered attendees and NewBay subscribers. Packed with last-minute conference, event and exhibit news, the Preview Edition replicates the look and feel of the printed Daily News, but offers advertisers the additional value of a hyperlink to their website, plus rich media options (flash, streamed audio, video, etc.). Use your print ad, or create a new one for the digital Preview Edition.
Ad Close:
March 11, 2016
Ad Material Due:
March 18, 2016
Rates are net and include 4-color process.
Tabloid w/3-Day Pkg.* Alone**1 page .................... $1,875 .............2,4501/2 page ................. $1,585 .............2,1001/3 page ................. $1,475 .............1,9001/4 page ................. $1,350 .............1,725
Standard w/3-Day Pkg.* Alone**1 page .................... $1,725 .............2,2752/3 page ................. $1,485 .............1,9251/2 page ................. $1,400 .............1,8201/3 page ................. $1,235 .............1,5551/4 page ................. $1,135 .............1,4251/6 page .................... $835 .............1,115
Product Showcase (net) .............$425 ..................525
Digital Insert ......... $2,950 .............3,650Single-page, two-sided insert
*Rate is for Digital Preview when purchased in combination with a 3-Day Package
**Rate is for Digital Preview only. Rich Media Options available. Call for pricing.
Digital Preview
Pre-Show
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The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Monday 10 a.m.–6 p.m. | Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
April 6, 2015
Tours Reflect Industry Trends
You can’t create tomorrow’s solutions with yesterday’s technology. That’s why Sony
continues to surpass conventional limits in resolution, contrast, color and workflow.
And that’s what keeps Sony solutions beyond definition.
See for yourself at sony.com/nab or stop by NAB Exhibit C11001.
© 2015 Sony Electronics Inc. All rights reserved. Reproduction in whole or in part without written permission is prohibited. Features and specifications are subject to change without notice. Sony and the Sony logo are trademarks of Sony.
Beyond Definition
With more than 1,700 exhibitors the NAB Show floor can be a bit daunting, not only to first-time attendees, but to show veterans as well. Back by popular demand are the NAB Show Floor Tours, planned and guided by StoryTech.
Identifying industry trends, StoryTech has planned and mapped physical and audio tours that allow them to showcase many exhibitors over a two-hour period.
For trends by crafting stories that reflect what’s happening in the industry and why it’s rel-evant,” said Lori Schwartz of StoryTech.
4HONOREESNAB recognizes the best in the media and entertainment industry.
BY SUSAN ASHWORTHTV TECHNOLOGY
Excitement, anticipation... As media and enter-tainment professionals arrive in Las Vegas, many
will ask themselves, “How will I get it all done?”
Attendees will be more than 98,000 strong when they slip out of the desert sun for the first time and walk into the convention center. They’ll realize that there are nearly 1 million square feet of exhibit floor space with more than 1,700 exhibi-tors to visit.
If this is your first NAB Show you’ll be surprised at how much there is to see on the exhibit floor. If you’re an NAB Show veteran, you already know what lies ahead. Make it easier on yourself by planning ahead.
Scoping Out the Show Floor
BY JOHN MERLIDIGITAL VIDEO
This year’s Technology Summit on Cinema, which runs April 11–12, is one of the premiere conferences signaling the start of the 2015 NAB Show. As this year’s timely gathering will demon-strate through moving images, sound, presenta-tions and discussion, continuing digital advances have dramatically reshaped the art and science of cinema in recent years — thanks to pioneer-ing engineers uncovering breakthroughs and to the hundreds of millions of moviegoers who
welcome those often-unknowing advances at the box office.
This year’s conference, titled “Building the Future of Storytelling,” is produced in part-nership with the Society of Motion Picture & Television Engineers, which will mark its 100th anniversary next year.
LASER-ILLUMINATED PROJECTORSLaser-illuminated projectors hold the prom-
ise of several important benefits, including lower cost of ownership for theater operators,
PREVIEW
SHOW continued on 3 ❱ TOURS continued on 10 ❱
SUMMIT continued on 6 ❱
Experts Consider Impact of Emerging Technologies
8SUPER SESSIONSExplore game-changing technologies and emerging business models and markets.
12PAVILIONSTech-focused pavilions offer more exhibitors and sessions on the show floor.
19WORKSHOPSOne- and two-day workshops offer deep-dive on specific topics.
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“Building the Future of Storytelling”
Buy a three-day ad package and receive maximum distribution and visibility, including NAB Show selected hotels.
Published Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday morning, with distribution at NAB-designated hotels, and by hand and in racks at the Las Vegas Convention Center. Every edition includes the latest news, product coverage, exhibitor listings, session schedules and more.
Ad Close:
March 18, 2016
Ad Material Due:
March 25, 2016
Rates are net and include 4-color process.Position Guarantee 10% premiumRotating/Split Run ads 5% premium
Three-Day PackageTabloid SizesTabloid page ............................... $9,8901/2 page ...................................... $8,4501/3 page ...................................... $7,8251/4 page ...................................... $6,975
Standard SizesStandard page ............................ $9,3252/3 page ...................................... $7,8901/2 page ...................................... $7,3751/3 page ...................................... $6,4001/4 page ...................................... $5,7651/6 page ...................................... $4,465
Product Showcase (net) ............. $2,500Classified Column Inch ................. $325
Inserts Net PricesMonday ..................................... $14,000Tuesday .................................... $13,000Wednesday ............................... $12,000
NAB Show Daily News
At the ShowSU2610B
OOTH
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From NewBay Media LLC, the Publisher of TV Technology, Radio World, Video Edge, Radio, Digital Video Magazine, Government Video, Creative Planet Network, Broadcasting & Cable, Multichannel News, Next TV, Systems Contractor News, Sound & Video Contractor, Pro Sound News, Mix, Audio Media, AV Technology and more.
The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Monday 10 a.m.–6 p.m. | Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 1Monday
April 13, 2015
Stations Act On Viewing Changes
BY GEORGE WINSLOWBROADCASTING & CABLE
Worries about cord-cutting and rapid changes in the way people are viewing TV programming have roiled the TV industry in the last year, prompting the launch of a slew of video chan-nels outside the traditional broadcast and pay-TV ecosystem.
In the last six months alone, HBO, CBS, Nickelodeon, Showtime, ESPN and others have either launched or announced that they were de-
3GROWTHSmith talks about some of the issues facing broadcasters.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64
Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY SUSAN ASHWORTHTV TECHNOLOGY
The theme of this year’s show is “Crave More,” a message that reflects the passion of the peo-
ple who make up the spectrum of industries represented under the media and entertainment umbrella.
“The people in this business … bring an ener-gy that is always palpable at the NAB Show, and
this is a particularly exciting time in the industry’s evolution,” said Chris Brown, executive vice president, Conventions and Business Operations for NAB. “Things are changing rapidly and that means it is more im-portant than ever to stay ahead of trends and to be on top of skills and knowledge.”
NAB Show: A Learning Lab For Traditional, New Media
BY JON SILBERGDIGITAL VIDEO
Today’s Creative Master Series presents an eclectic group of panels that examine such diverse topics as sound design, cinematography and the importance of authenticity in certain types of storytelling.
The series, described by Dennis Wharton, NAB’s executive vice president of Com-munications, offers “a comprehensive education experience and provides attendees a peek at how some of the industry’s leading talents perform their craft.”
For “Fifty Shades of Sound,” Mix magazine’s editor Tom Kenny will speak with sound design experts Becky Sullivan, Kelly Oxford, Anna Behlmer and Terry Porter to discuss their work on the worldwide box office blockbuster “Fifty Shades of Grey.” The
Master Series Discusses Importance of Storytelling
20FCCRadio and TV broadcasters are facing several regulatory issues.
32HONORSTV Luncheon honors several for making TV part of the American lifestyle.
81FINANCENew conference spotlights opportunities for investors.
Show continued on 6 ❱
Storytelling continued on 18 ❱
OTT continued on 10 ❱
Owen Wilson as “M. Chuck” in “The Grand Budapest Hotel.”
Phot
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Sea
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01-38_NABDN15_D1.indd 1 3/31/15 3:40 PM
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The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Tuesday–Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 2Tuesday
April 14, 2015
Up and Over: OTT Hits Its Stride
BY SUSAN ASHWORTHTV TECHNOLOGY
An influential mix of cord-shaving, viewer expectations and mobile adoption has pushed the programming market into an entirely new space; one where the traditional broadcast and cable model is being augmented, and in some cases, replaced by a segmented, niche-oriented, targeted viewing market.
That was the focus of the Super Session “Constant Cravings — Using OTT to Win the 76
CONVERSATIONMel Karmazin shares his insights on the current and future state of media.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY MIKE MALONEBROADCASTING & CABLE
Broadcasters are up against an ever-widening sea of competitors; yet their role in the communi-ties they serve has never been more important, said Gordon Smith, NAB president and CEO, in his opening address at NAB Show.
Partisan shouting matches and celebrity mis-deeds characterize cable television and the vast Web universe, Smith said. Newspapers are op-erating in a severely weakened state. Meanwhile, broadcast television and radio, he said, remain trusted sources of content.
“While citizens may be feeling bombarded by
BY JOHN MERLIDIGITAL VIDEO
Award-winning cinematographer Rob-ert Yeoman, ASC, told a Monday ses-sion of the Creative Master Series that one of the more gratifying and chal-lenging aspects of working with Wes Anderson on “The Grand Budapest Hotel” was dealing with no fewer than three aspect ratios — 1.37:1, 1.85:1 and anamorphic.
Film over digital continues to be the preference of choice for both Yeoman and Anderson, who have collaborated on seven motion pictures, including
“Budapest,” which was nominated for the Best Picture Oscar for 2014. In a conversation with host Jon D. Witmer, managing editor of American Cinema-tographer, Yeoman said it was Ander-son who came up with the concept of using different aspect ratios to indicate different time periods in the film, in-cluding the older 1.37.1, which was a favorite aspect ratio for motion pic-tures until the early 1950s.
While filming most exterior and some interior scenes for “Budapest” in Dresden and other locales in Ger-many (to represent the fictitious Re-
Robert Yeoman
Checking Into ‘Grand Budapest Hotel’
10THE ARTCreative Master Series delves into sound and artistic approach.
32RADIO LUNCHEONMarilu Henner keynotes and Kevin Ryder and Gene “Bean” Baxter are inducted into the NAB Broadcasting Hall of Fame.
Opening continued on 3 ❱
EXTRATuesday
See pages E1-E16
Evolve or Lose Relevance, Smith Tells Show Crowd
OTT continued on 83 ❱
Budapest continued on 84 ❱
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The Official Newspaper of the 2015 NAB Show | April 11-16, 2015 | Las Vegas Convention Center
NAB Show Exhibit Hours: Wednesday 9 a.m.–6 p.m. | Thursday 9 a.m.–2 p.m. | www.nabshowdailynews.com
DAY 3WednesdayApril 15, 2015
IP Transition‘A Big Deal’
BY GEORGE WINSLOWBROADCASTING & CABLE
A number of top technologists highlighted the potential of IP to revolutionize the TV indus-try during Tuesday’s Super Session “Television’s Transition to an All-IP Future — Why It’s a Big Deal.”
Moderator Deborah McAdams, the exec-utive editor of TV Technology, set the stage by noting that for the first time in nearly two decades of covering the industry “tech issues were the biggest story of the convention” and that “the transition to IP is turning into one of
2015 NAB SHOW
103,042REPORTED ATTENDANCEExhibit space exceeds 1 million net sq. ft.
Exhibitor Listings 42-64
Bus Schedule & Hospitality Suites 46
Session Schedule 66
BY JOHN MERLIDIGITAL VIDEO
Oscar-nominated cinematographer Tom Stern, ASC, AFC, key-noted a crowded Tuesday session in the Creative Master Series and anecdotally discussed his decades of working in tandem with director/actor Clint Eastwood — most notably their collabora-tion on last year’s “American Sniper,” which was nominated for six Academy Awards, including Best Picture.
Stern began his career in film as a gaffer, where he said he could stand off to the side and observe interactions on the set among actors, the director and the cinematographer. He de-scribed that job as quite different from being a director of pho-tography, a position to which he transitioned and where he be-came responsible for calling the shots, so to speak. He served as
Shooting Blockbuster ‘American Sniper’
10STYLECreative Master series ends with a look at the creative process and online video distribution.
18HACKS AND BREACHESSuper Session explores cybersecurity and how to make systems secure.
38TECH LUNCHEONJohn McAfee keynotes, and the NAB Engineering Achievement and Digital Leadership Awards will be presented.
Session Gets to The Heart of ‘The Walking
Dead’BY CRISTINA CLAPP
DIGITAL VIDEO
Introducing Tuesday morn-ing’s session, “More of What
You Crave: The World of ‘The Walking Dead,’” to a stand-ing-room-only crowd, NAB President and CEO Gordon
Dead continued on 3 ❱Steven Yeun as Glenn Rhee in “The Walking Dead”
Phot
o by
Gen
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ge/A
MC
IP continued on 84 ❱
Sniper continued on 83 ❱
Cinematographer Tom Stern (left) and David
Geffner, Executive Editor of ICG Magazine
1.3.5.6.83.84_NABDN15_D3.indd 1 4/14/15 8:05 PM
Pre-Show
This special, expanded live centerfold section will appear exclusively in the Tuesday edition and is 100% dedicated to exhibit coverage. Printed on glossy paper, the Tuesday News Extra will stand out and give readers a feel for the excitement of the show floor. Advertise in this section and take advantage of single-day ad rates and increased visibility via the morning newspaper’s NAB Show hotel distribution.
Ad Close:
April 1, 2016
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April 8, 2016
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Tuesday News Extra
One-Day OptionApril 14, 2015
EXTRATuesday
01_NAB15DN.D2X.indd 1 4/13/15 9:22 PM
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