Thursday, February 7, 2013

NPR Tests Ad Campaign


It may not carry much advertising, but that doesn’t mean NPR is against the idea. The highbrow radio organization is launching its first advertising campaign in four markets this month. It hopes to increase visibility and attract more listeners for both its broadcast and online programming.

According to mediapost.com, the campaign, which is scheduled to last three months, includes TV, billboards, rail transit, print and digital advertising. It will promote the local public radio station carrying NPR in each market, including KERA in Dallas-Fort Worth, WFYI in Indianapolis, WMFE in Orlando, and KPBS in San Diego.

Created by Baltimore-based branding and communications agency Planit, the campaign targets adults ages 25-44 with at least some college education and is being funded by a $750,000 grant from the Ford Foundation.


While it doesn’t rely on advertising revenue for support, NPR faces the same kind of competition from online audio as big commercial broadcast radio groups.

Know Your Listener: Millennials Are Stressed


Stress levels for Americans have taken a decidedly downward turn across the USA — except for young adults, whose stress is higher than the national norm, says a survey to be released Thursday.

USA Today reports those ages 18-33 — the Millennial generation — are plenty stressed, and it's not letting up: 39% say their stress has increased in the past year; 52% say stress has kept them awake at night in the past month. And more than any other age group, they report being told by a health care provider that they have either depression or an anxiety disorder.

The online survey of 2,020 U.S. adults 18 and older, conducted in August by Harris Interactive for the American Psychological Association, has been taking the stress pulse of Americans since 2007.

On a 10-point scale, where 1 means "little or no stress" and 10 means "a great deal of stress," the 2012 average is 4.9.

But for Millennials, it's 5.4.

"Younger people do tend to be more stressed than older people do. It may be they are more willing to admit to it. It may be a phase of life. They just don't know where they're going in life," says Mike Hais of Arcadia, Calif., a market researcher and co-author of two books on that generation, including 2011's Millennial Momentum.

But for this group, there is more cause for worry, Hais says.

"Millennials are growing up at a tough time. They were sheltered in many ways, with a lot of high expectations for what they should achieve. Individual failure is difficult to accept when confronted with a sense you're an important person and expected to achieve. Even though, in most instances, it's not their fault — the economy collapsed just as many of them were getting out of college and coming of age — that does lead to a greater sense of stress," he says.


Tom's Take: Another reason for stress could be they're continuously connected to their devices.

FCC Commissioner To Address Future Of AM Radio

Ajit V. Pai
The National Association of Broadcasters announced today that FCC Commissioner Ajit V. Pai will lead a session on AM radio revitalization at the NAB Show in Las Vegas on Monday, April 8.

Broadcasters are exploring the challenges and opportunities related to revitalizing AM radio while continuing to provide the popular, local programming that millions of listeners rely on daily. This session, held within the Broadcast Management Conference, will address possible options for sustaining and enhancing AM radio as a unique entertainment medium. Commissioner Pai, who has expressed special interest in the future of AM radio, will moderate a panel of AM radio leaders, engineers and policy experts.

Pai joined the FCC as Commissioner in May 2012 and is focusing on creating a regulatory environment in which competition and innovation can flourish, for the benefit of American consumers. Between 2007 and 2011, Pai held several positions in the FCC’s Office of General Counsel, including Deputy General Counsel.

NAB Show, held April 6-11 in Las Vegas.

'So God Made A DJ': The Video

During the Super Bowl 47 Dodge aired a great commercial using the late great radio legend Paul Harvey's "So God Made a Farmer" sermon as a kickoff for their Year of the Farmer campaign.

Dodge hopes to raise money for the Future Farmers of America.

Acting quickly on the popularity of that commercial another Norfolk radio legend, Rick Rumble released his "So God Made a DJ" sermon. Since its first airing earlier this week during Rumble in the Morning on WNOR FM99, the "So God Made a DJ" sermon has gone viral getting air play all over the country.

Detroit Radio: CCM+E Rehiring Frankie Darcell

Darcell (News Photo)
Frankie Darcell is returning to WMXD-FM Mix 92.3 next month, reps from Clear Channel Radio Detroit confirmed Wednesday. The popular radio personality was unexpectedly let go from her long-running “Afternoon Mix” radio show two months ago.

But when Darcell returns to the Detroit airwaves on March 4, she’ll also be working as the afternoon-drive host on Philadelphia’s WDAS-FM.

She said the format for her new simulcast show is still being worked out, but she plans to address topics of interest in Detroit and Philadelphia, as well as national issues.

“I hope that I’ve played a part in Detroit’s renaissance, and I plan to keep playing that role,” she told the Free Press. “There’s a lot going on in Michigan, and I’m going to be engaged in that conversation.”

Tony Travatto, vice president of programming for Clear Channel in Detroit, said in an e-mail: “Frankie is an engaging on-air personality who had many fans within the Detroit community, and we are very pleased to have her on air in both cities.”

She departed the airwaves two months ago amid a wave of layoffs at Clear Channel radio stations around the country. In Detroit, the broadcasting giant owns WMXD, WDFN-AM (1130), WDTW-FM (106.7), WJLB-FM (97.9), WKQI-FM (95.5) and WNIC-FM (100.3).

Darcell said the relationships she built with listeners played a role in bringing her back to radio.

Houston Radio: Sam Malone Plans Return


Sam Malone
Longtime Houston radio talk show host Sam Malone said Wednesday he will return to the air this year with a show that will air on Phonoscope Cable and on a radio station to be revealed next week.

Malone, who has worked for KRBE (104.1 FM), KHMX (96.5 FM) and KSEV (700 FM), told The Houston Chronicle the new show will originate from Phonoscope’s studios in southwest Houston. Audio will air on a Houston radio station, and video and audio will air on the station’s website.

Malone said he will reveal the identity of his new radio outlet next week. He said it will be a station for which he has not previously worked.

Springfield, MO's Power 96.5 Fires PD For Lying


A Springfield, MO radio station has fired its program director for allegedly lying about serving in the military.

KOLR 10News reports KSPW Power 96.5, which is owned by Journal Broadcast Group, posted the following statement online Wednesday about Program Director/DJ Simon Nytes:
"We are disappointed that our employee misrepresented himself as someone who had served in the military. It is unacceptable behavior."
According to Nytes' Facebook page, he'd been with Power 96.5 since October 2007, but worked for Journal Broadcast since the mid-1990's.
"Journal Broadcast Group is committed to ethical relationships with our listeners, clients and community," the online post reads. "Specifically regarding the unacceptable behavior, that employee has been terminated. Finally, we value and are grateful for the service of our military personnel across all branches, and have the utmost respect for the sacrifices made by so many of our military personnel and their families."
Nytes was Power 96.5's afternoon DJ, and also served as program director. His biography has since been removed from Power 96.5's website and his Twitter account has also been deactivated.

Reached by phone Thursday morning by the Springfield News-Leader, Rex Hansen, Vice President of Springfield-based Journal Broadcast Group, confirmed that the post referenced Simon, who had been on air in the late afternoon. Hansen also confirmed that the situation came to the station’s attention after a YouTube video was posted by a service member who had met Simon.



In the video, Bryan Hood, who says he has been in the Army for 20 years, describes going to the radio station for a meeting. Hood says that he was told by several station employees that his military service gave him something in common with Simon, who the employees apparently believed had served in the special forces.

In talking with Simon, however, Hood could clearly tell that was not true, he says in the video.

Read More Now.

SLCity Radio: Jon Carter Reflects On 32-Years As Personality

After 32 years in the business, radio personality Jon Carter is still the voice of Utah's classic rock-in-roll.

Perhaps better known as "Jumpin' JC," Carter is in his comfort zone every morning on KRSP 103.5 The Arrow and has been with Utah listeners for four decades. He's been an entertainer, a shoulder to cry on, and he occasionally plays the role of a therapist for his listeners — all in his 5:30 a.m. slot.

"It's been a long journey, a long migration." Carter told KSL.com. "But it's been a great ride and it's been a lot of fun. I'm still going, still going."

Carter has a long history with radio and music. He has been on the air as a full-time disc jockey since he was 13. He found his niche in Utah, where he's been on air since 1980.

When asked what he thought of his role as an entertainer and sometimes radio therapist, Carter said his listeners are the true entertainers and they help keep the show going.


Even after all the years and success he's had in radio, Carter still gets nervous sometimes before his shows. But at the end of the day, he said he appreciates his Utah listeners for waking up early with him to tune into his show.

San Diego Radio: Rich Brother Robbins Returns

Rich 'Bro'
XHPRS 105.7 The Walrus – San Diego’s station for Good Times, Greatest Hits is pleased to announce the addition of Rich “Brother” Robbin to its line-up. Rich will join the station for a daily 2-7pm air shift beginning Monday, according to Chris Carmichael at sdsradio.com.

Rich's career spans many decades and many markets including Los Angeles, Phoenix, Detroit, Portland, Nashville, Memphis and Tucson, but he is best-known and remembered for his work in San Diego at KGB and KCBQ ("back in the good ol'days") and more recently at KBZT-FM and KCBQ-FM, and B-100.

BCA’s Programming-Operations Manager, Mike Shepard says, “Robbin will be a perfect fit for the Walrus’ fun, upbeat presentation. Rich was one of the legendary disc jockeys who inspired me to get into radio, and we had the great fortune of working together to make K-BEST 95 a dominant station in San Diego in the 90s. I’m thrilled to have him back; his energy, enthusiasm and ‘fun-factor’ will make a great addition to The Walrus drive home.”

Robbin explains, "There I was, sitting at the beach with my website and three old classic cars, safely retired (or so I thought) minding my own business and here came this wonderful opportunity to return to the air on 105.7 The Walrus which I just couldn't refuse...and it's even more fun today!”

SiriusXM Expected To Launch Pandora-Like Service

Sirius XM subscribers will soon get a Pandora-like listening option in addition to the satellite radio service.

CEO Jim Meyer Tuesday gave an overview on the overdue Internet radio service that previous CEO Mel Karmazin first announced last year.

Called MySXM, the service will allow users to create personalized versions of existing Sirius XM music stations. Subscribers can start with channels they already enjoy and fine-tune the music using "unique slider controls."

Billboard.com reports MySXM will be available on all platforms, such as iOS, Android and the web. Meyer did not offer a timeline for its launch, saying MySXM is "upcoming" and is now in consumer beta.

Sirius XM is intent on keeping the customers it has. Meyer believes the service will keep the customer engaged in the home and will be a "defensive play" in the automobile, where Sirius XM satellite radio competes with Pandora and Clear Channel's iHeartRadio Internet radio services. Meyer doesn't think two services would be overkill.

He added that Sirius XM believes it can deliver a better experience with lower churn in a true connected car.

Internet Radio's Audience Turns Marketer Heads

Despite small audience, internet radio ads have a special appeal to marketers

The internet radio audience is growing thanks to shifts in consumer listening behavior from terrestrial radio to streaming stations, according to a new eMarketer report, “Internet Radio: Marketers Move In.”

Users are embracing internet radio on a growing range of devices, from PCs, smartphones and tablets to automobiles, connected-home appliances and other gadgets.

Internet radio is monetized primarily by advertising, but the industry is a small player within the digital advertising ecosystem. Growth forecasts for internet radio advertising, though positive, are more modest than for other categories of digital ad spending.

Still, advertisers are eager to attach their brands to internet broadcasting and other music-streaming properties. There are several reasons for this, among them: the appeal of associating a brand with a particular genre or artist; the extent to which internet radio is driven primarily by ads; and the appeal of in-steam audio ads, which are harder to avoid or skip than other forms of digital advertising.

In 2013, the number of US internet radio listeners will grow by 11.1% to 147.3 million. Expansion will continue for the next several years, though rates will taper off to single-digit percentages.

Copper Theft Knocks KWWK Rochester, MN Off-Air

Programming at Quick Country KWWK 96.5 FM  was disrupted briefly early Monday morning after someone broke into the transmitter area..

According to the sheriff's report, the station's transmission stopped about 4 a.m.; when an engineer investigated, he discovered the break-in at the Cumulus station tower site.

Stolen were 4-inch copper couplers and a 1-HP GE motor, according to the police report. Also damaged was about 80 feet of chain link fence; the total estimate of damage and loss is about $800.

The station is back on-air.

Backtalk: Consultant Shares Comments About Bobby Bones

Jaye Albright
Following her original Breakfast Blog about The Bobby Bones Show going country and moving from Austin to WSIX studios in Nashville, country consultant Jaye Albright now provides a sampling of the many thought-provoking comments in response:

(See original 'No Bones About It' posting, Click Here)
  • This is spot on.
  • Sorry, but I disagree. If radio needs Bobby Bones to succeed, then radio has already failed. Radio needs LOCAL programming - serving the public for the community good - like it was originally licensed to provide. Radio needs a country Ryan Seacrest like it needs a hole in the head. As someone who was "let go" by big corporate radio, I feel sorry for all the new insurance salesmen, car salesmen, freelance writers, social media marketers, Wal-Mart door greeters, and unemployment check-cashers who will have nothing left but memories of how good radio USED to be.
  • I've always loved how you set the tone for those who generally tend to see the worst in things. This article is a great example, good marching orders from radio's supreme 'General'.
  • Good radio is great for the business, and Bobby Bones apparently does good radio, (I've never heard him) but CC's back is against the financial wall. So if you're inside CC, you have to find a way 'make lemonade', and Bones will hopefully protect the product, maybe even advance it where possible. (at WSIX?) I think Jaye is happy because it's in nobody's best interest for CC to fail. Radio need good content, wherever it originates from. We'd all love to see it coming from local studios, no doubt. But this is all the more reason for those competing against CC to be re-energized and raise their game a little.  It's an opportunity. The business is changing because the customer/listener is changing. Hard to fight that kind of thing, but nobody's giving up. There is TONS of opportunity around us. By the way, I only voice 3 CC stations (down from 35 at their peak, about half my roster), but the ones I still voice have ballsy PDs who fight to keep an imaging budget, instead of taking it inside. I like that, and while it may cost them a few hundred bucks a month, CC is lucky to have those guys. Most of my business comes from smaller companies these days, who are operating mostly live, local operations. Vive la local radio!
  • As someone who is working at a live, local station competing against CC, tying and besting them in many demos and dayparts...I think what they're doing is great. only thing better is more of it. Hey billy bones, billy greenwood...I'll see ya at the next fundraiser I do for the SPCA...or the next Christmas parade, or lawn party, or fair our station is at...oops! I forgot you've got Facebook and a blog for that. So CC..great work!!!  
  • I completely agree with you. My first thought, upon hearing the news. Here we go, let's raise the level of OUR show. I am eager to up my game. I am extremely motivated. Why?? I love what I do and love where I love, couldn't ask for anything more (well, more money maybe - LOL).
  • It's not just about be local. It's about being entertaining, it's about caring about your community, you fellow man and it's about making a difference. If you can make the audience laugh and cry, that is indeed something special. I have learned, being local isn't good enough - being good sometimes isn't good enough... Striving for excellence is our goal each day!
  • After reading your column and watching Booby's press conference, one thought came to mind... No one will work harder than me to keep growing, learning and trying new things and new ways to get better each day.
  • Well done. You look at it in a way not a ton of industry folks would.
  • From being familiar with his team from looking at them for my CC CHR station, I could not agree more that Bobby will make a great transition to country.  Also, he will have a good talent coach. WSIX PD Michael Bryan is a good guy and a solid, solid programmer. He and Bones come from a similar background. I look forward to hearing the product they create together.  It's a great time to be Country radio.
Jaye adds: 
My favorite suggestion among a very long list great ones: for what should have been the headline to my original post, given Clear Channel's huge financial pressures:  "Bare Bones."

Internet Radio Reaches Out to Fort Hood Community

In less than two weeks, FortHoodRadio.com will sign on with a new live morning show. Staff Sgt. Julie Wallace-Myles will host the morning show, set to air weekday mornings from 9 a.m.- noon on the installation’s internet-based radio station beginning Feb. 19.

“We’re trying to reach out to our Soldiers and Family members in the Fort Hood community,” John Miller, broadcast operations officer, III Corps and Fort Hood Public Affairs Office, said. “Radio, even through the internet, works because we can reach out through mobile devices like a smartphone or tablets. Internet radio may not be in your car, but it’s in your pocket.”

The Fort Hood Sentinel story reports Miller saw his broadcast section shrink from a high-water mark in the summer of 2009 of nine broadcasters down to three full-time staff members today. Despite staffing challenges, the radio station’s biggest challenge remains building an audience.

That target audience is young troops and their Families in Central Texas.

“Our primary demographic is 30 and under,” Miller said. “We’re playing what’s popular now. We’re not programming for folks like me. I’m 46, and when I listen to the radio, it’s generally talk radio and some old school stuff. That doesn’t resonate, normally, with a younger audience.”

James Tapin
To reach out to a younger crowd, Fort Hood Radio has changed its overall sound since August 2012, when Wallace-Myles and Staff Sgt. James Tapin joined the staff, replacing temporary civilian hires who founded the effort.

Tapin, the station’s noncommissioned officer-in-charge, implemented a shift – and not a subtle one – in music programming.

“We went from playing anything you could imagine to starting to focus on a unique opportunity: bringing the newest music to our listeners first,” Tapin said. “When I say first, I mean that we’re generally a couple of months ahead of mainstream radio stations.”

The shift from a complete music mix – which included pop, urban, country and rock – also paired down the music genres highlighted by the station.

LISTEN LINE, Click Here.

“Our focus has switched to a more rock and urban playlist,” Tapin said, though he noted that other music genres, like country, are programmed throughout the day in a block format. “With that being said, if you tune in at the top of each hour, you’ll hear the newest music on the market.”

The music is the vehicle to draw listeners, but the goal of the station is to provide timely, accurate command information to the Fort Hood community.

Read More Now.

Tom's Take:  Happy to hear about this..I was section chief of the Fort Hood Radio/TV department 'back in the day'.

Wednesday, February 6, 2013

PPM Gets MRC Accreditation In Four More Markets

Arbitron has long vowed to win accreditation from the Media Rating Council for its Portable People Meter radio ratings system in every market where it is used. That promise came closer to fulfillment with Tuesday’s announcement that the MRC has granted accreditation to PPM in four more markets, bringing the total number of markets with MRC accreditation to 18, according to mediapost.com.

According to Arbitron, PPM has been granted MRC accreditation in Chicago, San Francisco, San Diego and the Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill metropolitan area in North Carolina.

These join 14 previously accredited markets, including Atlanta, Baltimore, Cincinnati, Houston, Kansas City, Los Angeles, Milwaukee-Racine, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Riverside-San Bernardino, San Antonio, St. Louis, and Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater.

Gregg Lindner, Arbitron’s executive vice president for service innovation and chief research officer, stated: “We remain focused on our efforts to maintain the MRC double checkmarks in our currently accredited PPM markets and to achieve service-wide accreditation for all PPM markets.”

Arbitron still has a ways to go toward getting MRC accreditation in every market, as PPM remains unaccredited in 30 other markets where it is already in use.


NashFM 94-7 Is Having A Country Concert Bash

New York’s new country radio station, NashFM 94-7, is having a coming out party.

The station is having what it calls a Nash-Bash featuring a number of country music’s biggest stars.  The concert will be held three days Feb 18, 19 and 20th at the Roseland Ball Room, on West 52nd Street in NYC.

The line-up was announced on-air Tuesday and directed listeners to the station's website.


All concert tickets will be given-away via the website. Listeners are invited to register and all winners will be notified by a return phone call.

The Nash-Bash concert was unveiled 17-years to the day that WYNY 103.6 FM ended it's country format.  Last song played..The Dance by Garth Brooks.

Birmingham: No Rulings In Haney Non-Compete Hearing

Ryan Haney
A federal judge in Birmingham has continued a hearing that was begun Tuesday morning to help him decide whether to issue a temporary restraining order against former WJOX 94.5 FM sports talk radio general manager Ryan Haney to prevent him from working for rival station WZNN 97.3 FM The Zone.

After more than an hour of hearing arguments between attorneys for WJOX owner Citadel Broadcasting, Haney, and The Zone owner Cox Media Group, U.S. District Court Judge David Proctor issued an order continuing the hearing to 10:30 a.m. Thursday, according to a story at al.com

Citadel, a subsidiary of Cumulus Media,  on Monday filed a breach of contract lawsuit against Haney, claiming he had violated terms of his contract by going to work for a competing radio station in Birmingham. Citadel asked for today's emergency hearing in order to get a temporary restraining order to prevent Haney from working for Cox.

Haney left WJOX on Jan. 21 and began work for Cox on Jan. 28.

At times the hearing was contentious.

Citadel attorneys wanted the hearing to be closed to the public and to Cox officials in order to discuss proprietary business information in its attempt to show that during his career at WJOX Haney had access to documents, strategies, and client information they don't want disclosed to Cox.

Mitchell argued Cox is not named as a defendant in the lawsuit. He told the judge they had asked for today's court hearing only to consider Haney's contract and its restrictive covenants that remained in place after he left WJOX.

Attorneys for Haney and Cox Media Group, however, said that Cox is an "indispensable party" to the court action because it has a 3-year contract with Haney and Cox wants to keep him there.

Proctor gave both sides a chance to meet individually and then together for about 20 minutes before convening in the judge's office for a private meeting late this morning.

Before going into the private meetings Proctor had suggested the possibility of ordering a two-day temporary restraining order preventing Haney from working for Cox until the hearing could be continued after both sides filed legal briefs.

Birmingham Sports Host Paul Finebaum Remains Unsigned

Paul Finebaum
Radio fans of Paul Finebaum's enormously popular afternoon radio show in Birmingham likely will have to wait three months before they get their next Finebaum fix.

Finebaum's contract with Birmingham sports-talk station WJOX-FM and its owner, Cumulus Media, expired January 21, and the two parties did not agree on a new deal.

WJOX has removed any reference to Finebaum from its website, and al.com reports Cumulus has shut down "The Paul Finebaum Radio Network" website.

Meanwhile, the Cox Media Group, which owns rival sports station WZNN ESPN 97.3 The Zone, has made it loud and clear for well over a year now that it wants Finebaum on its team.

However, Cumulus has 90 days to match any deal that Cox or anybody else would offer Finebaum, and if it were to so, he would have to remain at WJOX. After that 90-day window closes, though, Finebaum is essentially a free agent and may go wherever he chooses.

In addition to Cox, Finebaum has other, national suitors, including discussions with ESPN that include both television and radio (and would allow Finebaum to appear on 97.3 The Zone), and talks with SiriusXM Satellite Radio about being the exclusive provider of "The Paul Finebaum Radio Network." SiriusXM had simulcast Finebaum's show when it was on WJOX.


CCM+E, Houston Astros Announce Multi-Year Deal


Clear Channel Media and Entertainment Houston and The Houston Astros have announced a multi-year agreement to make KBME Sportstalk 790 AM the new home of the Houston Astros beginning with the 2013 MLB season.

 “I am excited that our valuable partnership with the Houston Astros will continue. Having the Houston Astros on KBME along with being the home of the Houston Rockets and U of H football and basketball will make KBME Houston’s premiere sports outlet,” said Eddie Martiny, President/Market Manager, Clear Channel Media and Entertainment Houston.

Under the agreement, Astros fans will be able to hear all regular season and spring training games in addition to pre-game, post-game and other Astros’ related programming on Sportstalk 790.

 “We are pleased to continue our relationship with Clear Channel Media and Entertainment,” said Astros President and CEO George Postolos. “Our fans will enjoy a first-class, entertaining and informative radio broadcast on Houston's premiere sports station - Sportstalk 790.”

 The new era of Houston Astros baseball on Sportstalk 790 has already begun with Thursday night broadcasts of “Astroline” from 7-8 p.m. CT.  The first spring training game is scheduled for Saturday, February 23 with the regular season debut on Sunday, March 31 against American League rivals The Texas Rangers.

Sportstalk 790 is also the radio home for the Houston Rockets and University of Houston Cougars’ football and basketball.

Opinion: No Bones About It

From Country Consultant Jaye Albright’s Breakfast Blog:
Tt's demoralizing for those of us who believe in local radio driven by powerful local brands to have to watch Clear Channel doing what it seemingly feels is must do to compete while paying down the huge mountain of debt facing the company. 
Demoralizing too for Bobby Bones and his terrific team, it seems, since they claim to have been receiving "a lot of hate mail" about the move.  Even their affiliates learned about it Monday on the air.

They have a poll on their website asking their listeners what they think.  When I voted, here's how it looked (not exactly a rousing welcome/sendoff):
 
I must confess that I am not demoralized.  Actually, I am one of that 42%.  I love how organic the show is, how authentic.  I feel confident that it's going to find a place, much like Ryan Seacrest has in Top 40 and and Hot AC, in country radio where a local show is stuck in its ways and has been slow to understand Gen Y and Z. 
I am energized.  It will be fun to watch what Bobby does on WSIX.  He's certainly not Gerry House in a litany of ways, and yet his unpredictability and honesty, that un-radio approach that endeared Gerry to Nashville radio listeners is alive and well within Bobby Bones.
 
This move means, of course, that as contracts end for many Clear Channel morning personalities over the next year or two, there will be a plethora of great morning talent seeking to find a new city to fall in love with in hopes that place will love them back. 
If you're on the air in the morning on a successful country station now, it's time to up your game.   
Think about today's and tomorrow's available target audience. 
These are exciting times, and if you don't enjoy competition and innovation, I feel sorry for you.  
Just like I feel sorry for anyone who has to face $10.1 billion in debt obligations which come due in three years, but of course a challenge like that can focus the mind and push one to quickly realize that they need to take risks and do big things.  
Radio needs Bobby, his employer and all of us who compete for country radio listener ears to do our very best.  Now. 
To me, that's exciting.

MJ-Bubba Trial Juror: ‘Never Listening To Radio Again'

Todd Schnitt
As controversy swirled and media coverage exploded following the court verdict last week that shock jock Bubba the Love Sponge Clem did not defame rival radio star Todd "MJ" Schnitt, jury forewoman Kristy Craig feared a lesson was being lost.

So she typed up an email to the Tampa Bay Times, eventually agreeing to become the first juror from the trial to speak on the record, stressing that a verdict for Clem did not equal an endorsement of the material on his show.

"I hated this case," wrote Craig, 36, of Tampa. " 'Hate' is not a word used often in my vocabulary, but I hated it. I hate the word 'whore.' I did not count (though, sitting through over 60 hours of testimony, I had plenty of time to), but I assume I heard the word 'whore' upwards of a hundred times. As a woman, I hate what it implies."

Her email continued: "(But) I love that I can hate the antics of Bubba the Love Sponge. I love that he can say all that sexist, worthless drivel to 400,000 radio listeners every day. I love that I can change the station."

Todd Clem
Schnitt filed his lawsuit against Clem back in 2008, saying his rival made "false, highly offensive and defamatory statements" about him and his wife, Michelle, as competition heated up between the two on morning radio.

Reminded that an alternate juror said Schnitt should "put on his big-girl panties" and accept that criticism comes with his job, Craig offered her own version:

"I think they both need to put their big-boy pants on and find something valuable to talk about," she said. She noted, "Nobody wants to sit around and listen to two men call each other names. I work with 12-year-olds; I do that with them and try to teach them better."

And Craig had a final conclusion, written as the last line in her email to the Times:

"I love that I have some awesome CDs in my car. I am never listening to the radio again."

Q92’s Mo Apologizes In Person, Returns To Air

Brian 'Mo' Modzelewski
The host of a show on an Alliance, OH  radio station WDJQ Q92 apologized in person to Kellie Baker of Strasburg for mocking her on air.

Brian “Mo” Modzelewski, host of “The Mo Radio Show” on Q92, met with Baker, who has Down syndrome, and her family at her Strasburg home Saturday afternoon for about 20 minutes, according to the timesreporter.com.

“She got the apology she asked for,” said Gigi Standiford, Baker’s mother. “She told him that he hurt her feelings bad, and she never wanted him to do something like that to anyone else ever again.”

Standiford said her daughter was happy with the apology.

THE ON-AIR APOLOGY, Click Here.

On Jan. 21, Baker accidentally called Q92 and talked to Mo, who recorded the conversation. He then played it repeatedly on his show and made fun of her. Mo was suspended and made an on-air apology, but Baker requested an in-person apology.

Mo has since returned to the air.

Strong Radio Presence Helps Beasley Broadcast

The Naples, FL-based Beasley Broadcast Group Inc. Tuesday reported net income of $3.6 million, or 16 cents a share, in the quarter ended Dec. 31, up from $3.4 million, or 15 cents a share, in the same period a year ago.

The company credited strength its radio stations in Fort Myers, Philadelphia, Las Vegas and Augusta markets, as well as the third-quarter purchase of an additional Las Vegas station for the increase.

Beasley operates 43 stations in 11 markets.

For the year, Beasley reported net income of $11 million, or 48 cents a share, up from $10 million, or 45 cents a share, for the previous year.

According to news-press.com, the company also announced it has signed a licensing agreement with the Nashville-based Big Machine Label Group "to share certain over-the-air broadcasting and digital revenue related to the use of Big Machine's Music."

Big Machine artists include Taylor Swift, Rascal Flatts and Tim McGraw.

Many Drive Times Getting Longer

When it comes to traffic congestion around Washington, even the good news is bad, and it goes downhill from there, according to an article by Ashley Halsey III at The Washington Post.

The city that so hungers to be No. 1 at something — usually on a gridiron or diamond-shaped field — has again risen to the top as the most congested metropolitan area in the United States, a place where the average driver burns 67 hours and 32 gallons of gas each year sitting in traffic.

The No. 1 ranking is the good news. The bad news is that it’s going to get worse.


The annual crunching of numbers by the Texas A&M Transportation Institute projects that unless something is done about traffic, the economic recovery will put more wheels on the road and create more congestion. By 2020, analysts say, the average U.S. driver will spend an additional seven hours in traffic each year and waste six more gallons of gas.

The Institute’s calculations are based on data from transponders on millions of moving vehicles. It comes from Inrix, the commercial network that also provides much of the information used in traffic reports on radio, television and the Internet.

After Washington, the four most congested metro areas in the nation were among the perennial contenders: Los Angeles, San Francisco, New York and Boston. Raleigh-Durham rated as the easiest major city to get around.

We Knew This Was Coming: “So God Made A DJ”

The creative talent behind this Paul Harvey parody is Rick Rumble from WNOR 99 FM Norfolk.  He wrote and produced and it was given air-time on his ensemble morning show.


Terrific job and thanks for the laughs, Rick!

‘Blackout Show’ Got Great Ratings

CBS made television history Sunday night when it aired not only the third most watched broadcast of all time, but also the fourth.

Lisa de Moraes at washingtonpost.com writes the No. 3 show was Super Bowl XLVII, which averaged nearly 109 million viewers — a crowd size surpassed only by last year’s Super Bowl XLVI (111.4 million viewers) and 2011’s Super Bowl XLV (111.0 million).

The fourth most watched broadcast in TV history?

Sunday’s Super Bowl blackout.

Number-crunching Nielsen Media has broken out Sunday’s 34-minute game shutdown in New Orleans as a separate show, and given it the name “Super Bowl XLVII Delay.”

“Delay” averaged 107 million viewers.

“Delay” has been trimmed to 30 minutes in Nielsen’s records: 8:41-9:11 p.m., a.k.a. not long after the end of Beyonce’s halftime show – and lasting twice as long as her performance, BTW.

The Super Dark Bowl: Boomer Heard Buzzing

Watching the big game power outage on television was strange enough.

Imagine being in the Superdome radio booth on Sunday night, trying to broadcast football’s biggest game in the dark.

WFAN’s own Boomer Esiason Monday gave his unique take on the 34-minute delay in the third quarter of Baltimore’s 34-31 win, and even offered up a possible cause for the yet-to-be-officially explained outage in New Orleans.

SHOW AUDIO, Click Here.

Piedmont Triad Radio: Diapered DJ Pays Off Lost Bet

Jared Pike of WKZL 107.5 FM Winston-Salem/Greensboro, NC paid off a lost Super Bowl bet Monday.  Jared of the Jared & Katie Morning Show bet an intern that the 49ers would win.

Jared was embarrassed but paid off the bet Monday morning on a street corner in chilly 40-degree weather.

He added the experience also was an eye-opener that he needs to find a gym and start working out!



Hidden 'Radio' Buttons Found In Apple's iOS 6.1

There's a hint that Apple has something new in the pipeline, and the company appears to have tucked it away inside the latest version of its iOS software.

Josh Lowensohn at cnet.com reports a set ofg buttons were discovered Monday night within a freshly jailbroken iPad.  Also discovered were code references for "radio," a feature found in iTunes on Macs and PCs, but not on the iPad or iPhone.

Making things more interesting is another button suggesting you can make purchases via the radio feature, presumably from iTunes.

The buttons hint at Apple's much-rumored radio service, a product that will let people stream music much like they do on the popular Pandora service, but with deep ties to Apple's iTunes library. Rumors that Apple has been working on such a service have floated for years, but heated up last year as talks with labels advanced. (See original posting, Click Here)

Tuesday, February 5, 2013

Merger: Arbitron Hits The ‘Reset’ Button

Arbitron Inc. announced Monday that, following informal discussions with the staff at the Federal Trade Commission, Arbitron and Nielsen Holdings have agreed to voluntarily provide the FTC with additional time in which to review the proposed merger of TNC Sub I Corporation, a wholly owned subsidiary of Nielsen, with and into Arbitron.

According to streetinsider.com, Nielsen, as the acquiring party, will withdraw and refile its pre-merger notification and report form under the Hart-Scott-Rodino Antitrust Improvements Act, which will restart the 30-day time frame for initial review of the transaction. The waiting period for the new filing will expire at 11:59 p.m. on March 8, 2013, unless earlier terminated by the FTC, or the FTC makes a formal request for additional information prior to the expiration of the waiting period.

List: Top 100 Streaming Talk Shows

A list of the “Top 100 Talk Shows of 2012″ just released by Talk Stream Live – which ranks the nation’s leading streaming talk shows – placed Rush Limbaugh at the top, with Michael Savage No. 2 and Glenn Beck No. 3.

Laura Ingraham came in fourth, followed by Mark Levin, Sean Hannity, Tammy Bruce, Dennis Miller, Bill Bennett and George Noory rounding out the top 10.

Most surprising were the strong performances of Savage and Ingraham, wnd.com notes both were at least temporarily off the air following contractual disputes with their syndicators and moved to new providers of their shows to stations around the country.

Other rankings, especially where the online audience differs from the on-air “Heavy Hundred” ranking produced by Talkers magazine, show a stark difference between what audiences choose online and what they’re given on the radio.


For example, Talkers magazine ranks Ed Schultz No. 4, with over 3 million in his radio audience, but Talk Stream Live ranks the progressive talker’s online audience at No. 61.

Talk Stream Live notes its rankings, based on a sample of 2.75 million listener sessions, “tracks talk radio show metrics gathered on the Internet and collected through our cloud based server via TalkStreamLive.com’s website, gadgets, iPhone app and ‘click2listen’ links on social networks. They only rank the talk show hosts that are listed at TalkStreamLive.com. The TSL Top 100 report includes the big personalities talk show fans would expect as well as some new media rising stars. The conclusions are our own and not guaranteed to be accurate.”

Tense Moments when The Lights Went Out

CBS’s Armen Keteyian was doing an interview with the NFL’s head of Super Bowl operations for a story for “60 Minutes Sports” when the lights went out.

“We were talking about the halftime clock and how Beyonce’s show had gone three minutes long when everything changed, leading us to a search for answers that for over 35 minutes, never came.”


'God Created Farmer' Third In Likeability

The Dodge Ram ad finished third in USA TODAY's likeability Ad Meter, behind the Anheuser-Busch Clydesdale colt commercial and the Tide "Miracle Stain" spot.

GoDaddy's ad with Refaeli finished last.

The two-minute ad from Chrysler Group LLC's Dodge Ram featured the voice of the late radio broadcaster Harvey speaking over dozens of documentary-style photos showing the hard work and challenges facing farmers and ranchers each day.

"And on the eighth day, God looked down on his planned paradise and said, 'I need a caretaker.' So God made a farmer," Harvey said as the ad began.

"God said, 'I need somebody willing to get up before dawn, milk cows, work all day in the field, milk cows again, eat supper, then go to town and stay past midnight at a meeting of the school board.' So God made a farmer."



The Harvey monologue was originally given to the Future Farmers of America (now FFA) convention in 1978. Harvey, who died in 2009, was a longtime radio favorite in the Midwest.

Criticisms of the commercial were mild.

In addition to raising awareness of the Dodge Ram and farmers, the ad will benefit the Indianapolis-based National FFA Organization, which is getting a donation for each download or share of the ad. The ad is now on YouTube and the Ram Truck site.

The intention is to raise $1 million for the FFA, according to the online farm magazine Agri-Pulse.

Agriculture has become defensive in part because of its dwindling numbers.

About 2% of Americans farm today, versus 25% 75 years ago.

Geek: Super Model Kisses “Soft And Sweet”

The chubby geek who seriously swaps tongues with supermodel Bar Refaeli, is still pinching himself. "It's everything I couldn't imagine when I signed up to be an actor," says Jesse Heiman, the 34-year-old character actor who plays the "romantic" lead in the Go Daddy kiss-o-rama told USAToday.

"It's crazy the things I get paid to do as an actor."

Consider: 18 seconds of the 30-second commercial are pure kiss.



Heiman actually was not even supposed to get the role. After a series of auditions, someone else was selected. But Bob Parsons, the founder of Go Daddy, wasn't sold on the guy who was cast.

So the auditions continued and Heiman, who is single and admits to never having had a serious girlfriend, was picked.

"It seemed a little too good to be true," he says, still giddy from his new-found fame despite previous appearances, mostly playing a nerd, in nearly 200 TV shows, films and commercials.

Sure, he says, he's kissed girls before — but never a supermodel, much less one who turned out to be a super kisser.

"She kissed amazingly soft and sweet," he says, with some embarrassment. "I'm going to hold all kissers to that standard — and it's going to be hard to beat."

But the commercial was hard work to film, he says. "It may sound dumb, but the day was exhausting," Heiman says. He says he lost exact count but that the kissing scene was reshot between 45 and 60 times.

He occasionally had to use mouthwash — and lip balm — between takes.