Tuesday, December 23, 2025

Report: 60 Minutes Staffers Furious


Brian Stelter, CNN's chief media analyst, published a detailed article Monday titled "Inside the Bari Weiss decision that led to a ‘60 Minutes’ crisis." The story covers a major internal controversy at CBS News, where Bari Weiss (who became CBS News editor-in-chief in October 2025 following Paramount's acquisition of her media company, The Free Press) decided to shelve a "60 Minutes" segment at the last minute.

Key Details from Stelter's Report:
  • The segment, titled “INSIDE CECOT,” was reported by correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi. It focused on the conditions inside CECOT, a notorious maximum-security prison in El Salvador, where the Trump administration had deported Venezuelan men (including allegations of torture and brutal treatment).
  • The story had been in development for weeks, screened multiple times, cleared by legal and standards teams, and even promoted publicly by CBS ahead of its planned airdate on Sunday, December 21, 2025.
  • Bari Weiss
    Weiss reportedly got personally involved in political stories after President Trump criticized a recent "60 Minutes" interview with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene.
  • On Saturday, Weiss raised concerns about the lack of response from the Trump administration (e.g., no on-the-record comment from officials like Stephen Miller) and suggested adding such a perspective.
  • The decision to pull the story was finalized hours before airtime, with a different segment substituted.
  • Alfonsi sent an internal memo calling the move "political" and a "betrayal" of sources, arguing that government refusal to comment shouldn't kill a story (and that it was factually correct and ready).
  • Weiss defended the decision in a staff call on December 22, stating the story "was not ready," didn't "advance the ball" (as similar reporting existed from outlets like The New York Times), and lacked sufficient context or critical voices.
Fallout
  • Staff at "60 Minutes" and CBS News were reportedly furious, with some threatening to quit over what they saw as corporate censorship or capitulation to political pressure.
  • The incident sparked widespread media criticism, with figures like Sen. Brian Schatz (D-Hawaii) calling it an "embarrassment."
Stelter's reporting drew from sources inside CBS and included details from Alfonsi's memo and the staff call transcript.

In Her Own Words: Bari Weiss Explains Pulling Story From 60-Minutes


CBS News Editor-in-Chief Bari Weiss abruptly pulled a "60 Minutes" segment on Sunday, hours before its scheduled airing, sparking a major internal controversy and accusations of political interference.

The segment, titled "Inside CECOT", featured correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi interviewing Venezuelan men deported by the Trump administration to El Salvador's notorious maximum-security prison (Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo, or CECOT). It highlighted allegations of brutal torture, abuse, and inhumane conditions, despite the deportees' claims of no criminal records.

Weiss decided to shelve the piece after multiple screenings and clearances by CBS lawyers and standards editors. In an internal memo to top "60 Minutes" producers, she stated the story lacked sufficient context, particularly the administration's perspective and legal rationale for the deportations under the Alien Enemies Act. She argued it did not "advance the ball," as similar reporting (e.g., by The New York Times) had already covered the prison conditions, and insisted on more reporting, including on-the-record comments from officials like Stephen Miller. Weiss described the hold as standard editorial practice to prioritize viewer understanding.

Alfonsi strongly disputed this in her own leaked internal memo to colleagues, calling the decision "not an editorial decision, it is a political one" and amounting to "corporate censorship." She noted the segment had been screened five times, cleared legally and factually, and that her team had sought interviews from DHS, the White House, and State Department—requests the administration ignored as a "tactical maneuver" to kill the story. Alfonsi argued that allowing government silence to veto reporting hands officials a "kill switch" for inconvenient journalism, betraying sources who risked their lives to speak out. She compared it to CBS's past decision to spike a tobacco whistleblower story, which damaged credibility.


Here’s the full text of the Weiss memo:

Hi all,

I’m writing with specific guidance on what I’d like for us to do to advance the CECOT story. I know you’d all like to see this run as soon as possible; I feel the same way. But if we run the piece as is, we’d be doing our viewers a disservice.
 
Last month many outlets, most notably The New York Times, exposed the horrific conditions at CECOT. Our story presents more of these powerful testimonies—and putting those accounts into the public record is valuable in and of itself. But if we’re going to run another story about a topic that has by now been much-covered we need to advance it. 
Among the ways to do so: does anyone in the administration or anyone prominent who defended the use of the Alien Enemies Act now regret it in light of what these Venezuelans endured at CECOT? That’s a question I’d like to see asked and answered. 
At present, we do not present the administration’s argument for why it sent 252 Venezuelans to CECOT. What we have is Karoline Leavitt’s soundbite claiming they are evildoers in America (rapists, murderers, etc.). But isn’t there much more to ask in light of the torture that we are revealing? Tom Homan and Stephen Miller don’t tend to be shy. I realize we’ve emailed the DHS spox, but we need to push much harder to get these principals on the record. 
The data we present paints an incongruent picture. Of the 252 Venezuelans sent to CECOT, we say nearly half have no criminal histories. In other words, more than half do have criminal histories. We should spend a beat explaining this. We then say that only 8 of the 252 have been sentenced in America for violent offenses. But what about charged? My point is that we should include as much as we can possibly know and understand about these individuals. 
Secretary Noem’s trip to CECOT. We report that she took pictures and video there with MS-13 gang members, not TdA members, with no comment from her or her staff about what her goal on that trip was, or what she saw there, or if she had or has concerns about the treatment of detainees like the ones in our piece. I also think that the ensuing analysis from the Berkeley students is strange. The pictures are alarming; we should include them. But what does the analysis add? 
We need to do a better job of explaining the legal rationale by which the administration detained and deported these 252 Venezuelans to CECOT. It’s not as simple as Trump invoking the Alien Enemies Act and being able to deport them immediately. And that isn’t the administration’s argument. The admin has argued in court that detainees are due “judicial review”—and we should explain this, with a voice arguing that Trump is exceeding his authority under the relevant statute, and another arguing that he’s operating within the bounds of his authority. There’s a genuine debate here. If we cut down Kristi Noem analysis we’d have the time.

My general view here is that we do our viewers the best service by presenting them with the full context they need to assess the story. In other words, I believe we need to do more reporting here.

I am eager and available to help. I tracked down cell numbers for Homan and Miller and sent those along. Please let me know how I can support you.

Yours,

Bari

Weiss also defended her actions in a Monday editorial call, emphasizing the need for contentious but respectful debate and insisting the story was simply "not ready." CBS has reiterated it will air eventually.

FCC Commissioner Criticizes CBS News


FCC Commissioner Anna M. Gomez, the agency's lone Democrat, sharply criticized CBS News on Monday for pulling a planned "60 Minutes" segment on the Trump administration's deportation of Venezuelan migrants to El Salvador's notorious CECOT prison, calling the decision "a strike at the heart of press freedom."

In a blistering statement, Gomez described the cancellation as "deeply alarming" and warned it could signal government influence over journalism. She tied her concerns to the ongoing Paramount-Skydance merger, now led by CEO David Ellison, and the recent appointment of Bari Weiss as CBS News editor-in-chief following Ellison's acquisition of Weiss's Free Press outlet.

The segment, "Inside CECOT," featured correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi and was scheduled to air Sunday. It examined the March 2025 deportation of about 250 Venezuelan men accused of gang ties to El Salvador's mega-prison, highlighting reports of harsh conditions and lack of due process. A preview had aired, but the full piece was postponed hours before broadcast. 

Weiss defended the move, saying it needed more reporting and additional interviews, while some CBS staff called it politically motivated.

Gomez urged CBS to publicly explain the decision and prove newsroom independence remains protected, especially amid the merger and a "government-imposed media monitor" at the network. She emphasized that "a free press cannot function if the government is able to exercise veto power over critical reporting."

The controversy adds to broader scrutiny of CBS News under new ownership, following a $16 million settlement with the Trump administration earlier in 2025 that helped clear the merger. Gomez, a vocal defender of press freedom and consumer protections on the FCC, has previously opposed the merger over similar concerns about independent journalism. 

CBS has said the segment will air at a later date.

Bari Weiss Plans Road Trip To Re-Launch CBS Evening News


Bari Weiss, the newly appointed editor-in-chief of CBS News hired by CEO David Ellison to shake up the network, has launched a new series of town halls and debates titled "Things That Matter" — a joint venture between CBS News and her media company, The Free Press.

The series, billed as “The people, conversations, and debates shaping America,” will tackle major issues including immigration, capitalism, public health, criminal justice, foreign policy, artificial intelligence, and the state of politics.

Upcoming guests include Vice President J.D. Vance and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. Planned debate topics include “Gen Z and the American Dream,” “God and Meaning,” and “The Sexual Revolution.” Specific air dates and locations — described only as “held across the country” — were not announced.

Weiss is expected to moderate many of the events, following her role in the December 13 premiere, a town hall with Erika Kirk (widow of Charlie Kirk and CEO of Turning Point USA). CBS reported 1.9 million total viewers and 265,000 in the key 25-54 demographic, while calling it the most-watched interview in CBS News history on social media.

The "Things That Matter" series builds on the success of CBS News’ recent special “Town Hall With Erika Kirk,” hosted by Weiss, and marks the first major collaboration since Paramount acquired The Free Press for $150 million.

This road-based approach aligns with broader changes at CBS News under Weiss. New "Evening News" anchor Tony Dokoupil will also travel the country in January, visiting 10 cities in 10 days — Miami, Atlanta, Dallas, Denver, San Francisco, Detroit, Minneapolis, Chicago, Cincinnati, and Pittsburgh — for a series called “Live in America” to “share the most urgent, important stories with Americans, rather than talking to them.”

Westwood One Recaps Most Impactful Blog Posts Of 2025

Pierre Bouvard

As 2025 comes to an end, Pierre Bouvard take a look back at the Westwoood Oneblog posts that resonated the most. Here are our top 5 most popular audio insights posts of the year in descending order:

5. The Extraordinary Cost of Dull: Boring Ads Require 2X To 2.6X Greater Media Spend To Achieve Same Impact As Interesting Ads: In January, we shared a report from creative testing giant System1, Adam Morgan, founder of ad agency eatbigfish, Jon Evans, Chief Customer Officer of System1 and host of Uncensored CMO, and Peter Field, the legendary “godfather of marketing effectiveness,” revealing that brands must spend significantly more media money on dull ads compared to interesting, non-dull ads. They key finding from the piece? Simply put, boring ads cost a fortune.

4. Advertiser Perceptions: Podcast Advertising Usage And Spending Intention Explode To Eleven-Year High Among Agencies And Marketers: In advance of the first IAB Podcast Upfront in 2015, the Cumulus Media | Westwood One Audio Active Group® commissioned Advertiser Perceptions to study agency and brand sentiment on podcast advertising. For the last eleven years, the study has been reprised annually to track buy-side podcast advertising consideration and intention. Our fourth most read blog post examined the latest June 2025 results, revealing advertiser/agency podcasting usage and interest had reached an eleven-year high.


3. Perception Vs. Reality: Eight Things Brands Get Wrong About AM/FM Radio: Ad industry perceptions of media audiences are often completely opposite reality. In September, we challenged the narrative and looked at some evidence by collecting frequently heard media agency and marketer myths. Using data from research leaders Nielsen, LeadsRx, and Edison Research, we disproved eight of the biggest misperceptions brands hold about AM/FM radio.

2. Creative Best Practices Handbook: Best Practices From Marketing Effectiveness Leaders And Advertising Measurement Firms: The second most popular blog featured the release of the Creative Best Practices Handbook. The Cumulus Media | Westwood One Audio Active Group® has tested hundreds of audio ads over the years working with the leading experts in creative testing: ABX, Veritonic, and System1. The findings from those tests, along with marketing effectiveness and creative strategy work from industry giants, have been combined to form comprehensive Audio Creative Best Practices. In January, those best practices were distilled and summarized in a Creative Best Practices Handbook.

And our most popular post…

1. Audio Remains The Primary Mode Of Podcast Consumption, Despite Growing Video Use; 92% Say They “Listen” To Podcasts, According To Cumulus Media And Signal Hill Insights’ Podcast Download – Fall 2025 Report: In November we released Cumulus Media and Signal Hill Insights’ Podcast Download – Fall 2025 Report, the fifteenth in the twice annual series of studies analyzing the media habits of weekly podcast consumers. Our most popular blog post highlighted the comparison between podcast viewers and listeners, revealing how the rising use of video hasn’t detracted from podcasts primarily being a “listening” medium.

Pierre Bouvard is Chief Insights Officer of the Cumulus Media | Westwood One Audio Active Group®.

Report: Late-Night Hosts Told 7,045 Trump Jokes in 2025


The NewsBusters report (from the Media Research Center, a conservative media watchdog) is a year-end analysis of political jokes on major late-night shows in 2025. 

It claims that hosts told a total of 7,045 jokes about Donald Trump across six programs: The Daily Show, Jimmy Kimmel Live!, The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, Late Night with Seth Meyers, The Late Show with Stephen Colbert, and After Midnight (which ended in June).

Key findings from the report: 
  • Total political jokes analyzed: 13,097 across 818 episodes from January 6 to December 19, 2025.
  • 92% of those jokes targeted conservatives (12,011 total), up from 82% in 2024.
Trump was the top target by far, accounting for more than half of all political jokes and over 10 times    more than any other figure.  Breakdown by show:
  • Late Night with Seth Meyers: 1,885 Trump jokes
  • Jimmy Kimmel Live!: 1,668
  • The Late Show with Stephen Colbert: 1,458
  • The Daily Show: 1,128
  • The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon: 851
  • After Midnight: 55 (short run)
The report highlights this as evidence of escalating anti-conservative bias in late-night comedy, especially with Trump's second term beginning in 2025, and notes that liberal guests overwhelmingly outnumbered conservatives (nearly 100:1 in some periods). 

It has been covered in outlets like the New York Post, AOL, and conservative sites, often framing late-night TV as one-sided "therapy" for the left.

This is part of NewsBusters' ongoing tracking of late-night political humor, which has consistently shown high volumes of Trump-focused jokes in recent years.

Milwaukee Radio: Benjamin Yount Moves to Morning Drive On WISN


NewsTalk 1130 WISN in Milwaukee is refreshing its weekday lineup starting Friday, January 2, 2026, to build on the station's strong momentum and deliver trusted local talk programming.

The key change: Longtime midday host Benjamin Yount moves to morning drive (6-9 a.m.), succeeding longtime host Jay Weber, who is stepping away from daily mornings at the end of December to launch a twice-weekly iHeartPodcast in 2026 while continuing as a contributor to WISN and iHeartMedia.

Benjamin Yount
Yount, who has hosted the 9-11 a.m. slot since earlier this year (after joining WISN in 2020 as News Director and primary fill-in host), expressed enthusiasm for the shift: “WISN has always been about serving Wisconsin with smart, honest conversation, and I’m honored to take on morning drive. Our listeners count on us to start their day informed and engaged, and I’m excited to continue that in a new time slot while keeping the same commitment to strong local coverage.”

Filling the 9-11 a.m. midday slot is Jason Goch, who will also anchor news during Yount's morning show. Goch brings over 20 years of experience in spoken-word radio, including sports talk and general interest programming, and has previously served as a guest host on WISN. 

“WISN is one of the most respected talk stations in the country, and I’m thrilled to join the lineup,” Goch said. “Midday is a great opportunity to connect with listeners on the issues that matter most, and I’m excited to contribute both on the air and in supporting WISN’s live, local mornings.”

Program Director Jerry Bott described the moves as strategic: “This lineup builds on WISN’s momentum and reflects our focus on serving listeners with strong, credible voices throughout the day. Benjamin has earned the trust of our audience and brings proven ratings success to morning drive, while Jason is a terrific addition whose experience and versatility strengthen our local programming bench.”

The rest of WISN’s weekday schedule remains unchanged. This adjustment follows Weber’s transition from his 18-year run in mornings (and 35+ years with the station overall), positioning Yount—a familiar and trusted voice—as the new morning anchor to maintain continuity for listeners.

Stugotz Signs With iHeartMedia


Jon "Stugotz" Weiner, the veteran sports personality, is returning to daily live radio in a major multiplatform deal with iHeartMedia and FOX Sports Radio. 

Starting in January 2026, he will host a new weekday afternoon show airing Monday through Friday from 3-5 p.m. ET, broadcast on more than 270 FOX Sports Radio stations nationwide from iHeartMedia's South Florida studios. The program will also stream on the FOX Sports Radio channel via iHeartRadio and FOXSportsRadio.com.

The show will serve as a live extension of his popular podcast Stugotz and Company, featuring his signature humor, bold takes, unfiltered commentary, and a mix of regular collaborators plus rotating guest co-hosts.

As part of the agreement, iHeartPodcasts has launched the Stugotz Podcast Network immediately. It includes existing shows like Stugotz and Company and God Bless Football, with plans for additional original sports talk programming. 

Content will be available on the iHeartRadio app, major podcast platforms, and Stugotz's YouTube channel.

Stugotz cited the opportunity to return to live radio while expanding his podcast presence, highlighting the massive reach of iHeartMedia and FOX Sports Radio as key factors in his decision.

FOX Sports Radio Senior VP Scott Shapiro praised Stugotz's unique, unpredictable style, calling him "one of a kind" and predicting an entertaining addition to the afternoon lineup. iHeartPodcasts President Will Pearson emphasized Stugotz's engaged audience and growth potential.

Weiner, who rose to fame co-hosting The Dan Le Batard Show with Stugotz on local Miami radio and later ESPN Radio (2004-2021), has built a dedicated following through podcasts and digital platforms since leaving ESPN.

Poll: Most Voters Oppose Local TV Consolidations


Large majorities of likely voters in the 2026 midterms oppose large national broadcasters buying or merging with local TV stations, according to a new poll.

The survey, commissioned by the National Hispanic Media Coalition (NHMC) and the Defend the Press Campaign, found that 72% of respondents opposed such consolidations, with 52% strongly opposed. Opposition crossed party lines: 75% of Democrats, 70% of Republicans, and 69% of independents rejected the idea.

Conducted by Lake Research Partners among 1,000 likely 2026 midterm voters via live phone interviews and text-to-online methods, the poll also revealed:81% preferred local TV stations to remain locally owned rather than controlled by large national corporations (only 2% favored national ownership).

76% believed corporate mergers would lead to higher prices for cable, satellite, and streaming services.
Four out of five voters opposed regulatory changes allowing broadcasters to grow larger.

NHMC President & CEO Brenda Victoria Castillo stated, “The bottom line is that Americans across the political spectrum simply do not want local TV station consolidation.”

The poll highlights concerns over media consolidation amid FCC discussions on revising the national ownership cap (currently limiting reach to 39% of U.S. households) and amid ongoing debates about local news control and consumer costs.

Philly Radio: 102 Students Pass KYW Newstudies Series


KYW Newsradio (103.9 FM / 1060 AM), an Audacy station in Philadelphia, wrapped up its 58th annual Newstudies program. From October 11 to November 15, 102 talented high school students from across the Greater Philadelphia area had the opportunity to learn inside one of the country’s most respected news radio stations. The program culminated in a graduation ceremony at Temple University on December 13.

Since 1968, KYW Newsradio has offered high school students the opportunity to learn about a major market radio station through the Newstudies student reporter program. For four Saturdays, students learned news writing, reporting, ethics and interviewing skills from station managers, editors, reporters, anchors and guest speakers. Each student researched, wrote and recorded a news story about their school or community and their report will air on KYW Newsradio. This year’s student reports can be heard here.

“No other program brings students closer to the heartbeat of news and sports media,” said Kristina Koppeser, Brand Manager, KYW Newsradio. “After nearly six decades, we aren’t just teaching students, we’re building a legacy that spans generations. With the support of Klein College, we are excited to continue shaping the future of young media professionals, in Philadelphia and beyond.

This year, Trey Williams, a student from Salesianum High School, was awarded the $2,000 Richard Monetti Scholarship. The yearly scholarship is named in honor of a Newstudies graduate who passed away in the 1988 bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 and honors a student whose work demonstrates overall excellence. To keep his memory alive, his family speaks at Newstudies every year.

📻Listeners can tune in to KYW Newsradio (103.9 FM and 1060 AM) in Philadelphia on-air and nationwide on the Audacy app and website. Fans can also connect with the station via X, Facebook and Instagram.

Houston Radio: Mega 101.1 Raises $156K+ for Texas Children’s Hospital

Valentin Gallegos, Gerry Fernandez, Cindy Burbano, Ryan Lavallee, Sarah Frazier,
Lorena Macarena, Liz Arreola and Nancy Mendoza

Mega 101.1 (KLOL-FM), an Audacy station in Houston, raised $156,432 for Texas Children’s Hospital during its annual “Mega Radiothon.” All proceeds go towards providing services to the local community who would otherwise not have access to proper medical attention. Since its inception, the station has raised over $2.5 million for the kids.

The radiothon took place on December 11-12, and throughout the two days, the station’s hosts featured stories from patients and their families who had received care from the hospitals. They expressed their gratitude for the resources the hospitals provided.

“This milestone belongs to our community. The money raised for Texas Children’s Hospital represents compassion in action, hope for families, strength for children and proof that collective kindness can change lives,” said Cindy Burbano, Host, Mega 101.1. “We are honored to stand alongside an audience that believes in giving back and lifting others.”

Texas Children’s Hospital has 80 locations across Texas and the greater Houston area, where they provide life-changing care.

📻Listeners can tune in to Mega 101.1 (KLOL-FM) in Houston on air and nationwide on the Audacy app and website. Fans can also connect with the station on social media via X, Facebook, Instagram and YouTube.

Barry Manilow Discloses Lung Cancer


Singer Barry Manilow, 82, announced Monday that he has been diagnosed with lung cancer.

Doctors discovered a cancerous spot on his left lung during an MRI ordered after a prolonged bout of bronchitis. He described the early detection as "pure luck" and credited his doctor, noting that tests suggest it has not spread. 

The Grammy-winning artist, known for hits like "Mandy" and "Copacabana," plans to undergo surgery to remove the spot but will not require chemotherapy or radiation.

The diagnosis has forced him to reschedule his January 2026 U.S. arena concerts (part of his farewell tour) to February, March, and April. 

Manilow remains optimistic, joking that recovery will involve "chicken soup and I Love Lucy reruns," and urged fans to get tested for any symptoms.



This is not Manilow's first health challenge; he previously battled throat cancer in 2020, along with issues like bronchial pneumonia, heart problems, and vocal cord troubles. 

Fans have flooded social media with support following his announcement.

R.I.P.: Chris Rea, British Singer-Songwriter


British singer-songwriter Chris Rea, best known for the enduring festive hit "Driving Home for Christmas", has died at the age of 74.

Rea passed away peacefully in hospital Monday following a short illness, surrounded by his family. A spokesperson for his wife Joan and their two children released a statement expressing immense sadness and confirming his death.



The Middlesbrough-born musician, whose distinctive gravelly voice and bluesy slide guitar defined his sound, recorded 25 studio albums over a career spanning decades. Hits like "Fool (If You Think It's Over)" (a Grammy-nominated track from 1978), "The Road to Hell", "Let's Dance", and "On the Beach" brought him widespread success, particularly in the UK and Europe, where albums such as The Road to Hell (1989) and Auberge (1991) topped the charts.His 1986 song "Driving Home for Christmas" — originally released as a B-side and later featured on the 1988 compilation New Light Through Old Windows — became a perennial holiday favorite. 



Written during a snowy drive home with his wife while he was banned from driving, the track has charted in the UK every Christmas since 2007 and featured in this year's M&S Food advert.

Rea overcame significant health challenges, including a pancreatic cancer diagnosis in the 1990s (leading to the removal of his pancreas and development of diabetes) and a stroke in 2016. Despite these, he continued creating music, often drawing from his blues roots.

Tributes poured in from fans, fellow artists, and his hometown of Middlesbrough, where he was hailed as a "Teesside icon" who put the town on the map. His family noted that his music has been the soundtrack to many lives and his legacy will endure through his songs.

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.

Monday, December 22, 2025

Larry Ellison Steps-Up To Personally Guarantee Bid

Larry and David Ellison

Oracle co-founder Larry Ellison has personally guaranteed $40.4 billion in equity financing for Paramount Skydance's hostile bid to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery (WBD), addressing key concerns raised by WBD's board about the deal's funding certainty.

The revised offer, announced Monday morning, maintains the original $30 per share all-cash price, valuing WBD at approximately $108 billion. It includes additional concessions: Ellison has committed not to revoke or adversely transfer assets from the Ellison family trust during the deal's pendency, and Paramount has increased its reverse termination fee to $5.8 billion (matching Netflix's) while extending the tender offer expiration to January 21, 2026.

The move responds directly to WBD's December 17 rejection of the prior bid, where the board criticized the financing as relying on an "opaque revocable trust" without a full personal backstop from the Ellison family, calling the offer "illusory" and inferior to Netflix's $83 billion deal for WBD's studios, HBO, and streaming assets.

Paramount argues its all-cash proposal for the entire company provides superior value and a clearer regulatory path, though WBD has urged shareholders to stick with Netflix. Shares of WBD rose nearly 4% in pre-market trading on the news, while Paramount Skydance shares also gained.

The battle continues as Paramount presses its case directly to WBD shareholders amid a high-stakes fight for control of major Hollywood assets.