Monday, December 23, 2024

LA Radio: iHM KFI's Bill Handel Under Fire For Anti-Asian Comments

 
A coalition of Asian American advocates are calling for the suspension of KFI's Bill Handel. The radio show host has repeatedly made remarks about "dog-eating Asians." 

This isn't the first time Handel has gotten in trouble for anti-Asian comments.

"You just can't have Korean people do it, that's all…" Handel says. 

He was talking about people adopting shelter dogs, suggesting Koreans should not be allowed to adopt because they would eat them.

"It's a thing, it's a thing!" he says. 

The Media Action Network for Asian Americans says Handel made the offensive remarks between May and October of this year.



This isn't the first time Handel found himself in trouble with MANAA. He had to apologize and was suspended after comments about figure skaters Kristi Yamaguchi and Michelle Kwan.

Rupert Murdoch Facing Uphill Battle In Family Feud


Rupert Murdoch’s attempt to change his family trust to consolidate his son Lachlan’s leadership of his global media empire — and lock in its conservative editorial direction after his death — now depends on a long-shot move in the highly specialized Nevada probate court system.

According to The NY Times, the first step for Murdoch is to try to persuade a district court judge in Reno to reject a local commissioner’s harsh ruling this month that he had acted in “bad faith” when he moved secretly to change the trust that left control of his empire divided equally among his four oldest children. Mr. Murdoch’s brief challenging that opinion is now due by Monday.

If Murdoch fails, and the commissioner’s recommendation is ratified by the judge, his lawyers have said Mr. Murdoch will appeal the probate court’s decision. Under the Nevada system, that appeal would be filed directly to the State Supreme Court.

To prevail, Mr. Murdoch, 93, will have to clear a high legal bar — proving that the Nevada probate commissioner’s finding of bad faith was “clearly erroneous,” according to the rules of the Reno-based court circuit.

That might prove especially difficult, he said, because of the breadth and unequivocal language of the Dec. 7 recommendation that the probate commissioner, Edmund J. Gorman, filed under seal this month.

The 96-page opinion, which was obtained by The New York Times, concluded that Murdoch’s bid to change the Murdoch Family Trust was “a carefully crafted charade” to lock Lachlan in place as Mr. Murdoch’s successor and take power away from three of Lachlan’s siblings.

If Murdoch and Lachlan can overcome the decision and succeed in amending the trust, Lachlan will be able not only to consolidate his voting power over the Murdoch empire but also, in effect, to control his siblings’ shares. If they fail, Lachlan may have no choice but to buy out his siblings — perhaps at a premium now, because of the commissioner’s ruling — to retain control of the empire.

The general contours of the trust date back to Rupert Murdoch’s 1999 divorce from his second wife, Anna. As part of their settlement, she insisted that his four children at the time — Prue, Elisabeth, James and Lachlan — share equal control of the Murdoch trust upon his death. The trust holds the family voting shares that control the world’s most powerful conservative media empire, which includes Fox News, The Wall Street Journal, and major newspapers and television outlets in Australia and Britain.

Lefty Journalist Kicking The Tires At WaPo

Post CEO Will Lewis

Lefty Tech reporter Kara Swisher is working toward assembling a group of investors to purchase The Washington Post from billionaire Jeff Bezos.

“The Post can do better… it’s so maddening to see what’s happening. … Why not me? Why not any of us?” Swisher told Axios in a report on Friday.

The Washington Post has reportedly suffered an exodus of high-profile talent, is losing money, has struggled to fill key positions and has seen employee morale plummet in recent years. The paper also irked readers when it announced this year that it would not endorse a candidate in the 2024 presidential election. The decision, which angered multiple staffers at the paper and prompted some editorial staff members and staffers to resign, was favored by Bezos.

However, Bezos has given no indication he is willing to sell. 

Musk has become a target of attacks from liberal media outlets and Democratic lawmakers after he endorsed and supported President-elect Trump’s campaign.

While Musk has yet to respond directly to Swisher’s comments, he entered the media landscape in full force by purchasing Twitter in 2022. Musk has since changed the company’s name to X, aiming to create an “everything app.” ”

Swisher and The Washington Post did not immediately respond to a request for comment from Fox News Digital.

Matt Murray
Also at The Post, Puck columnist Dylan Byers expects C.E.O. Will Lewis to announce that he has appointed acting executive editor Matt Murray as the newsroom’s permanent chief. The news, which Will has been delaying for unspecified reasons, will bring an anticlimactic end to a long and tortured recruitment effort at a storied paper that—as you know, dear reader—has endured a rather miserable and ignominious few years of financial irresponsibility, soul-searching, and chaos.

Murray, after all write Byers, was not Will’s first choice. In June, he had tried, quite inelegantly, to appoint his fellow Brit Rob Winnett to the post while transitioning the lackluster incumbent Sally Buzbee out of the role—only to be all but mutinied by veterans who chafed at the incursion of a Fleet Street sensibility at their august institution. Instead, Will enlisted Murray, his former Wall Street Journal top editor, to man the rudder until he could appoint someone else, at which point Murray was slated to become head of a “third newsroom” focused on new digital projects and innovations. 

2025 Could Be the Year For Congress To Act On AM Radio


The failure of the AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act to progress this year may turn out to be a temporary setback. Supporters are gearing up to renew their efforts with new Congressional leadership in 2025, as potential core changes could breathe new life into the Act’s legislative journey. 

This legislation, which seeks to mandate the inclusion of AM radio in all new vehicles due to its vital role in emergency communication, stalled under the current Senate majority. 

Despite bipartisan support, particularly from Senators Ed Markey (D-MA) and Ted Cruz (R-TX), Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-NY) has not yet brought the bill to the Senate floor for a vote since it passed out of committee in July 2023. 

If the Act resumes its legislative path in the new Congress, prospects for its success may improve with Republicans taking control of the Senate. 

Prominent broadcast attorney Frank Montero recently expressed optimism about the AM Act's chances under a Republican-led Senate, stating, “I would feel optimistic about the AM Act’s chances under a Republican-led Senate.” 

The change in Senate leadership also signals a significant shift in committee oversight. Senator Ted Cruz, a staunch advocate for the AM Act, is set to become Chair of the Senate Commerce, Science, and Transportation Committee. 

This development could facilitate the Act’s advancement, especially considering Cruz’s vocal support for AM radio. Additionally, President-elect Trump has pledged his support. On February 22, he publicly endorsed the protection of AM radio at the National Religious Broadcasters International Christian Media Convention in Nashville, TN. 

With Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) retiring after decades in leadership, South Dakota Senator John Thune will step into the role of Senate Majority Leader in the 119th Congress, which begins January 3, 2025

Family, Friends, Food Are the Stars of Christmas


Christmas is the time to be merry - for most this means sharing a good time with friends and family, but indulging in food, presents and TV is also a way for many to feel cheerful.

Four fifths of U.S. respondents between the ages of 18 and 89 said they were looking forward to the Christmas season. Out of these, 70 percent felt that friends and family were a reason for it - the biggest agreement in the survey. 53 percent answered that Christmas dinner was in fact something to get exited about, while 50 percent could not wait for the presents to be opened.

Roughly a third of respondents found it important to celebrate Christmas as a Christian holiday, fewer than those who were ready to indulge in cookies and sweets (37 percent), Christmas movies, shows and songs (38-40 percent) and decorating (43 percent).

Netflix Is Dreaming Of A Glitch-Free Christmas


Netflix is preparing to stream two NFL games this Christmas Day: the Kansas City Chiefs facing the Pittsburgh Steelers at 1 p.m. ET, followed by the Baltimore Ravens squaring off against the Houston Texans at 4:30 p.m. ET. These matchups represent the streaming service's latest foray into live programming for major events likely to attract millions of viewers.

Last year, an average of 28.7 million viewers tuned into one of three NFL games on Christmas Day—the Las Vegas Raiders vs. the Chiefs, the New York Giants vs. the Philadelphia Eagles, and the Ravens vs. the San Francisco 49ers. These games were among the top 25 most-watched TV programs of 2023.

"We couldn't be more excited to be the first professional sports league to partner with Netflix to bring live games to fans around the world," said Hans Schroeder, NFL Executive Vice President of Media Distribution, in a statement.

But it's not just the action on the field that is anticipated to boost viewership.

Before the Ravens take on the Texans, Grammy-winning group Pentatonix will perform the national anthem. At halftime, Beyoncé will take the stage, delivering tracks from her 2024 album "Cowboy Carter" live for the first time, accompanied by special guest appearances.

Netflix's decision to stream NFL games follows a recent attempt to broadcast live boxing featuring Jake Paul and Mike Tyson, which was plagued by technical glitches.

Many fans reported issues on social media, including long buffering times and being booted from the stream. According to Down Detector, more than 85,000 viewers experienced streaming problems. One frustrated Florida man even filed a class action lawsuit against Netflix, claiming the broadcast was "unwatchable."

Despite the challenges, the boxing match peaked at 65 million concurrent streams worldwide, marking an unprecedented scale for Netflix.

News Corp To Sell Off Aussie Foxtel to DAZN Group


News Corp and Australian telecom company Telstra have agreed to sell their Australian cable TV and streaming company Foxtel, a deal that values the pay television company at more than $2.1 billion.

The Wall Street Journal reports News Corp on Sunday evening said the sale of Foxtel, in which it holds a 65% stake, will allow the company to narrow its focus on its key growth areas—Dow Jones, digital real-estate services and book publishing.

As part of the deal, News Corp will receive an approximately 6% minority equity stake in DAZN, and a seat on its board. In addition, $362 million in shareholder loans owed to News Corp will be repaid in full; Foxtel’s current debt will be refinanced when the deal closes and transfer with the company.

No cash, other than the loan repayment, is changing hands.

The Journal reported in late 2023 that activist investor firm Starboard Value had built a stake in the company and planned to push for strategic and governance changes. News Corp investors in November rejected an effort to end the company’s dual-class share structure that had been backed by Starboard.

“DAZN is the right owner to take the business to the next level with their technological capabilities, global footprint and compelling sports rights,” News Corp Chief Executive Robert Thomson said. Thomson in early August said that the company had received third-party interest in Foxtel and was considering all options.

The sale is expected to close next year subject to regulatory approvals.

For DAZN, which streams live sporting events from boxing to women’s soccer and motor sport, the deal will add revenue, content and 4.7 million subscribers. It is an opportunity for DAZN to enter a key sports market and advances its long-term strategy of becoming “the global home of sport,” Shay Segev, DAZN’s chief executive, said in a statement.

Big Changes In 2025 Expected At MSNBC


Hosts Joy Reid and Stephanie Ruhle may need to accept pay cuts if they wish to stay on the air at MSNBC

According to The Ankler, a news site, MSNBC is negotiating new contracts and both Reid and Ruhle have reportedly been asked to lower their salaries.
 
Ruhle, who anchors "The 11th Hour" at 11 p.m. on weeknights, currently earns $2 million annually, while Reid makes $3 million for hosting "The ReidOut" at 8 p.m. on weeknights.

The news of these salary negotiations comes amid significant turmoil for the liberal network.
 
Ratings have declined, and MSNBC’s parent company, Comcast, has announced plans to spin off the channel into a new entity called SpinCo. As a result, employees are reportedly worried about potential layoffs.
 
Last month, The New York Post reported that "panic engulfed" MSNBC headquarters after the announcement regarding the network's future.
 
During a meeting led by NBCUniversal chairman Mark Lazarus, who is set to head SpinCo, staffers inundated him with questions about potential changes, fearing that the new entity could lose its connection to NBC News.
 
One MSNBC insider told The Post, "Everyone is in a panic because everything is uncertain."

Utica-Rome Radio: WLZW, WFRG Shuffle For 2025


Townsquare Media is implementing significant changes to the morning shows at AC WLZW (Lite 98.7) and Country WFRG-FM (Big Frog 104.3) in Utica, NY. 

Dave Wheeler, a veteran of Townsquare Utica since 2009, will return to WFRG-FM, stepping in for Bill "Tad Pole" McAdams, who is retiring for the second time. Having transitioned from afternoons at WFRG to mornings on WLZW in October 2020, Wheeler will now team up with Polly Wog for the morning show. His extensive experience includes programming for Classic Hits WODZ and its predecessor, as well as serving as Assistant Production Director and Assistant PD for WLZW. 


Since 2018, he has held the position of Cluster Director of Content. Rachel Davis, who previously worked as a producer and morning co-host at iHeartMedia's News/Talk WGY in Albany, will take over as the new morning host at WLZW. Davis, who left iHeartMedia in May, has also served as Promotions Director for Pamal Broadcasting in Albany and for Alpha Media in Richmond, VA. 

Both Wheeler and Davis are set to begin their new roles on Monday, January 6.

Former FCC Chair Expresses Concern Over Musk Influence

Al Sikes headed FCC 1989-1993

As tech billionaire Elon Musk steps into an increasingly prominent policy role within the incoming Trump administration, a former chair of the Federal Communications Commission from the George H.W. Bush era has expressed concern about “the world’s richest man” acting as “the president’s voice” on critical issues. 

In his opinion piece titled “Who Is President?”, Alfred Sikes urged President-elect Donald Trump to “regain control.”

Elon Musk
Commenting on the looming budget crisis that could lead to a government shutdown on December 21, Sikes remarked that “within a very short time, Elon Musk, America’s richest man and a close associate of the president-elect, put his thumb down,” ultimately derailing a bipartisan spending plan. “It is reported that he posted his disapproval on his website 70 times. Just ten hours later, so did Donald Trump. Not a good look.”

“I don’t shy away from expressing my concern about the world’s richest man positioning himself to appear not as the President’s whisperer, but as the President’s voice,” Sikes concluded.

“This not only sends a troubling message, but it also foreshadows a clash of egos that could undermine the presidency. Regain control, Mr. President-Elect.”

This opinion piece was first reported by Policyband.

Ex-Rep Accuses Audacy of Discriminatory Conduct

A former account executive at Audacy’s Philadelphia cluster has filed a federal lawsuit against the company, claiming discriminatory and retaliatory behavior. Paul Bolognone, who dedicated 21 years to Audacy before his termination in 2022, asserts violations of the Americans with Disabilities Act, the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Family and Medical Leave Act, and other federal statutes. 

In a complaint submitted on December 11 to the U.S. District Court in New Jersey, Bolognone reveals that he was diagnosed in January 2022 with a serious heart condition that necessitated extensive testing, major surgery, and a prolonged recovery period with several physical limitations. Less than a year after revealing his condition, taking medical leave, and requesting to work remotely, he was terminated allegedly "under the guise of an alleged violation" of Audacy’s code of conduct. Just six days prior to his dismissal, Bolognone reported internally about "sexually inappropriate comments" made by his supervisor and a co-worker regarding a female employee.

Paul Bolognone
Bolognone contends that his disability and the accommodations he requested, coupled with his complaints about sexually explicit remarks among colleagues, were the true motivations behind his firing.

In late December 2022, Bolognone filed a Charge of Discrimination with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which ultimately dismissed the complaint and issued a Notice of Right To Sue.

The alleged inappropriate comments date back to January 2018, when Bolognone claims to have overheard the Philly cluster’s General Sales Manager and an Outside Sports Sales Consultant discussing whether they would have sexual relations with a female sales representative at the station. 

The female employee also heard the conversation and subsequently filed an internal complaint, according to the lawsuit. 

Bolognone corroborated the details of the discussion during an internal investigation into the incident.

Radio History: Dec 23


➦In 1900...Canadian wireless expert Reginald Fessenden, working for the US Weather Service at Brant Rock, Mass. near Boston, broadcast the world’s first voice communications by AM (amplitude modulation) radio wave for a distance of 1.6 km between two 13 metre towers. He asked his assistant, ‘Is it snowing where you are, Mr. Thiessen?’







➦In 1907...the longtime host of ABC radio’s Breakfast Club, Don McNeill was born at Galena Illinois.

In Chicago during the early 1930s, McNeill was assigned to take over an unsponsored early morning variety show, The Pepper Pot, with an 8 a.m. timeslot on the NBC Blue Network. McNeill re-organized the hour as The Breakfast Club, dividing it into four segments which McNeill labeled "the Four Calls to Breakfast."

McNeill's revamped show premiered in 1933, combining music with informal talk and jokes often based on topical events, initially scripted by McNeill but later ad-libbed. In addition to recurring comedy performers, various vocal groups and soloists, listeners heard sentimental verse, conversations with members of the studio audience and a silent moment of prayer. The series eventually gained a sponsor in the Chicago-based meat packer Swift and Company, beginning February 8, 1941. McNeill is credited as the first performer to make morning talk and variety a viable radio format.

He died May 7, 1996 at age 88.

➦In 1922...the British Broadcasting Corporation (BBC)  began daily newscasts on its radio service in the UK.

➦In 1926...radio station KEX in Portland Oregon began broadcasting. It has been a clear channel 50,000-watt powerhouse at 1190 KHz since 1941.

Some sources show that the station may have originally started broadcasting on 670 kHz. On November 11, 1928, KEX started broadcasting on 1180 kHz under the terms of FCC General Order 40. On March 29, 1941, the station moved to 1190 kHz under the terms of the North American Regional Broadcasting Agreement (NARBA).

KEX was an NBC Blue Network affiliate, carrying its schedule of dramas, comedies, news, sports, game shows, soap operas and big band broadcasts during the Golden Age of Radio. In 1945, as the Blue Network became ABC, KEX's affiliation continued. KEX was the first station to give the voice of Bugs Bunny, Mel Blanc, his own show. Blanc's Cobwebs & Nuts program debuted June 15, 1933, and ran Monday through Saturday from 11 p.m. to midnight.

The Oregonian Publishing Company, which owned The Morning Oregonian newspaper, acquired KEX in 1933. From 1934 to 1943, the station's studios were located in The Oregonian Building, in space shared with co-owned KGW, now KPOJ, which was the NBC Red Network affiliate in Portland. Westinghouse Broadcasting expanded to the West Coast in 1944 with its purchase of KEX, then running 5,000 watts, and sharing its frequency with another Westinghouse station, WOWO in Fort Wayne, Indiana.

In 1948, Westinghouse got the FCC to increase KEX's power to 50,000 watts, day and night. Also in 1948, Westinghouse put KEX-FM on the air at 92.3 MHz (the frequency is now utilized by KGON). KEX-FM mostly simulcasted KEX. But few people had FM radios in those days and KEX-FM was taken off the air in the early 1960s.

Also in the early 1960s, as network programming shifted from radio to television, KEX began airing a mix of middle of the road music, talk, news and sports.

Having reached the FCC's then-limit of seven AM stations, Westinghouse sold KEX to actor and singer Gene Autry's media company, Golden West Broadcasters, in 1967. In 1984, KEX was acquired by Taft Broadcasting. Taft became Citicasters in 1993, which was merged into Clear Channel Communications in 1999. Clear Channel was the forerunner to current owner iHeartMedia, Inc. 

As music listening switched to FM radio stations, KEX cut back on the songs it played till it became a true talk station by the late 1990s.

➦In 1928...a permanent coast-to-coast NBC Radio network was formed. NBC had been formed two years earlier by General Electric, Westinghouse and RCA, with David Sarnoff as its chief organizer.

NBC's network operations were officially launched with a gala broadcast beginning at 8 p.m. Eastern on November 15, 1926. Carl Schlegel of the Metropolitan Opera opened the inaugural broadcast, which also featured Will Rogers and Mary Garden. This broadcast, which included a remote link from KYW in Chicago, was coordinated through WEAF, and carried by twenty-two eastern and Midwestern stations, located as far west as WDAF in Kansas City, Missouri.

On January 1, 1927, NBC formally divided its programming into two networks, called the Red and the Blue. Legend has it that the color designations originated from the push-pins early engineers used to mark affiliates of WEAF (red pins) and WJZ (blue pins), or from the use of double-ended red and blue colored pencils.