Monday, October 31, 2016

Chicago Radio: Jeff England Named VP/MM For Hubbard Cluster

Jeff England
Hubbard Radio President/COO Drew Horowitz today announced that Jeff England was named VP/Market Manager for Hubbard Radio-Chicago.

Hubbard Radio operates four radio stations in Chicago: WTMX (101.9 FM The Mix), WDRV/WWDV 99.7/96.9 FM The Drive and WSHE 100.3 FM.

Commented Horowitz, “We are thrilled to have someone with Jeff’s experience and competitive spirit assuming the leadership mantle in our largest market. What makes our choice of Jeff even more gratifying is we were able to promote from within which is always our preference.”

England is a 28 year veteran of radio and was most recently the VP/Director of Sales for Hubbard Radio in Phoenix. Prior to joining Hubbard, England was the President/Market Manager and DOS in Phoenix for Clear Channel.

His career started in Atlanta where he worked for Shamrock Broadcasting, Jacor Broadcasting, and Clear Channel in sales and sales management roles.

“I am beyond thrilled with this opportunity,” commented England. “We have legacy brands and great people at Hubbard Chicago. I look forward to working with our team to grow our audiences, our clients’ businesses, and serve our community. I will also be shopping for a new winter wardrobe!”

Orlando Radio: WTKS Morning Personality Lands 'Walking Dead' Role

Carlos Navarro
After 15-auditions, a member of the WTKS 104.1 FM Monsters Morning Show has landed a role in the AMC's original series 'The Walking Dead'.

Carlos Alberto Navarro made his premier appearance Sunday night as viewers found out what The Kingdom and King Ezekiel was all about.

Navarro made his announcement on his Facebook page.  His role is that a Alvaro, a Knight of the Kingdom or a “Kingdomer.”

The new Walking Dead cast member has been in film and TV for some time. He has several TV commercials to his credit over the past few years.

Navarro  is a also a profesional photographer who specializes in artistic photography and lifestyle documentary shots. His work has been featured in several national publications and websites.

He was the Florida Lottery spokesperson playing the part of the LSC (Lottery Shopping Channel) as Kevin Sanchez in all of the TV and Radio commercials.


He is one of the few comedians that can perform his stand up comedy act fluently in English and in Spanish.

As for the Walking Dead role, Navarro admits there were times he wanted give up his quest to join the show.  Many people told him he never would get on the show.  However, his perseverance eventually paid off.

Nielsen: N/T, Sports Lead During October

Election Day is just about a week away, and as one could expect the effects of the final weeks of the campaign for the White House are rippling across radio.

Americans are tuning in, turning on and consuming the steady stream of news and information available across platforms. This thirst for coverage of the U.S. presidential race is evident in everything from the debate viewership numbers to this month’s radio listening results for the News/Talk format.

The release of Nielsen’s portable people meter (PPM) ratings for October reveal that News/Talk stations are continuing to grow their audience, as has been the case over much of the past year. This month’s 9.9% share of audience among all listeners 6 and older is a sharp uptick from a year ago (9.1% in October 2015), and represents significant growth for the format from the summer months of June and July, when News/Talk was a full share point lower (8.9% in June).


These results show a rising tide for News/Talk, with audience growth happening across the board. And while this growth is expected during a presidential election year, it’s worth noting that the 25-54 audience to the format reached its highest point this month (7.3%) in more than three years.

Radio Still Accounts for Almost Half of Music Listening


While streaming music has certainly taken off over the last few years, radio continues to reign as the go-to music listening format and device for US consumers, according to eMarketer.

Almost half of time spent listening to music happens on AM/FM radio, followed by owned music and then streaming platforms, like Pandora and Spotify, according to research this motnh.

In May 2016, Edison Research studied more than 8,500 US consumers ages 13 and older and how much time they spent listening to music.

Almost half (or 44%) of all time spent listening to music was spent on the AM/FM radio format, followed by listening to music participants had purchased (including CDs and digital music files) at 18%. Streaming accounted for 17% of music listening time.

Devicewise, AM/FM radio came on top again. More than 40% of music listening time was spent with traditional radio receivers. Meanwhile, 23% was spent with mobile devices and 16% with desktop and laptop PCs.


Despite the evidence that radio continues to have a hold on the largest share of the music-listening market, subscriptions to streaming music sites are growing globally. In separate April research from International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, an estimated 68 million people were music service subscribers in 2015, compared to 41 million the year prior.

150 Stations To Debut New Blair Garner Show Tonight

Cumulus Media announces that The Blair Garner Show will debut today across over 150 radio stations nationwide.

The all-new overnight radio program, hosted by National and Country Radio Hall of Fame On-Air Personality, Blair Garner, will air Monday through Sunday from Midnight-5AM. The Blair Garner Show broadcasts from Cumulus Media’s NASH Campus in Nashville and is syndicated nationally by Westwood One. Garner has dedicated the new show to those special Americans hard at work while the rest of the world sleeps. Garner’s first guest will be country legend, George Strait.

Garner said: “15 million Americans work the late and overnight shifts… 15 million! These folks are the backbone of our country — the ones who dig a little deeper to get ahead, and get the job done. We owe them a lot, and this show is our attempt to thank them for all that they do. They are a special bunch that deserve more than jukebox radio.”

Garner added: “It also means a lot that someone like George Strait would agree to be our first guest. The man couldn’t have been more gracious. And from the leading edge of Country, Sam Hunt gave us a live version of his number-one hit, “Take Your Time.” It is really an electric show."

Mike McVay, Senior Vice President, Content & Programming, Cumulus Media and Westwood One said: “"Blair originated the concept of overnight entertainment for country listeners. His homecoming enables stations around the world the opportunity to build an even larger audience for their morning shows. His talent and total dedication to the third shift worker makes this show unique."

For more information, visit: www.theblairgarnershow.com. To get The Blair Garner Show in your market, contact Donny Walker at: DWalker@westwoodone.com or at 615-727-6987.

Things Just Got Worse For ESPN


The biggest business story in American sports this fall isn't the declining NFL ratings or anything that's happening on the field, court, or ice, it's the collapse in ESPN subscribers, which reflect a larger trend in the collapse of cable subscribers in general, according to the website outkickthecoverage.com.

Lasrt week Nielsen announced its subscriber numbers for November 2016 and those numbers were the worst in the history of ESPN's existence as a cable company -- the worldwide leader in sports lost 621,000 cable subscribers.

That's the most subscribers ESPN has ever lost in a month according to Nielsen estimates and it represents a terrifying and troubling trend for the company, an acceleration of subscriber loss that represents a doubling of the average losses over the past couple of years, when ESPN has been losing in the neighborhood of 300,000 subscribers a month.

These 621,000 lost subscribers in the past month alone lead to a drop in revenue of over $52 million and continue the alarming subscriber decline at ESPN, reports Outkick The Coverage.

Couple these subscriber declines with a 24% drop in Monday Night Football ratings this fall, the crown jewel of ESPN programming, and it's fair to call October of 2016 the worst month in ESPN's history. But this isn't just a story about ESPN, the rapid decline in cable subscribers is hitting every channel, sports and otherwise. It just impacts ESPN the most because ESPN costs every cable and satellite subscriber roughly $7 a month, over triple the next most expensive cable channel.

Nielsen cable (includes satellite & telco services) coverage estimates for the measured cable sports networks for November 2016:

Source: Sports TV Ratings


All data ©Nielsen (data provided by a variety of TV network sources and not directly from Nielsen)

So What's Wrong With ESPN?

The problems with ESPN are not new or hard to understand. In fact, the fans have made their issues with the program quite clear.

Seeking Alpha Media sampled Quotes from dissatisfied ESPN subscribers:
  • "I would pay ESPN $10 a month for an ESPN streaming app that had access to all the college football games (no blackouts), alone, as long as it didn't require a cable subscription. The current ESPN streaming app is garbage, compared to Netflix, and other on-demand interfaces. It's not available on my Smart TV. The quality of the streaming is terrible. It's slow to bring up video. The ads are repetitive and annoying, and it's a second class citizen with wait screens while local ads are up on broadcast."
  • "ESPN is failing to deliver internet content effectively. The 'watchespn' site/app is clunky, slow, and sometimes takes multiple provider logins to work. When you see how simple it is to watch the NFL on Twitter vs. the 5 step broke process of ESPN online - the choice is clear. It's too bad they won't upgrade basic site functions since they cover the most sports globally, including games with expected low viewership...YouTube has been an easier outlet for some to broadcast live."
  • My wife and I "cut the cord" as it were this year, now with OTA TV and a Netflix and Amazon prime account. OTA reliably gets you local and national news, Netflix and Amazon between them reliably get you movies and recent television shows. And of course with Amazon you can rent/buy stuff.
  • Cord cutting is a big part of this, but there is a cultural aspect in play as well: ESPN has been increasingly pushing a progressive narrative on its viewers, many, perhaps most, of whom are conservatives. The NFL is seeing the same thing, with big declines in viewership since the national anthem protests began.
  • I see a lot of newly developed/developing antipathy towards professional sports among my right-wing acquaintances. What's funny is that the reasoning is often very similar to what my left-wing acquaintances had to say back when I was at Berkeley. As with the libertarian -> alt-right shift of the last five years, I think it is one of the more interesting sociological developments I am aware of, and largely unremarked upon by the press.

Philly Radio: WIP Could Be Just A Stop-Over For Chris Carlin

Chris Carlin
Longtime New York sports radio and television veteran Chris Carlin has signed on to become the new afternoon host at Sports Radio 94 WIP 94.1 FM.  Although not officially announced by the statiob, Carlin is expetced to start Monday, November 7.

Carlin is expected to team WIP midday host and former Eagles linebacker Ike Reese for PM Drive/

Since 2008, Carline been appearing on he SNY television show ‘Loud Mouths’. His last show there will be November 4.

He also hosted Mets Pre and Post-game shows on SNY for a period of five years.

Prior to becoming a familiar face on New York sports television, Carlin was a popular voice on WFAN 660 AM in New York. He filled in on talk shows on the station, worked as an update anchor for “Imus In The Morning”, and produced Mike Francesa for six years.

He has kept busy by hosting national radio shows for SiriusXM.

Carlin and Reese will be tasked with providing stability to WIP in afternoons and helping the station make inroads against 97.5 The Fanatic drive time host Mike Missanelli. The Fanatic has beaten WIP in the ratings in afternoons for the majority of 2016 when the show was hosted by the recently departed Josh Innes.

Lloyd Carroll at nysportsday.com, speculates Carlin won't be investing in property in the Philly Area. He thinks CBS Radio execs are sending Carlin to Philly as prep to succeed Mike Francesa on WFAN 660 AM / 101.9 FM.  The Pope has made it clear his final day on WFAN will be December 15, 2017.  Time will tell.

Report: Murky Path Ahead For Emmis

Jeff Smulyan
Shareholders who recently foiled Emmis CEO Jeff Smulyan’s latest effort to take the company private are raving about the potential of the company’s in-house products—Next Radio and Digonex Technologies. But, accoridng to the Indy Business Journal,  many industry analysts aren’t sure either will turn a profit in the next few years.

Still, there’s almost unanimous agreement on this: Emmis will continue to chug forward as long as Smulyan drives the locomotive. That sort of reliance on one person is a bit daunting, shareholders admit.

“The future of this company is whatever Jeff wants it to be,” said Robert Unmacht, a partner at RTK Media Inc., a Tennessee-based investment banking consultancy focused on broadcasting and technology.

“If he wants to sell off his assets and retire, this company, no doubt, goes away,” Unmacht said. “If he wants to continue, there’s little doubt that, in some form, Emmis will continue. There’s no questioning Jeff is a bright guy. He’s found some kind of path forward in this industry for a long time.”

There’s a nagging thought, though, that could rain on the sunny outlook.

“I have never heard one thing about how this company will operate beyond Jeff,” Unmacht said. “That’s a real concern for investors. Is there an exit strategy?”

The 69-year-old Smulyan has no plans to retire. During an hour-long interview with IBJ, he said he never gives retirement a fleeting thought. Nor, he said, does he entertain any thoughts of selling out.

But most startling is that the company has no clear succession plan.

“I don’t have an exit plan. I want to keep doing this,” Smulyan said.

That’s fine, Unmacht said, “until he can’t. We all have our stopping point.” And it appears the Emmis board has at least considered the possibility.

Read More Now

The Turtles vs SiriusXM Case Heads To Court

The latest battle over pre-1972 songs begins with pre-trial conference scheduled for a week from today.  The trial is set to start November 15, according to The Hollywood Reporter.

Nearly half a century after pop group The Turtles released the chart-topping hit "Happy Together," two of them are about to take center stage in a different kind of arena: California federal court.

For the past three years, Mark Volman and Howard Kaylan, known as Flo & Eddie, have been fighting a legal battle on behalf of artists who created songs prior to February 15, 1972 — the day the federal government granted copyrights to music.

These pre-72 sound recordings are a centerpiece of digital channels like SiriusXM Radio's '60s on 6 — but until recently rightsholders weren't being compensated because the tunes weren't federally protected. So Flo & Eddie filed several class action lawsuits against Sirius to seek vindication under state laws.

So far in the California fight, U.S. District Judge Philip Gutierrez has already granted summary judgment in Flo & Eddie's favor, finding Sirius' use of the music violates public performance rights.

Battles in Florida and New York have seen split results. Sirius is currently appealing a Turtles win in the Empire State, meanwhile the 11th Circuit has asked the Florida Supreme Court to rule on an appeal to the Sirius win there.

Sirius paid $210 million last summer to settle the issue of pre-72 recordings with the major record labels, which resolved the dispute for some members of Flo & Eddie's class.

The Turtles will next take on Sirius in California to determine what damages, if any, are owed to the remaining class members.

The Turtles are represented by Henry Gradstein, along with his colleagues from Gradstein & Marzano and attorneys from Susman Godfrey. An Oct. 7 court filing argues that because the court has already found liability on claims relating to public performance of the works he will not pursue the claims that Sirius improperly duplicated, reproduced and copied the recordings. The amount of damages being sought has been redacted, but is tied directly to the satellite company's local subscriber revenue.

Flo & Eddie also want the court to issue an injunction that would require Sirius to license pre-1972 recordings moving forward or, alternatively, issue an award of future damages based on revenue projections. (Read the full filing here.)

On the other side, Daniel Petrocelli is leading the battle on behalf of the satellite music giant. He argues that Sirius openly and continuously performed the songs for more than a decade without any complaint from class members and The Turtles won't be able to prove that any of them were damaged.

Apple Being Urged To Make Rival Bid For Time Warner

Goldman Sachs is trying to persuade Apple to make a rival bid for Time Warner, a source with direct knowledge of the situation told The NY Post.

“They are freaking out trying to convince Apple to come in,” the source said. Goldman has been left on the sidelines in advising on AT&T’s $85 billion agreement to acquire Time Warner.

Cook’s company has expressed interest in buying Time Warner in the recent past, and there is some belief that judging from his comments this week, he will not let AT&T carry the day.

On Apple’s earnings call on Wednesday, he said, “We are open to acquisitions of any size that are of strategic value, where we can deliver better products to our customers and innovate more. And so we look at a whole variety of companies, and based on that, we choose whether to move forward or not. But we’re definitely open, and we definitely look.”

“I would confirm that television has intense interest with me and many other people here. In terms of owning content and creating content.”

Goldman declined comment.

AT&T/TW Could Become Nation’s Largest Advertiser

The new AT&T/Time Warner won’t just be out in the market selling advertising, they’ll be the nation’s biggest buyers of media, statistics show.

The NY Post is reporting that if AT&T survives regulatory scrutiny without having to divest too many assets, the new AT&T will become the nation’s No. 1 advertiser — leaping past Procter & Gamble, the maker of toilet paper, toothpaste and laundry detergent.

The mega-merger is expected to take a year to close.

Dallas-based AT&T spent $3.9 billion on US ads in 2015, according to Advertising Age data, more than double the $1.7 billion spent by Time Warner.

Together, the combined companies will leap frog over P&G’s $4.3 billion ad spend and into the No. 1 spot with a combined total of roughly $5.6 billion.

AT&T ads for its DirecTV unit are currently on the air. The firm’s new product, DirecTV Now, an online cable-like bundle of 100 channels is set to get a marketing push for its Nov. 4 launch.

Pirate CD Sales Still Plague Music Industry

Pirate CDs (Reuters Photo)
Even in the digital era there are plenty of music fans who still buy old-fashioned compact discs for more than $10 a pop. But, reports The Wall Street Journal,  the money that shoppers have been spending on CDs lately hasn’t necessarily been going to the artists and record labels who created the music.

In the latest challenge for the battered music industry, pirates are flooding Amazon.com Inc. and other online retailers with counterfeit CDs that often cost nearly as much as the official versions and increasingly are difficult to distinguish from the real goods.

Earlier this month, the American Association of Independent Music alerted its indie-label members about Chinese pirates who have been selling knockoff CDs on Amazon for slightly less than the cost of legitimate albums, bringing illicit copies to market within about two weeks of an album’s release date, and sometimes getting them featured in Amazon’s “buy box.”

Although CD sales accounted for only about 13% of revenue for record labels in the U.S. for the first half of 2016, they accounted for nearly 40% of global revenue for the $15 billion recorded music industry last year, and still make up the bulk of sales in top music markets including France, Germany and Japan, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry.

In late August, the Recording Industry Association of America launched a study to determine the severity of the problem.

Starting with Amazon due to its size, the record-label trade group’s investigators searched for music on the site in a range of categories, from new releases to greatest hits, and placed orders for the CDs that came up in the top search results for each type of album. Of a total of 194 CDs delivered, 44 turned out to be counterfeit—including 18 counterfeit CDs in orders that were fulfilled by Amazon itself, not third-party sellers.

Greatest-hits albums were the most likely to be fake, with 28 of the 36 greatest-hits collections in question proving illegitimate.

Read More Now (Paywall)

Report: Funk Band Collage Sues Over 'Uptown Funk'

“Uptown Funk” collaborators Mark Ronson and Bruno Mars are being sued for alleged copyright infringement, according to TMZ. Collage, a funk band that released music in the early 1980s, filed the complaint.

According to Billboard, the group claims “Uptown Funk” and its own 1983 song “Young Girls” are “almost indistinguishable” and states that Ronson and Mars have previously mentioned being influenced by early ‘80s Minneapolis electro-funk and soul music.



The complaint, obtained by Pitchfork, specifies the following: “Upon information and belief, many of the main instrumental attributes and themes of ‘Uptown Funk’ are deliberately and clearly copied from ‘Young Girls,’ including, but not limited to, the distinct funky specifically noted and timed consistent guitar riffs present throughout the compositions, virtually if not identical bass notes and sequence, rhythm, structure, crescendo of horns and synthesizers rendering the compositions almost indistinguishable if played over each other and strikingly similar if played in consecutively.”

R.I.P.: Country Songwriter Curly Putman

Curly Putman
Claude 'Curly' Putman Jr., who wrote what some consider the greatest country song ever, died Sunday at 85.

Putman wrote "He Stopped Loving Her Today" with Bobby Braddock, which George Jones turned into a hit. Putnam also had a hand in writing Tammy Wynette's "D-I-V-O-R-C-E" with Braddock as well. With Billy Sherrill, he penned "My Elusive Dreams," a hit for Wynette and David Houston.

His first hit was "Green, Green Grass of Home," a 1964 hit for Porter Wagoner. Many others recorded the song as well including Roger Miller, Elvis Presley, Kenny Rogers, Don Williams, Burl Ives, Johnny Darrell, Gram Parsons, Joan Baez, Jerry Lee Lewis, The Grateful Dead, Johnny Cash, Dean Martin, Merle Haggard, Bobby Bare, Joe Tex, Nana Mouskouri and Tom Jones.

Putman was born Nov. 20, 1930 in Princeton, Ala. He spent four years in the Navy before moving to Nashville.


Putman's Nasvhille-area farm was also the inspiration for the Wings' hit "Junior's Farm".

Paul and Linda McCartney wrote “Junior’s Farm” as an homage to Claude “Curly” Putman, Jr., who’s farm they were staying at in Lebanon, Tennessee, along with Wings, in 1974. The band recorded the song at Nashville’s Sound Shop and released it as the A-side to a 7” single backed with “Sally G” in October, and the song went to number three on the U.S. charts.

October 31 Radio History




In 1912...actress & singing cowgirl Dale Evans was born (Frances Butts) in Uvalde Texas. She was Roy Rogers’ partner in life, the movies, radio & TV.  Dale wrote Roy’s theme song, Happy Trails to You. She died at 88 on Feb 7, 2001 of congestive heart failure.

In 1942..."White Christmas" by Bing Crosby hit No. 1 on the pop singles chart, where it stayed for 11 weeks.

In 1942...CBS radio debuted Thanks to the Yanks, a wartime themed game show starring Bob Hawk, the quizmaster who had introduced Take it Or Leave It to radio, the original $64 Question show.

In 1963...The Beatles returned to London from Sweden to be greeted by hundreds of screaming fans and a mob of photographers. Ed Sullivan happened to be at Heathrow, and was struck by the sight of Beatlemania in full swing. This was the day he determined to have the Fab Four appear on his Sunday night CBS TV variety show, thus introducing The Beatles to North America.


In 1968..The War of the Worlds was a radio drama, originally aired by Buffalo, New York radio station Top40 WKBW 1520 AM on October 31, 1968. It was a modernized version of the original radio drama aired by CBS in 1938.

WKBW program director Jefferson Kaye (d. 2012), a big fan of the original Orson Welles version from three decades earlier, wondered what The War of the Worlds would sound like if it was made using up-to-date (for 1968) radio news equipment, covering the "story" of a Martian invasion. Up until this point, most radio renditions of the 1938 broadcast were simply script re-readings with different actors or had minor variations to account for significantly different geographical locations. Kaye decided to disregard the original script entirely, move the action to Grand Island, New York, and use actual WKBW disc jockeys and news reporters as actors.

Other changes reflected the changing state of the industry: instead of the old-time radio programming fare of the 1930s, WKBW's War of the Worlds broadcast was interwoven into the station's Top40 programming.



Initially, a script was written for the news reporters to act out; however, upon hearing the rehearsals, it was evident that the news reporters were not adept at scripted radio acting. So instead, Kaye wrote an outline based on the events that were to occur, and the news reporters were then asked to describe the events as they would covering an actual news story. The results were much more realistic for its time, and this was the process used for the actual broadcast.

Jeff Kaye
Despite an exhaustive advertising campaign by WKBW for this show, several people were still convinced upon listening to it that the events unfolding in the show were genuine. Among those fooled included a local newspaper, several small-town police officers and even the Canadian military, which dispatched troops to the Peace Bridge. Although the public concern over the legitimacy of the broadcast was not as great as in 1938, creator Kaye and director Dan Kriegler feared that they were going to lose their jobs as a result of the broadcast; Kaye claimed that he actually submitted his resignation, certain that he was going to be fired the next day. However, no one involved in the broadcast was fired and the resignation was not accepted.

It was a generally conceived notion before the broadcast that a mass hoax, even one as unintentional as the 1938 program, could never be duplicated again by a lone radio broadcast. The rise of television as a preferred news medium was a factor in this notion that radio could no longer produce such a drastic response from its audience. The fact that the WKBW broadcast could unintentionally re-create that response on a smaller scale surprised many people and garnered a lot of post-broadcast attention on the radio station. In this way, it was a successful marketing gimmick.
Versions.



The original and longest airing broadcasts. featured Sandy Beach during the opening.




In 1988...prominent network radio announcer & commercial spokesman Ken Niles died, aged 81.  He had numerous assignments from the late 1920′s through the 1950′s, as announcer for Abbott & Costello, Judy Canova, Danny Kaye, Louella Parsons and Kay Kyser, plus such shows as A Date with Judy, Life of Riley, Beulah, Camel Caravan and Suspense.

In 2008...Chicago author/actor/radio host Studs Terkel died at age 96. He broadcast on WFMT/Chicago for 45 years.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

October 30 Radio History


In 1745...Invention of the Leyden jar (the first capacitor) by Dean Ewald Jurgen von Kleist of the Cathedral of Cammin.

Renzo Cesana
In 1907...actor/writer/songwriter Renzo Cesana was born in Rome Italy.  He is best remembered as The Continental, the suave debonair “latin lover” host of his own early TV series. He is also credited with creating the radio programs “Art Linkletter’s House Party”, “Stop That Villain”, and the “Radio Hall of Fame.” Cesana succumbed to lung cancer November 8 1970 at age 63.


Fred W. Friendly with Edward R. Murrow
In 1915...broadcaster Fred W. Friendly was born in New york City.  He rose to prominence through his close working relationship with Edward R Murrow.  He was executive producer of CBS Reports from 1959-64, and president of CBS News from ’64-’66. He died March 3 1998 at age 82, after a series of strokes.


In 1925...KUT-AM in Austin Texas began broadcasting.

The actual beginning date of radio broadcasting on the UT-Austin campus has never been fully substantiated. There is an unofficial reference to an on-campus radio operation as early as 1912. But the most reliable information indicates that the first broadcast license — bearing the call letters 5XY — was issued to the University on March 22, 1921.

A year later, a new license was issued, bearing new call letters WCM, which the station used to identify itself until 1925.

In these first years, the station was used for a number of purposes, beginning as a demonstration project in the Physics Department, whose Professor Simpson L. Brown had persuaded the administration to let him build the station in the first place.

Beginning in 1923, though, funding concerns prompted a transfer of operational control to the University's Extension Division for extension teaching. One of the stipulations of the transfer agreement was that funds would be provided for operations and maintenance to put the station in a "first-class" condition. The funds, however, did not materialize and broadcasting suffered until a state agriculture official needed a means to broadcast daily crop and weather reports.

A deal between the official and UT's Extension Division allowed agriculture broadcasts for one hour per day in exchange for equipment maintenance. At other times of the day, the University would broadcast items of interest from the campus, including a number of faculty lecture series.

But by the end of 1924, the Physics Department decided it wanted the station back, and with the approval of the Board of Regents, the Physics Department regained control in the summer of 1925. They had a new license granted on October 30 and it bore, for the first time, the call letters KUT.

KUT's early years were ambitious but, by 1927, ambition had outrun the funding. The expense of operating and maintaining the station had simply become too great for the Physics Department to sustain. University President Harry Benedict appointed a committee to study the matter, and the committee recommended that the project be discontinued. The station was dismantled and the equipment returned to the Physics labs for experimentation.

KUT would not re-emerge for 30 years.




In 1938...Orson Welles's radio adaptation of HG Wells's War Of The Worlds caused panic in the US by convincing many listeners that Martians had really landed in New Jersey.

During the '30s, Welles worked extensively in radio as an actor, writer, director and producer, often without credit.  Between 1935 and 1937 he was earning as much as $2,000 a week, shuttling between radio studios at such a pace that he would arrive barely in time for a quick scan of his lines before he was on the air.

Welles reflected in February 1983:
"Radio is what I love most of all. The wonderful excitement of what could happen in live radio, when everything that could go wrong did go wrong. I was making a couple of thousand a week, scampering in ambulances from studio to studio, and committing much of what I made to support the Mercury. I wouldn't want to return to those frenetic 20-hour working day years, but I miss them because they are so irredeemably gone."
In addition to continuing as a repertory player on The March of Time, in the fall of 1936 Welles adapted and performed Hamlet in an early two-part episode of CBS Radio's Columbia Workshop. His performance as the announcer in the series' April 1937 presentation of Archibald MacLeish's verse drama The Fall of the City was an important development in his radio career and made the 21-year-old Welles an overnight star.

In July 1937, the Mutual Network gave Welles a seven-week series to adapt Les Misérables, which he did with great success. Welles developed the idea of telling stories with first-person narration on the series, which was his first job as a writer-director for radio.  Les Misérables was one of Welles's earliest and finest achievements on radio, and marked the radio debut of the Mercury Theatre.

That September, Mutual chose Welles to play Lamont Cranston, also known as The Shadow. He performed the role anonymously through mid-September 1938.

After the theatrical successes of the Mercury Theatre, CBS Radio invited the 23-year-old Orson Welles to create a summer show for 13 weeks. The series began July 11, 1938, initially titled First Person Singular, with the formula that Welles would play the lead in each show. Some months later the show was called The Mercury Theatre on the Air. The weekly hour-long show presented radio plays based on classic literary works, with original music composed and conducted by Bernard Herrmann.

The Mercury Theatre's radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells October 30, 1938, brought Welles instant fame.

When the show began at 8 p.m., a voice announced, “The Columbia Broadcasting System and its affiliated stations present Orson Welles and the Mercury Theater on the air in ‘War of the Worlds’ by H.G. Wells."  In 1938, Sunday evenings were prime time in the golden age of radio and millions of Americans had their radios turned on.

On Sunday nights in 1938, most Americans were listening to ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his dummy “Charlie McCarthy” on NBC and only turned to CBS at 8:12 p.m. after the comedy sketch ended and a little-known singer went on. By then, the audience had missed the introduction and the story of the Martian invasion was well underway.

Welles introduced his radio play with a spoken introduction, followed by an announcer reading a weather report. Then, seemingly abandoning the storyline, the announcer took listeners to “the Meridian Room in the Hotel Park Plaza in downtown New York, where you will be entertained by the music of Amon Raquello and his orchestra.” Dance music played for some time, and then the scare began.

An announcer broke in to report that “Professor Farrell of the Mount Jenning Observatory” had detected explosions on the planet Mars. Then the dance music came back on, followed by another interruption in which listeners were informed that a large meteor had crashed into a farmer’s field in Grover’s Mills, New Jersey.

The combination of the news bulletin form of the performance with the between-breaks dial spinning habits of listeners was later reported to have created widespread confusion among listeners who failed to hear the introduction, although the extent of this confusion has come into question.  Panic was reportedly spread among listeners who believed the fictional news reports of a Martian invasion.

When news of the real-life panic leaked into the CBS studio, Welles went on the air as himself to remind listeners that it was just fiction. There were rumors that the show caused suicides, but none were ever confirmed.

The Federal Communications Commission investigated the program but found no law was broken. Networks did agree to be more cautious in their programming in the future.



Welles's growing fame drew Hollywood offers, lures that the independent-minded Welles resisted at first. The Mercury Theatre on the Air, which had been a sustaining show (without sponsorship) was picked up by Campbell Soup and renamed The Campbell Playhouse.


In 1943...WINS switched to 1010 AM.

The station began broadcasting first during 1924 on 950 kHz as WGBS, named after and broadcasting from its owner, Gimbel's department store. It moved to 860 kHz sometime around 1927, and to 600 around 1930, settling on 1180 around 1931. The station was bought by William Randolph Hearst in 1932, and it adopted its present callsign (named after Hearst's International News Service) the same year, effective January 15.

WINS relocated from the Hotel Lincoln to the WINS Building, 114 East 58th Street, June 19, 1932.

It changed its frequency from 1180 to 1000 on March 29, 1941 as part of the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement and then eventually to 1010 on October 30, 1943. The Cincinnati-based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation announced its purchase of the station from Hearst in 1945, though it would be over a year before Crosley would take control of WINS, in July 1946


In 1967...WNEW-FM adopted a 'progressive rock' radio format, one that it became famous for and that influenced the rock listenership as well as the rock industry. The original disc jockeys were Bill "Rosko" Mercer, who started on October 30, 1967; Jonathan Schwartz, who made his debut on November 16, 1967; and "the Professor" Scott Muni, who first appeared on November 18, 1967. Alison Steele would stay on from the female staff and eventually take over the overnight shift on January 1, 1968.

Disc jockeys would broadcast in ways that bore out their personalities:
  • morning fixture Dave Herman was not afraid to mix Erik Satie or Donna Summer into the playlist;
  • noontime stalwart Pete Fornatale promoted the Beach Boys when it was not fashionable and later started his eclectic weekend Mixed Bag program;
  • afternoon legend Muni would use his gravelly voice to introduce largely unknown British artists on his "Things from England" segments;
  • nighttime host Schwartz was a raconteur who would sneak in the Sinatra pop standards that he not-so-secretly liked better than rock;
  • overnight presence Steele would play space rock groups in between readings of her equally spacey poems;
  • weekend personality Vin Scelsa started his idiosyncratic Idiots' Delight program, which soon gained a devoted following.
Other well-known disc jockeys who worked at the station included Dennis Elsas, Pete Larkin, brothers Dan Neer and Richard Neer, Jim Monaghan, Pam Merly, Thom Morrera, Meg Griffin, and John Zacherle.

WNEW-FM was among the first stations to give Bruce Springsteen significant airplay, and conducted live broadcasts of key Springsteen concerts in 1975 and 1978; Springsteen would sometimes call up the DJs during records. Later, Dave Herman featured a "Bruce Juice" segment each morning. John Lennon once stopped by to guest-DJ along with Dennis Elsas and appeared on-air several other times during his friend Scott Muni's afternoon slot. Members of the Grateful Dead and other groups would hang out in the studio; Emerson, Lake & Palmer's visit to Muni's show is often credited for popularizing the group in America. In addition to music, youth-oriented comedy recordings such as from Monty Python would also be aired.


In 1996...Leon Lewis, a radio talk show host for WMCA-AM, New York, died at age 81.

Lewis was the nighttime voice of WMCA from 1970 to 1980. On ''The Leon Lewis Talk Show,'' he took calls from listeners, debated public issues, offered advice to the troubled or merely provided a sympathetic ear, greeting each caller with a soothing ''Hello, my friend.''

Before he joined WMCA, Mr. Lewis was the moderator of ''Community Opinion,'' a call-in show on WLIB in Harlem. In 1967, the station won a George Foster Peabody award for the show, which was credited with helping to defuse racial tension.

Mr. Lewis, who was born in Bloomington, Ind., began his radio career at WABY in Albany. After working as a disk jockey and in advertising sales, he moved to New York City in 1954 and became circulation manager for The Amsterdam News. He left the paper in 1957 and joined radio station WWRL as news director before moving to WLIB.


In 2000...Radio/TV host Steve Allen died of a heart attack resulting from a minor automobile accident earlier in the day. Autopsy results concluded that the accident had caused a blood vessel in his chest to rupture, causing blood to leak into the sac surrounding his heart. He was 78.

Steve Allen 1977
Allen's first radio job was on station KOY in Phoenix, Arizona, after he left Arizona State Teachers College (now Arizona State University) in Tempe, while still a sophomore. He enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II and was trained as an infantryman. He spent his service time at Camp Roberts, California, and did not serve overseas.

Allen became an announcer for KFAC in Los Angeles and then moved to the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1946, talking the station into airing a five-nights-a-week comedy show, Smile Time, co-starring Wendell Noble. After Allen moved to CBS Radio's KNX in Los Angeles, his music-and-talk half-hour format gradually changed to include more talk on a full-hour, late-night show, boosting his popularity and creating standing-room-only studio audiences. During one episode of the show reserved primarily for an interview with Doris Day, his guest star failed to appear, so Allen picked up a microphone and went into the audience to ad lib for the first time.  His radio show attracted a huge local following, and in 1950 it replaced Our Miss Brooks, exposing Allen to a national audience for the first time.

Allen's first television experience had come in 1949 when he answered an ad for a TV announcer for professional wrestling. He knew nothing about wrestling, so he watched some shows and discovered that the announcers did not have well-defined names for the holds. When he got the job, he created names for many of the holds, some of which are still used today.

After CBS radio gave Allen a weekly prime time show, CBS television believed it could groom him for national small-screen stardom and gave Allen his first network television show. The Steve Allen Show premiered at 11 am on Christmas Day, 1950, and was later moved into a thirty-minute, early evening slot. This new show required him to uproot his family and move from LA to New York, since at that time a coast to coast program could not originate from LA. The show was canceled in 1952, after which CBS tried several shows to showcase Allen's talent.

Allen achieved national attention when he was pressed into service at the last minute to host Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts because Godfrey was unable to appear. Allen turned one of Godfrey's live Lipton commercials upside down, preparing tea and instant soup on camera and then pouring both into Godfrey's ukulele. With the audience (including Godfrey, watching from Miami) uproariously and thoroughly entertained, Allen gained major recognition as a comedian and host.



Leaving CBS, he created a late-night New York talk-variety TV program in 1953 for what is now WNBC-TV. The following year, on September 27, 1954, the show went on the full NBC network as The Tonight Show, with fellow radio personality Gene Rayburn (who later went on to host hit game shows such as Match Game, 1962–1982) as the original announcer. The show ran from 11:15 pm to 1:00 am on the East Coast.

While Today developer Sylvester "Pat" Weaver is often credited as the Tonight creator, Allen often pointed out that he had previously created it as a local New York show. Allen told his nationwide audience that first evening: "This is Tonight, and I can't think of too much to tell you about it except I want to give you the bad news first: this program is going to go on forever... you think you're tired now. Wait until you see one o'clock roll around!"

It was as host of The Tonight Show that Allen pioneered the "man on the street" interviews and audience-participation comedy breaks that have become commonplace on late-night TV.

In 2007...Alberta-raised singer, actor Robert Goulet, while awaiting a lung transplant, died at age 73. His career began as an announcer at Edmonton radio station CKUA; he went on to sing frequently on CBC-TV. His Broadway debut in Camelot launched an award-winning stage and recording career (If Ever I Would Leave You, My Love Forgive Me).  As well as starring in numerous televised musicals (Carousel, Brigadoon, Kiss Me Kate) he appeared 16 times on Ed Sullivan, and starred in a short-lived ABC WW2 series, Blue Light.

Poll: National Anthem Protests Leading Cause For NFL Ratings Drop

There are many reasons why the NFL’s ratings are down in 2016. According to Matt Dolloff at CBS Local/Boston, one may be dismissive of the very idea that the backlash to the national anthem protests, sparked by the 49ers’ Colin Kaepernick, has played a role in the NFL’s TV ratings, which have dropped by about 12 percent year-over-year. To continue to dismiss that is to blatantly ignore legitimate data on the subject.

A fresh poll from Seton Hall surveyed 841 adults across the U.S. Each respondent was asked to identify seven separate factors as a reason for the NFL ratings drop, allowing them to answer “yes” or “no” for each of them. The leading factor, according to the poll, was the national anthem protests, which scored “yes” at a rate of 56 percent.

Other answers also scored “yes” at a high rate, including 50 percent of “yeses” for coverage of the presidential election, 47 percent for the league’s handling of domestic violence cases, 44 percent for the over-saturation of the market, 39 percent for increased interest in postseason baseball, and 33 percent for controversy over head injuries and player safety.

Interestingly enough, the lowest score, tied with player safety at 33 percent, was “a decline in quality of play on the field.” Many would cite this as the overriding factor to all of this, and it certainly is factoring in. It’s easier to turn the games off for other reasons if the games aren’t fun to watch in the first place.

The point here, however, is that there are many Americans out there who view the players’ national anthem protest as a sign of disrespect to the American flag, the sanctity of which they take very seriously. Hundreds of fans have emailed Dolloff on the subject, and many of them agreed with Kaepernick’s right to protest injustices but disagreed with his method of doing so.

Howard Stern Streaming Video Launch Set For 2017

The upcoming Howard Stern streaming video service that the talk show host and satellite radio platform SiriusXM have been touting is on track to launch next year, according to CEO Jim Meyer.

The company also announced that it has surpassed 31 million subscribers and is set to add 1.7 million net subscribers in total in the year 2016.

SiriusXM appears to be on a roll these days, according to TechTimes.  As streaming competitors like Pandora and Spotify continue to bleed cash, the satellite radio giant is quietly adding to its coffers as well as gaining new subscribers despite the plethora of music streaming alternatives.

The company announced that its quarterly earnings for Q3 shot up by 16 percent to $194 million, earning the company four cents per share as compared to three cents in the same period a year ago, and beating Wall Street analyst's expectations by a penny.

"SiriusXM's performance in the third quarter was exemplary," said CEO Jim Meyer. "Our business is operating more efficiently than ever before, and we are pleased to increase our revenue and adjusted EBITDA guidance for the second time this year." He touted newly hired talk show talent, increased focus on the country music genre, and various one of a kind music events as part of the reason for the company's strong growth.

The jewel in the company's crown, however, remains Howard Stern. The talk show host is just finishing up the first of a 5 year contract that reportedly pays him a reported $90 million per year for his four hour long, three days a week morning show on SiriusXM, and which crosses over nicely with the company's music offerings. A-list musical artists such as Green Day, Lady Gaga and Metallica have all performed live on the show during the past month.

Meyer also confirmed that although no concrete launch date has been established for Stern's upcoming "revolutionary" video streaming app, which has been delayed from its previously announced 2016 debut, it should be available sometime in 2017.

Poll: Fox News Viewers See The World Differently

New data shows that Fox loyalists, when compared to the public at large, are far more pessimistic about America's future; are far more critical of President Obama's performance; are far more fearful of Hillary Clinton; and are more forgiving of Donald Trump.

According to Brian Stelter at CNNMoney, the sharp differences in opinion extend to beliefs about political corruption, voter fraud and media coordination with campaigns. Fox fans, when compared to fans of other networks, are far more likely to express concern about November's election results being manipulated.

They are also more likely to agree with the sentiment that divisions in the United States are deeper than in the past.

The data -- from a new national poll by Suffolk University -- shows deep divisions, indeed. And it demonstrates why 21st Century Fox patriarch Rupert Murdoch recently told the Wall Street Journal that it would be "business suicide" to change Fox's editorial direction.

Overall, the poll finds that the country is split about Clinton, with 46% of all respondents having a favorable view of her versus 47% unfavorable. Among people who rate Fox News as their most-trusted source of news, however, sentiments are much more solidly anti-Clinton, with 84% viewing her unfavorably, versus just 13% favorably.

Similarly, 54% of all Suffolk respondents approve of President Obama's job performance, versus 41% who disapprove. But among Fox loyalists, the numbers are radically different, with 16% approving of the president's performance and 80% disapproving.

During the Obama presidency Fox News positioned itself as a voice of the opposition. Fox's most popular shows, like "The O'Reilly Factor," reinforced these sentiments.

If Clinton is elected president, Fox's audience will expect more of the same.

Fox News says it reaches many independents and some Democrats. But several surveys, including Suffolk's, shows that Fox's base is passionately pro-Republican, aligning with GOP positions and GOP candidates.

Steve Tyler, Joe Perry Meet Obama Aboard Air Force One

Joe Perry, Steve Perry aboard Air Force One (Aerosmith photos via Instagram)
Aerosmith's Steven Tyler and Joe Perry got to play excited fans abroad Air Force One on Friday and sang 'Walk This Way' with President Obama in an impromptu meeting.

Perry, Tyler on the tarmac
According to The Daily Mail, The legendary musicians landed in Florida after a five-week tour of Mexico and South America when they spotted the president's aircraft on the tarmac of Orlando International Airport.

Tyler and Perry took a few pictures of the plane, and before they knew it, they had an invitation to play at the White House, with the Sweet Emotion singer concluding: 'He's something else.'

Aerosmith, whose official fanclub is incidentally called Aero Force One, returned to the US from Mexico City when they realized Obama was in town.

Perry told the music website Vanyaland they got out of their plane to snap some pictures before they were suddenly invited on board and offered a tour, although the president wasn't around at the time.
Obama, who was busy in Florida campaigning for Hillary Clinton, didn't want to miss a thing - and told the rock stars he would return if they were willing to wait.

When they met, the president said he was a big fan of their work, and invited them to play at the White House - even though they'll have to act quickly if they want cash in on the offer.

Bob Dylan Will Accept Nobel Prize

Bob Dylan (Reuters)
(Reuters) -- American singer-songwriter Bob Dylan, who was awarded the Nobel Prize in Literature earlier this month, has now told the Swedish Academy that he will accept the prize.

The notoriously media-shy Dylan had not made any comment on the 8 million crown ($900,000) prize, despite repeated attempts by award-givers the Swedish Academy to contact him since it named him as the winner on Oct. 13.

The Nobel Foundation said in a statement that Dylan this week told Sara Danius, Permanent Secretary of the Swedish Academy, that he now accepts the prize.

The committee that awarded the Nobel Prize to Dylan had said it was up to him whether to attend the prize-giving ceremony later this year or not.

"It has not yet been decided if Bob Dylan will attend any events during the Nobel Week in Stockholm in December," the Nobel Foundation said on Friday.

"The Nobel Foundation will share information as soon as it is available."

Separately, Dylan told British daily the Telegraph in an interview that he will be at Nobel Prize ceremony, if he can.

Portland OR Radio: Alpha Media Makes Strategic Moves

Alpha Media, Portland, OR announced several strategic changes Friday:
  • Milt McConnell, SVP/Market Manager of Portland has been promoted to VP, National and Group Sales Strategy. 
  • Lisa Decker joins Alpha Media to fill the role as Portland SVP/Market Manager
  • Amy Leimbach moves into VP Sales, Portland- Live Performance Lounges.  
These changes will be effective Monday, November 7, 2016.

Alpha Media President/CEO, Bob Proffitt commented on the changes, “This is an exciting time for Alpha Media. With our major growth in 2016, we have been focused on recognizing key players and evolving to the next level. Milt has always been a high performer, even back in the Citadel days. In his new role, he will work closely with our National Rep Firms as well as our Business Development team.

Lisa Decker, originally from the area, built her radio career in the Pacific Northwest. She is a seasoned, talented broadcaster with experience in corporate and local managerial roles for CBS and iHeart.  She will be a huge asset to Alpha.

Amy Leimbach has been integral within the Alpha Media sales management team for the past 7 years. Originally, serving as a Director of Sales in Portland, and most recently as Regional Director of Business Development makes her the right choice to lead our sales portfolio of now seven stations (KWEE-FM LMA) and our live performance venue, Skype Live Studio.”

R.I.P.: NYC TV Cool Ghoul, Radio Personality John Zacherle


John Zacherle, one of the first of the late-night television horror-movie hosts, who played a crypt-dwelling undertaker with a booming graveyard laugh on stations in Philadelphia and New York in the late 1950s and early ’60s, died on Thursday at his home in Manhattan.

He was 98, according to The NYTimes.

John Karsten Zacherle was born in Philadelphia in September 1918. After graduating from Germantown High School, Mr. Zacherle enrolled at the University of Pennsylvania, where he earned an English degree in 1940. He enlisted in the Army at the start of World War II and served in England, Italy and North Africa with the Quartermaster Corps, rising to the rank of major.

Returning to Philadelphia after the war, he joined the Stagecrafters, a small theater troupe in the Chestnut Hill neighborhood. Before long he found work doing commercials for local drug companies.

“I guess my first horror gig was posing for before-and-after pictures for some new tranquilizer,” he told The Daily News in New York in 2000. “In the ‘before’ shot, I was chasing my wife with a carving knife. Then, after I took the pill, I was a kind and loving husband.”

In 1953 he began appearing as characters on “Action in the Afternoon,” a live western series shot in a vacant lot behind the studios of WCAU. “The idea was to get somebody in trouble on Monday, and either get him out of trouble, shoot him or hang him by Friday,” he told The Daily News in 1959.

In late 1958, Zacherle moved to New York, “flapping in on leathery wings of fame,” as The Journal of Frankenstein, a monster magazine, put it. He took over “Shock Theater” at WABC, Channel 7, and added a “y” to his name to avoid confusion about how it should be pronounced. After the show tripled its ratings in the first year, it was renamed “Zacherley at Large.”

When WABC had run through its stock of horror films, Mr. Zacherle took his act to Channel 9 and then Channel 11, where he became the host of “Chiller Theater,” “The Mighty Hercules Cartoon Show” and, briefly, “The Three Stooges Show.”

He moved to the New York album-rock radio station WNEW 102.7 FM in 1967 as a morning D.J. and two years later began hosting a program at night. He later worked at another rock station, WPLJ 95.5 FM , and in 1992 joined WXRK, known as K-Rock. That job ended four years later when the station changed its format from classic rock to alternative rock.

 Zacherle was inducted into the Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia's Hall of Fame in 2010.

"In his day, he was one of the first superstars of radio and television in the Delaware Valley," said Gene Kolber, a member of the Broadcast Pioneers.