NAB 2011

Eddie Fritts To Receive NAB’s DSA

The longtime National Association of Broadcasters president will be presented with the group’s top honor at the opening keynote of this year’s convention in Las Vegas on April 11.

The National Association of Broadcasters announced today that Eddie Fritts will receive the NAB Distinguished Service Award during the 2011 NAB Show.

Fritts, who served as NAB president for 23 years, will be honored for his leadership in securing a variety of public policy victories that helped sustain broadcasting’s future during an era of intense competition and unprecedented change. The award will be presented during the opening keynote session on April 11 in Las Vegas.

“For more than two decades, Eddie Fritts carried the banner for free and local broadcasting on Capitol Hill with integrity and distinction,” said NAB President-CEO Gordon Smith. “Eddie helped put NAB on the map as an advocacy force in Washington, and his accomplishments on behalf of radio and television stations — and the listeners and viewers that we serve — will be felt for decades to come. I’m honored to follow in his footsteps as head of NAB, and we are thrilled to present him with the prestigious Distinguished Service Award.”

NAB Joint Board Chairman Steve Newberry called Fritts “a remarkable leader and a relentless champion for over-the-air broadcasting. His bipartisan bridge-building on Capitol Hill and string of legislative victories stand as a testament to Eddie’s understated Southern charm and advocacy skills.”

From his early roots as a small market Mississippi radio broadcaster, Fritts became interested in Washington policy issues and was a frequent visitor to Capitol Hill and the FCC. He was elected to the NAB Radio Board and later elected NAB Joint Board chairman. As president-CEO of NAB from 1982 until 2006, Fritts led the association to a series of legislative and regulatory victories, including the must-carry/retransmission consent provision included in the 1992 Cable Act, securing loaned spectrum for the transition from analog to digital television, and regulatory reform in the 1996 Communications Act that helped radio and television stations grow their businesses.

After more than two decades at NAB, Fritts launched The Fritts Group in 2006 where he continues his work in Washington as a political consultant offering strategic counsel to clients in government relations, international affairs and public relations.

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Each year the NAB Distinguished Service Award recognizes members of the broadcast community who have made significant and lasting contributions to the broadcasting industry. Previous award recipients include Michael J. Fox, Mary Tyler Moore, President Ronald Reagan, Edward R. Murrow, Bob Hope, Walter Cronkite, Oprah Winfrey and Charles Osgood, among others.


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Jonathan Yeh says:

February 7, 2011 at 12:15 pm

Hot Damn Eddie! Well deserved.