Monday, March 5, 2018

Tampa Radio: Nielsen vs Bubba Court Date Pushed Back

Bubba The Love Sponge
Today's long scheduled starting date in U-S Middle District Court in Tampa for Nielsen's $1M ratings tampering case against Todd Alan Clem (aka Bubba The Love Sponge) has been delayed.  It now appears the trial won't get started until March 19th at the earliest. Both sides have been told they would get one week's notice for the start.

Nielsen filed suit in October 2015 alleging fraud for tampering in the ratings process. The ratings service says Clem tried to manipulate ratings via a listener, who was in the PPM respondent pool in the Tampa market.  At the time, his show aired on Beasley Media's WBRN 98.7 FM.  It now airs on Genesis Communications WWBA 820 AM & on a translator at 98.3 FM.

Stakes are high for both sides.  For Nielsen, its important that PPM rating results are unbiased and accurate.  For Clem, a conviction of rating manipulation could not only cost him considerable damages, but potential advertisers could shy away from Clem's show because of questions concerning his ratings.

The numbers generated via the PPM process are used to sell time to advertisers, meaning they play a significant role in how radio stations make money as well as how hosts such as Clem are compensated.

Nielsen has faced scrutiny by both clients and ad agencies about the accuracy of its PPM system.

Both sides have made hefty accusations at one another in the buildup to the trial.  Clem counter-sued Nielsen, and his legal team has implied that Nielsen has had incidents before in other markets, as well as problems with quality control.

Both Nielsen and Clem have filed motions last  requesting certain evidence and testimony be excluded from the trial.

Several of Nielsen's motions have to do with quality control issues the company has faced outside the Tampa market that it insists are not relevant to Clem’s alleged ratings tampering activity—which the trial is set to focus on. Clem’s filings, meanwhile, aim to keep character issues of witnesses out of the courtroom, ironically, including Clem himself.

Clem's lawyers have asked the court to keep his previous “controversies and allegations of misconduct” from being presented, because they are “irrelevant and immaterial” and beyond the scope of the trial. His legal team worries that including his past legal matters could confuse the issues pertinent to this trial, mislead the jury, waste time and prejudice their client.

Nielsen also wants to keep evidence about Voltair out of the courtroom. According to InsideRadio, Clem apparently wants to use the infamous audio processor, which is said to increase the likelihood of Nielsen’s watermarks being picked up by the PPM, to expose technological deficiencies of Nielsen’s PPM system. But Nielsen says introducing evidence about Voltair could “create a side-show” that would confuse the issues, mislead the jury and unfairly prejudice Nielsen.

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