Tuesday, May 26, 2026

CBS News Pivots From Radio Newscasts to Audio


CBS News Radio aired the final edition of its iconic “World News Roundup” Thursday nighty, closing a program that began in 1938 as a victim of budget cuts at parent company Paramount.

Anchor Steve Kathan delivered the sign-off from a dimly lit studio at the CBS Broadcast Center in Manhattan, noting the program’s historic debut on March 13, 1938. He played a recording of Edward R. Murrow’s closing words from that first broadcast: “the best in radio reporting is yet to be — good night and good luck.”

Twin Cities Radio: Co-Host Let Go as Dave Ryan Exits KDWB


As longtime morning host Dave Ryan wraps up his 33-year career at 101.3 KDWB, the station is undergoing a major lineup overhaul that includes the departure of his co-host Bailey J. Hess.

According to Bring Me The News, Hess confirmed Saturday night on Facebook that she was let go following Friday’s final show with Ryan.

“I’ve had a lot of people asking about what’s in store for me at KDWB,” Hess wrote. “I am sad to say that after the show yesterday, I was let go.”

'Comic Unleashed" Takes Over Colbert Time Slot


Media mogul Byron Allen’s long-running comedy roundtable Comics Unleashed has replaced Stephen Colbert’s The Late Show in the prestigious 11:35 p.m. slot on CBS, fulfilling a 51-year personal goal for Allen.

In a wide-ranging NPR Newsmakers interview, Allen expressed excitement about the opportunity but made clear he has no plans to alter his established formula to chase Colbert’s former audience of more than 2.5 million viewers per episode.

No changes, no controversy, no corporate boundaries

FCC Opens Public Comment On ABC's 'The View'


The FCC has launched a formal public comment period to determine whether ABC’s daytime talk show The View meets the legal definition of a “bona fide news program,” which would exempt it from longstanding equal time obligations for political candidates.

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr announced the proceeding on Friday. Comments are due by June 22, with reply comments accepted until July 6.

Welcome Back: Recharge With the Pulse For Tuesday, May 26


Radio Broadcasting

Ownerships Killing Radio: The National Association of Broadcasters has reiterated its call for the FCC to update outdated radio ownership caps, arguing that today's broadcasters compete primarily against unregulated streaming services and digital giants rather than other radio stations.

CBS News Audio Pivots: CBS plans to stay in audio journalism through podcasts rather than traditional newscasts. The company is developing “a whole bunch of different things that are less news reading and more other things.”

Dave Ryan's CoHost Fired: As longtime morning host Dave Ryan wraps up his 33-year career at 101.3 KDWB, the station is undergoing a major lineup overhaul that includes the departure of his co-host Bailey J. Hess.

NAB Tells FCC Ownerships Caps Are Unsustainable


The National Association of Broadcasters has reiterated its call for the FCC to update outdated radio ownership caps, arguing that today's broadcasters compete primarily against unregulated streaming services and digital giants rather than other radio stations.

In comments filed in the FCC’s biennial communications marketplace review (GN Docket No. 26-78), the NAB says the current rules place radio on a “playing field fundamentally tilted against them.” 

Broadcasters remain subject to strict ownership limits and regulations while facing largely unregulated competitors for listeners and advertising dollars. The group urges the Commission to relax local radio ownership restrictions to help level the competitive landscape.

AMAs: BTS Artists of the Year


BTS won Artist of the Year at the 52nd American Music Awards, marking a triumphant return to the stage after four years and leading a night of fan-voted triumphs at the MGM Grand Garden Arena in Las Vegas on Monday, May 25, 2026.

Hosted by Queen Latifah and broadcast live on CBS and Paramount+, the show highlighted commercial success through public voting, with BTS also claiming Song of the Summer and Best Male K-Pop Artist. 


Other multiple winners included Sabrina Carpenter (Album of the Year for Man’s Best Friend), Cardi B, KATSEYE (New Artist of the Year), and SOMBR.

NYC Radio: Eddie Scozzare Signs Off After 37 Years at WFAN


Eddie Scozzare, the longtime producer and board operator for Audacy’s WFAN morning drive, officially ended his 37-year career on Friday, signing off in front of fans, colleagues, and cameras during the station’s “Kickoff to Summer” celebration in Belmar, New Jersey.

The 47-year-old Scozzare was celebrated by the station, its current morning show Boomer and Gio, and loyal listeners who gathered for the event. A true WFAN lifer, he became one of the few behind-the-scenes figures to build a genuine on-air connection with the audience through his quick wit, perfectly timed drops, and endless supply of trivia.

Late Night Comedy Shifts Platforms


Stephen Colbert’s departure from CBS’s The Late Show marks the potential close of a historic franchise, yet the broader late-night comedy tradition has shifted online rather than disappearing.

Reuters reports Podcasts now offer comedians creative freedom, larger audiences, and stronger economics compared to traditional television. Former late-night hosts like Conan O’Brien, Chelsea Handler, and Samantha Bee have built successful second acts, joined by stars such as Amy Poehler, Theo Von, and rising talents like Kareem Rahma, whose subway celebrity interviews have gone viral.

Consumer Sentiment Hits All-Time Low


Consumer confidence in the United States has plunged to the lowest level ever recorded in more than 70 years of tracking, according to the University of Michigan’s latest index released Friday.

The sharp decline comes as Americans grapple with persistently high prices, a softening labor market, and rising energy costs triggered by the Iran war that began at the end of February. The reading fell 10% below the previous record low set in June 2022, when inflation was at its highest level in decades.

NOAA Forecasts Scorching Summer for Most of U-S


Above-average temperatures are forecast across the vast majority of the United States this summer, according to the latest seasonal outlook released May 21 by NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center.

The June-July-August map is dominated by orange and red shading, indicating elevated probabilities of hotter-than-normal conditions from the West through the Great Plains, Lower Mississippi Valley, and East Coast. The highest confidence for above-normal temperatures centers on the Pacific Northwest. Above-normal temperatures are also favored for most of Alaska.

Only the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest appear in white, signaling equal chances of above-, near-, or below-normal temperatures.

Bananas Sell Out Record-Shattering 101,000 Fans In Knoxville


A sold-out crowd of approximately 101,000 fans packed Tennessee’s Neyland Stadium in Knoxville on Sarturday, as the viral entertainment baseball team Savannah Bananas brought their unique “Banana Ball” brand to the iconic 101,915-capacity football venue for a game against the Texas Tailgaters.

The event marked one of the largest single-game attendances in Banana Ball history — second only to the 102,000 fans who attended the team’s May 2 game at Texas A&M’s Kyle Field — and represented the first organized baseball game at Neyland in nearly a century. 

Fans, many dressed in banana yellow, filled the stands for a high-energy night featuring trick plays, a two-hour game clock, players on stilts, backflips, a Dolly Parton-themed heel race, celebrity appearances including former Vol Alvin Kamara as a pinch runner, and Lady Vols softball stars throwing out the first pitch.

Radio History: May 26



➦In 1886
..iconic performer Al Jolson born Asa Yoelson (Died at age 64 - October 23, 1950) was a Russian-born American singer, comedian, and actor. At the peak of his career, he was dubbed "The World's Greatest Entertainer".  In the 1920s, Jolson was America's most famous and highest-paid entertainer.

Al Jolson - 1938
Although best remembered today as the star of the first talking picture, The Jazz Singer (1927), he starred in a series of successful musical films during the 1930s. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he was the first star to entertain troops overseas during World War II.

After a period of inactivity, his stardom returned with The Jolson Story (1946), for which Larry Parks played Jolson, with the singer dubbing for Parks. The formula was repeated in a sequel, Jolson Sings Again (1949). In 1950, he again became the first star to entertain GIs on active service in the Korean War, performing 42 shows in 16 days. He died weeks after returning to the U.S., partly owing to the physical exertion of performing. Defense Secretary George Marshall posthumously awarded him the Medal for Merit.

➦In 1903...Canadian radio pioneer Reginald Fessenden was granted a patent for the liquid barretter microphone.

➦In 1920...singer Peggy Lee, whose real name is Norma Delores Egstrom, was born in Jamestown, North Dakota.

She was among the few singers who can handle any type of song — pop, ballad, country, rhythm-and-blues or jazz. Benny Goodman gave her her stage name when she performed with his band from 1941 to ’43. Lee went out on her own after marrying Goodman’s guitarist, Dave Barbour. Her hit records included “Manana (mahn-YAH’-nah),” ”Fever” — a cover of Little Willie John’s r-and-b song — and ”Is That All There Is?” Peggy Lee died of a heart attack January 21st, 2002. She was 81.

Jimmie Rodgers
➦In 1933...Jimmie Rodgers, the “Father of Country Music,” died of tuberculosis in New York City at age 35, just two days after making his final recording.

He was so ill during his final recording sessions that he had to rest between takes on a cot.  Jimmie Rodgers recorded his first million-seller “T for Texas,” also known as “Blue Yodel,” in 1927, becoming country music’s first superstar. He never appeared on any major radio show or played the Grand Ole Opry. But he, Hank Williams and songwriter-publisher Fred Rose were the first to be elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961.

➦In 1940...CBS Radio first presented “Invitation to Learning”.  The 30-minute Sunday morning program that featured a discussion of great books, with Lyman Bryson as host, continued for 15 years.

Joe Kelly
➦In 1959...Chicago-based radio host Joe Kelly, who MC’d the WLS National Barn Dance & NBC’s Quiz Kids (1940-53), died at age 57.

➦In 1962...the original version of “Twist and Shout,” by the Isley Brothers, was released. The song was revived two years later by The Beatles.

➦In 1971...Don McLean was in New York to record his soon-to-be iconic signature song “American Pie.”

➦In 1989...Radio stations staged 30 seconds of silence at 7:42 AM (EST), to honor Radio.