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| 53-0114600 | |
| Legal status | 501(c)(6) |
| Location | |
President | Curtis LeGeyt |
| Revenue | |
| Website | www |
TheNational Association of Broadcasters (NAB) is atrade association andlobby group representing the interests of commercial and non-commercial over-the-airradio andtelevisionbroadcasters in theUnited States. The NAB represents more than 8,300terrestrial radio andtelevision stations as well asbroadcast networks.
As of 2022, the president and CEO of the NAB is Curtis LeGeyt.[2]

The NAB was founded as theNational Association of Radio Broadcasters (NARB) in April 1923 at theDrake Hotel inChicago. The association's founder and first president wasEugene F. McDonald Jr., who also launched theZenith corporation.[3] In 1951 it changed its name to theNational Association of Radio and Television Broadcasters (NARTB) to include the television industry. In 1958 it adopted its current name, "National Association of Broadcasters".[4]
The NAB worked to establish acommercial radio system in the United States. The system was set up in August 1928 with the establishment of General Order 40—a radioreallocation scheme by theFederal Radio Commission which awarded the choicest frequencies and broadcast times to the then-emerging commercial radio industry. In the wake of General Order 40, a loose coalition of educators,nonprofit broadcasters,labor unions, andreligious groups coalesced to oppose the NAB and their allies through the 1920s and 1930s, and to develop a public, nonprofit, license-funded radio system without commercials (similar to what happened with the BBC). The coalition claimed that the commercial industry would only promote profitable programming, thereby reducing the quality and future potential of radio broadcasting.
Not having the political connections, resources, or publicity of the NAB and the commercial radio industry, the non-profit coalition eventually lost the fight with the passage of theCommunications Act of 1934.[5]
TheNational Independent Broadcasters were formed in 1939 as part of the NAB, to represent stations that were not associated with any network, but the group split off in 1941.[6][7]
Manysatellite radio enthusiasts have criticized the NAB for lobbying against legislation approvals for those services. The NAB protested the FCC's approval of both satellite radio services in the United States—XM andSirius—and furthermore criticized the 2008merger of the two companies, calling the merged company a "potentialmonopoly".[8]
In 2005, the NAB, together with the Association for Maximum Service Television Stations, Inc. (MSTV), commenced development of a prototype high quality, low costdigital-to-analog converter box for terrestrialdigital television reception.[9] The result of this project was a specification for the converter box, which was then adopted by theNational Telecommunications and Information Administration as atechnical requirement foreligible converter boxes for the Administration'sDigital-to-Analog Converter Box Coupon Program.
The NAB has lobbied against the use ofwhite spaces, unused broadcast spectrum lying between broadcast channels, for wireless broadband internet and other digital use. The NAB has claimed that use of white space will interfere with existing broadcast spectrum, even though tests by the Federal Communications Commission at levels far stronger than that being advocated for in policy circles have not supported such claims.[10] Indeed, the FCC has recommended the use of white spaces for broadband and other digital use.[11]In 2011 the NAB funded an advertising campaign titled "The Future of TV",[12] advocating for the private ownership of the spectrum, framed as a threat to free television.
In mid-2014, an NAB advertising campaign against a Congressional threat appeared, advocating viewers to defeat a cable-TV lobby.[13][14]

NAB's annual spring convention is theNAB Show. It typically draws over 100,000 industry professionals.[15] NAB also manages theNAB Radio Show which is held each autumn and draws over 3,000 radio professionals. At the 2010 and 2011 NAB shows, popular technology included stereoscopic video and editing software—a demand inspired by James Cameron'sAvatar; point-of-view cameras, and DSLR cameras boasting shallow Depth of Field. Other strides in nonlinear editing technology included archival film restoration, digital audio mixing improvements, motion stabilization of hand-held footage and rotoscoping with one click.
The annualNAB Show returned to Las Vegas April 23–27, 2022, after a two-year absence due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Preliminary attendance figures indicated the show attracted more than 50,000 visitors from 155 countries.[16]
In 1952, the NAB created theCode of Practices for Television Broadcasters, which banned profanity, the negative portrayal of family life, irreverence for God and religion, illicit sex, drunkenness and biochemical addiction, presentation of cruelty, detailed techniques of crime, the use of horror for its own sake, and the negative portrayal of law enforcement officials, among others.[17] It was enforced by a committee appointed by President of the NAB.[18]
After the courts struck down the Code as unconstitutional in 1983, the NAB board of directors issued a brief "Statement of Principles of Radio and Television Broadcasters" that encourages broadcasters to "exercise responsible and careful judgment" in the selection of material relating to violence, drug abuse, and sex.[19]
On March 1, 2022 the NAB called "on broadcasters to cease carrying any state-sponsored programming with ties to the Russian government" in response to theRussian invasion of Ukraine the week prior.[20]
The NAB presents several annual awards:
Organizations similar to the NAB exist in individualU.S. states, including Georgia Association of Broadcasters (GAB) inGeorgia, and theIllinois Broadcasters Association (IBA), in Illinois. InCanada, theCanadian Association of Broadcasters (CAB) has a similar role.