The AM Radio for Every Vehicle Act is bipartisan legislation aimed at ensuring that AM radio remains a standard, free feature in all new passenger vehicles sold in the United States. It addresses concerns that some automakers (particularly for electric vehicles) have removed AM broadcast receivers due to interference issues or design choices, potentially limiting access to emergency alerts, news, weather, and public safety information delivered via AM stations—especially critical during disasters when other systems may fail.
Key Details
Bill Numbers and Sponsors:
House version: H.R. 979 (119th Congress, 2025-2026), introduced February 5, 2025, by Rep. Gus Bilirakis (R-FL) and co-led by Rep. Frank Pallone (D-NJ).
Senate version: S. 315, introduced January 29, 2025 (or late January), by Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) and Sen. Ed Markey (D-MA).
Main Provisions:
Requires the Secretary of Transportation (via the National Highway Traffic Safety Administration, or NHTSA) to issue a rule mandating that all new passenger motor vehicles include devices capable of receiving and playing AM broadcast signals (including digital audio AM) as standard equipment.
AM access must be free (no extra fees, surcharges, or payments), easily accessible to the driver, and apply to vehicles manufactured in the U.S., imported, or shipped in interstate commerce after the rule's effective date.
Consults with the FCC and FEMA to ensure alignment with public safety needs (e.g., integration with emergency alert systems like IPAWS).
During the interim period (between enactment and the rule's effective date), vehicles without AM radio must be clearly labeled to inform consumers.
Provides compliance flexibility for smaller manufacturers (e.g., extra time for those producing under certain thresholds).
Includes a potential sunset or review period (amendments in committee shortened one aspect from 10 to 8 years in some versions).
Daylight Saving Time (DST) resumed across most of the United States on Sunday at 2:00 a.m. local time, when clocks "sprang forward" one hour to 3:00 a.m. This annual shift, mandated by federal law since adjustments in 2007, extends evening daylight but shortens the morning period, affecting sleep patterns and daily routines for millions.
For U.S. radio broadcasters, particularly those operating on the AM band, the time change directly impacts operational compliance with FCC rules. Many AM stations are licensed as daytime-only (Class D or similar), meaning they are authorized to broadcast only from local sunrise to local sunset to minimize interference from skywave propagation at night. Others hold pre-sunrise authorization (PSRA) or post-sunset authorization (PSSA), allowing limited-power operation in the two hours before sunrise or after sunset, respectively, with power caps typically at 500 watts (not exceeding daytime limits).
The spring-forward adjustment shifts local sunrise and sunset times later by one hour on the clock.
As a result:
Daytime-only AM stations must delay their sign-on until the new (later) local sunrise, potentially reducing morning drive-time coverage when listener demand is high.
Stations with PSRA must recalibrate pre-sunrise start times to align with the updated local clock (e.g., provisions in FCC rules like §73.99 account for DST shifts to ensure consistent local-time operation).
Post-sunset operations similarly adjust for the delayed sunset.
The FCC routinely reminds licensees of these requirements around DST transitions, emphasizing verification of authorized parameters to avoid violations. Broadcasters often use FCC tools or recalculated authorizations (updated in recent years) to determine precise quarter-hour power increments during these periods.
This timing coincides with broader industry dynamics in early 2026. The FCC's ongoing 2022 Quadrennial Regulatory Review of broadcast ownership rules—focusing on local radio limits, among others—continues with comments and replies processed into early 2026, fueling discussions on potential rollbacks to allow greater consolidation amid competitive pressures from digital media.
Opportunistic station dealmaking gained momentum, with BIA Advisory Services reporting 36 radio stations traded in January 2026 (more than double the prior year's pace), totaling around $15.7 million in filings, including notable multi-station deals in Arkansas and single high-value sales like a Providence-market FM.
Country music legend Vince Gill recently revealed he once nearly came to blows with radio shock jock Don Imus during a heated on-air confrontation, after Imus made disparaging remarks about Gill's wife, singer Amy Grant.
Gill recounted the incident on the "Naked Lunch" podcast, explaining that he and Imus had been good friends before Gill married Grant. Imus, who previously praised Gill (along with singer Delbert McClinton as favorites), reportedly "flipped" after the marriage and began mocking Gill daily on his morning show, eventually targeting Grant with unkind comments.
Gill appeared as a guest on Imus's program and waited for the moment Grant's name came up. When Imus said something negative about her, Gill confronted him directly:
In a sharp exchange on Real Time with Bill Maher that aired Friday, March 6, 2026, Sen. Adam Schiff (D-CA) walked straight into a classic gotcha moment set by host Bill Maher, highlighting apparent inconsistencies in how presidential war powers are judged depending on who's in office.
The discussion centered on recent U.S. military strikes against Iran under President Trump, which critics like Schiff have slammed as unconstitutional without explicit congressional approval.
Schiff argued that broad claims of executive authority to use force are dangerously vague and overreach presidential powers under the Constitution.
Maher then presented a statement for Schiff to evaluate: “This statement from the administration: ‘The president had the constitutional authority to direct the use of military force because he could reasonably determine that such use of force was in the national interest.’ That’s too vague for you?”
Schiff quickly agreed, calling it “totally vague” and implying it lacked sufficient justification or checks.
Maher delivered the reveal: “Okay. Because that’s from Obama about Libya.”
106.1 BLI (WBLI-FM) has officially promoted Ally Ali to co-host status on its morning show.
Effective immediately, the program is renamed “Syke & Ally Ali in the Morning” (previously “The Syke Morning Show with Ally Ali”).Both Syke and Ally Ali have signed new multi-year contracts with the station, securing their leadership of the morning show for years to come.
The name change reflects Ally Ali’s growing influence and on-air partnership with Syke. Since joining the program, she has become a central voice, boosting the show’s energy, listener interaction, and connection with Long Island audiences.
“Ally Ali has become an essential part of the show and a true partner to Syke on the air,” said Chris Lloyd, Director of Operations, Branding and Programming. “Their chemistry and connection with listeners continues to grow, and this change reflects the show our audience hears every morning.”
The show, Syke & Ally Ali in the Morning, airs weekday mornings on 106.1 BLI, delivering pop culture, lifestyle talk, listener engagement, and hit music to wake up Long Island.
Ally Ali also continues hosting middays on 106.1 BLI from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.
Plight of Daytime AM Radio Stations After DST "Spring Forward": The switch to Daylight Saving Time on March 8, 2026 (clocks sprang forward at 2 a.m., creating a 23-hour day), has immediately impacted many daytime-only AM radio stations and those with restricted pre-sunrise/post-sunset authority. FCC licenses specify operating hours in Standard Time, so stations must strictly adhere to local sunrise/sunset times without gaining "extra" broadcast hours from the clock change. This means many AM outlets—particularly smaller or class D daytime-only stations—faced earlier effective sign-off relative to clock time or delayed full-power operations in the morning, potentially cutting into peak morning drive listenership (a critical revenue period).
Personnel Moves and Programming Updates in Radio: Several notable shifts occurred or took effect around March 9: Dan Breymeier (known as “Flounder”) joined Times-Shamrock Media's classic hits “92 Mix FM” (WQFM/WQFN in Wilkes-Barre/Scranton, PA) as Assistant Program Director and afternoon host. He previously held roles at crosstown stations. Other moves included programming tweaks at stations like Beasley Media Group's 97.5 The Fanatic (WPEN Philadelphia), reuniting hosts for middays.
Media Industry
Fox News Apology for Airing Old Footage of President Trump: Fox News issued an on-air apology (initially during Sunday's Fox & Friends Weekend broadcast, with statements carrying into March 9 coverage) for "inadvertently" using archival video from a prior dignified transfer (likely December 2025) instead of the correct footage from the March 7, ceremony at Dover Air Force Base. The event honored six U.S. service members killed in an Iranian drone strike in Kuwait. The old clip showed Trump hatless and saluting solemnly, while actual recent footage depicted him wearing a white "USA" baseball cap throughout the event, sparking backlash over perceived disrespect to the solemn occasion. Anchor Griff Jenkins addressed the error live, expressing regret and extending condolences to the families. Fox described it as an honest sourcing mistake, noting correct footage aired at other times (e.g., Saturday).
Tensions Between Trump Administration and Media Over Iran War Reporting: The administration has ramped up criticism of mainstream outlets (particularly CNN) for their coverage of U.S. military casualties and strikes. CNN's Jake Tapper responded defiantly on March 8 (with clips recirculating March 9), stating the press's role is to report facts on the war—not "cheerlead" for it—telling critics to "get used to it." This has intensified partisan divides in media consumption, with pro-administration outlets like Fox emphasizing Trump's claims of "total demolition" of Iranian forces and calls for "unconditional surrender."
U-S News
Escalation in the Iran War and Leadership Transition: Iran has named Mojtaba Khamenei (son of the late Ayatollah Ali Khamenei) as the new Supreme Leader. This has driven oil prices surging past $100 per barrel for the first time in years, impacting global markets and the U.S. economy. President Trump has stated that Iran wants to negotiate but it's "too late," with U.S. officials indicating the "most significant" strikes may still be ahead. Trump described surging oil prices as "a small price to pay" for eliminating Iran's nuclear program. There are also reports of Iranian attacks on U.S. and allied targets, including bases in the region, and concerns about potential spillover or wider war (with China issuing warnings against further U.S. attacks).
U.S. Military Casualties and Media Coverage Tensions: Additional U.S. troops have been killed in the conflict (including identifications of personnel lost in Kuwait and other strikes). The Trump administration has criticized media coverage (e.g., CNN) of these deaths, with Jake Tapper responding that the press's role is to cover the war, not "cheerlead" for it. Discussions continue about potential war crimes, such as an alleged U.S./Israeli strike on an Iranian school.
Arrests Following Protest in New York City: Several arrests occurred after chaotic dueling protests outside Gracie Mansion (the official residence of NYC Mayor Zohran Mamdani, who is Muslim) on March 7. A far-right demonstration led by activist Jake Lang, titled something like "Stop the Islamic Takeover of New York City," clashed with counterprotesters. An improvised explosive device (or "homemade bomb"/suspicious smoking devices) was thrown/ignited during the confrontation, capable of causing serious injury or death. NYPD arrested six people total, including two Pennsylvania men (Emir Balat, 18, and Ibrahim Kayumi/Nikk, 19) accused of handling and throwing the devices—some sources indicate they admitted to ISIS inspiration, prompting a Joint Terrorism Task Force investigation with potential federal charges.
Expected job cuts from the Paramount Skydance-Warner Bros. Discovery merger remain a major point of speculation and anxiety in Hollywood, with no official numbers released but widespread predictions of thousands of layoffs to help achieve $6 billion in cost synergies over three years post-closing.
Paramount executives, including CEO David Ellison and Chief Strategy Officer Andy Gordon, have repeatedly downplayed the scale of workforce reductions during investor calls and interviews in early March 2026. They insist the majority of the $6 billion in targeted synergies, aimed at offsetting the combined entity's projected $79 billion net debt load, will come from non-labor sources.
These include consolidating streaming technology stacks (merging Paramount+ and HBO Max platforms), optimizing cloud providers, procurement efficiencies, marketing spend, real estate consolidation (likely centering operations at the Warner Bros. lot in Burbank), IT system migrations to a single ERP platform, and broader corporate overhead reductions.
Ellison has emphasized that synergies will not reduce production capacity, with plans to maintain or even increase theatrical output to 30+ films annually, and has described labor rationalization as secondary rather than the primary driver.
Despite these assurances, industry observers, analysts, employees, and media reports express deep skepticism, viewing the $6 billion figure as code for significant headcount reductions given the massive overlap in duplicative functions across two major studios, streaming services, TV networks, and corporate divisions. Reports describe the anticipated impact as a potential "bloodbath," "jobs apocalypse," or "thousands of layoffs," potentially rivaling past media industry downturns.
Older demographics (55+) are gaining buzz in advertising for their outsized spending power and loyalty—yet brands and media remain fixated on the narrower 25-54 group.
Key facts:
In 2025, adults 55+ accounted for nearly half of U.S. new vehicle registrations, while 18-34s fell below 10% (S&P Global Mobility).
Americans 65–74 hold the highest median net worth (~$410,000), with 76% homeownership and strong retirement savings (Federal Reserve SCF).
Households 75+ now sit 55% above the national net-worth average, up sharply over decades (NBER).
Wealth has risen for 55–69 households while declining for some middle-age groups (Center for American Progress).
Today’s 55+ consumers own homes outright, have substantial savings, and actively buy cars, travel, healthcare, home improvements, and luxury goods. Brand loyalties shift with life changes—except, apparently, mayonnaise.
President Donald Trump sharply rebuked Fox News Senior White House Correspondent Peter Doocy on Friday, during a White House roundtable on college athletics, calling Doocy's question about reports of Russia providing intelligence to Iran to target U.S. forces a "stupid question" and insisting the discussion stay on topic.
Trump dismissed the query as off-topic and an "easy problem" compared to the event's focus on saving college sports, saying:
Doocy: It sounds like the Russians are helping Iran.
Trump: I have a lot of respect for you. You always been very nice to me. What a stupid question to be asking. pic.twitter.com/aq71ux3Ac9
He did not directly address the Russia-Iran allegations, which stem from recent reporting (including in The Washington Post) amid escalating U.S.-Israel-Iran conflict in the Middle East.
Sean Hannity, a longtime Trump ally and Fox News host, later spoke with Doocy and defended Trump's reaction. Hannity described it as Trump "attacking" Doocy not personally, but because the question was legitimately tough and hard—a "fair" one that exposed a serious geopolitical "problem" (potential Russian aid to Iran against U.S. interests) that Trump preferred not to discuss or divert attention to during the unrelated event.
The exchange drew widespread attention, as Doocy represents a network often aligned with Trump, and it underscored frustrations over off-topic questions at focused White House appearances. Critics saw it as evasion on national security issues, while supporters viewed it as appropriate boundary-setting.
A federal judge appeared skeptical of the Pentagon's new press access restrictions during a hearing on Friday, in the New York Times lawsuit challenging the policy as a violation of the First Amendment.
U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman in Washington, D.C., heard arguments from the Times and the Department of Defense. The judge questioned the government's defense sharply, particularly on First Amendment implications, and indicated he may rule soon given the case's significance amid ongoing U.S. military operations (including the war with Iran).
No final decision has been issued yet, but a ruling is expected in the coming weeks.
The New York Times, along with reporter Julian Barnes, sued the Pentagon, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, and chief spokesman Sean Parnell in December 2025. The suit claims the Defense Department's October 2025 policy on Pentagon Facility Alternate Credentials (PFACs/press badges) is unconstitutional.
A federal judge has ruled that Kari Lake's appointment as acting CEO of the U.S. Agency for Global Media (USAGM) — the parent agency overseeing Voice of America (VOA) — was unlawful, voiding major actions she took during her tenure, including mass layoffs of hundreds of staffers.
U.S. District Judge Royce Lamberth, a Reagan appointee, issued the decision on Saturday in Washington, D.C. He granted summary judgment in favor of plaintiffs, including VOA journalists and a federal employees' union, who sued the Trump administration.
The court found that Lake's elevation to acting CEO on July 31, 2025, violated the Federal Vacancies Reform Act and the Constitution's Appointments Clause. Lake was ineligible because she was not already employed by USAGM when the prior CEO resigned in January 2025, nor had she received Senate confirmation for any relevant federal role. The judge described the arrangement as an "unlawful effort" to install her as CEO "in all but name" and "violence to the statutory and constitutional scheme."
Estefany RodrÃguez Florez, a Colombian journalist for Nashville Noticias and Univision 42 who has reported critically on ICE activities, remains in ICE detention as of March 8, 2026, following her arrest on March 4 during a traffic stop outside a gym in south Nashville.
Her attorneys filed an emergency petition for a writ of habeas corpus in federal court, alleging the detention was retaliatory due to her journalism, violated her First Amendment rights, and involved an arrest without a proper judicial warrant.
They claim she was not shown any valid warrant at the time and that the administrative warrant later provided by ICE was incomplete or improper. RodrÃguez, who entered the U.S. on a tourist visa in March 2021, has an active asylum case, a work permit, and is married to a U.S. citizen; her lawyers attribute the arrest partly to confusion or missed immigration appointments, which ICE cited as making her a flight risk.ICE maintains that RodrÃguez-Florez is unlawfully present in the U.S. after overstaying her visa, describing the arrest as part of a "targeted enforcement operation." An ICE spokesperson confirmed she is an "illegal alien from Colombia" and stated she will receive due process.
A 30-year-old woman was arrested Sunday after firing multiple rounds from an assault-style rifle at pop star Rihanna's Beverly Hills-area mansion, with bullets striking a gate, an RV in the driveway, and penetrating a wall of the home, but causing no injuries.
Rihanna was inside the residence at the time of the shooting, which occurred around 1:21 p.m. in the Beverly Hills Post Office neighborhood, according to Los Angeles police and law enforcement sources. No one else was reported hurt, and it's unclear if the singer's partner, A$AP Rocky, or their three young children were also home.
The suspect fired at least seven to 10 shots from inside a white Tesla parked across the street from the property's gate, then fled south on Coldwater Canyon Drive, per LAPD radio dispatch audio and police statements.
Officers used helicopter surveillance to track the vehicle—described as dirty on the bottom, with the driver wearing a cream-colored blouse and braids—to a shopping center parking lot in Sherman Oaks. The woman was taken into custody about 30 minutes after the initial 911 call.Police recovered an assault rifle and seven casings from the vehicle, LAPD spokesperson Armen Arias said. Bullet holes were confirmed in the gate and the RV.
The LA Times reports the incident remains under investigation, with no motive or additional details about the suspect released.
“Country Joe” McDonald, the influential singer-songwriter and frontman of the 1960s psychedelic rock band Country Joe and the Fish, died on Saturday, at his home in Berkeley, California. He was 84. His wife, Kathy McDonald, and the band's official announcements confirmed that the cause was complications from Parkinson’s disease, with McDonald surrounded by family at the time of his passing.
McDonald became an enduring symbol of the era's antiwar movement through his iconic performance at the 1969 Woodstock festival. There, he led the massive crowd of nearly 400,000 in his irreverent "Fish Cheer"—spelling out an expletive with call-and-response shouts of "Gimme an F!"—before launching into his satirical anti-Vietnam War anthem "I-Feel-Like-I’m-Fixin’-to-Die Rag." The song, with its biting lyrics mocking the draft and military industrial complex ("And it's one, two, three, what are we fighting for? / Don't ask me, I don't give a damn"), captured the disillusionment of a generation and remains one of the most recognized protest songs of the counterculture era.
According to John Schneider at The Radio Historian: KJR, begun by amateur radio operator Vincent I. Kraft, was the first radio station to be licensed in the Pacific Northwest.
Vincent Kraft
After World War I, the civilian radio stations that had been ordered closed during the war were allowed to reopen. One was Vincent I. Kraft’s amateur station 7AC in Seattle. Kraft operated a small radio parts store in downtown Seattle, and in his spare time played with a small 5 Watt deForest Wireless telephone transmitter, transmitting from his home at E. 68th Street and 19th NE. An antenna hung from a 90 foot tower in the back yard.
He soon applied for and received the experimental license 7XC for “wireless telephone” transmission. He moved a phonograph and a piano into the garage adjoining his home, and tacked carpeting on the walls to improve the acoustics. 7XC went on the air on 1110 kc. starting in 1919, transmitting voice and music programs. He played phonograph records, coaxed a local piano teacher into performing, and asked a neighbor boy to play the violin. There was no regular schedule. Every so often he would get a call from one of the few people that had a crystal radio set in Seattle, and he would turn on the transmitter and broadcast so they could demonstrate the new "wireless" to their friends.
In 1921, the U.S. Department of Commerce created a new class of license for radio broadcasting stations. At the same time, a new law was issued that prohibited amateur stations from broadcasting music. So Kraft immediately applied for and received the license KJR, and transferred his 7XC operations to this new license. Unlike its amateur station predecessor, KJR operated on a regular schedule of several hours per day, 3 days a week.
Beginning in the 1950s and lasting until 1982, KJR was a pioneer Top 40 radio station owned by entertainer Danny Kaye and Lester Smith, "Kaye/Smith Enterprises".
In the 1960s, under the programming guidance of Pat O'Day, the station was top rated in Seattle and well known for introducing the Pacific Northwest to many recording stars such as Jimi Hendrix, the Beatles, Merrilee Rush & The Turnabouts and the Ventures. Today, the call letters are used by KJR-FM, which broadcasts a format that includes many of the songs and shows (including original American Top 40 shows from the 1970s) from that era.
Gary Lockwood was THE big morning show on Seattle radio in the 1980's as AM radio was fading out in Seattle. KJR was playing Oldies then.
KJR would switch to soft adult contemporary in 1982. In 1988, the station shifted to oldies, playing the music that had made the station famous throughout the 1960s and 1970s.
KJR's shift to sports programming was a gradual evolution starting in 1989, when the station added some sports-themed shows in mid-days and afternoons. The rest of the music programming would be phased out in September 1991.
On November 4, 2011, at 7 AM, KJR began simulcasting on 102.9 FM, replacing country-formatted KNBQ. This ended on June 13, 2013, when KNBQ (now KYNW) reverted to an Adult top 40 format. During this time, Clear Channel did not transfer the KJR-FM calls from 95.7 to 102.9, instead co-branding the station as "Sports Radio 950 AM and 102.9 FM KJR".
A collection of some of the country's greatest air personalities entertained Seattle listeners like Larry Lujack, Scotty Brink, Norm Gregory, Burl Barer, Pat O'Day, Eric Chase, Bob Shannon, "World Famous" Tom Murphy, Bobby Simon, Jerry Kaye, "Emperor" Lee Smith, Lan Roberts, Robert O. Smith, Charlie Brown, Bwana Johnny, Matt Riedy, Marion Seymour, Sky Walker, Tracy Mitchell, and Bob Brooks. Gary "Lockjock" Lockwood, a.k.a. L.J., was the disk jockey who had the longest tenure on the "Mighty Channel 95," from 1976-1991.
➦In 1925....WHBC Canton, OH signed-on. The original license for the station was granted on February 13, 1925 to Father Edward P. Graham and the St. John Catholic Church. WHBC began broadcasting at 1180 kHz with 100 watts. It was the first Catholic radio station on the air in the U.S., as WLWL in New York was not licensed until August 1925. By the middle of 1927 the station had moved to 1270 kHz. Broadcasting had moved to 1200 kHz by the middle of 1930.