Monday, November 30, 2020

Chairman Ajit Pai To Depart FCC

Ajit Pai

Ajit Pai formally announced Monday that he will leave his position as chair of the Federal Communications Commission on Jan. 20, reports The Hill.

Stepping down from the FCC when a new president is inaugurated is an agency tradition.

Pai, a Republican promoted to chairman by President Trump, has had a tenure mired in controversy.  

His most notable decision, the repeal of Obama-era net neutrality rules that allowed the commission to go after service providers that discriminate against certain web traffic, is likely to be overturned shortly after Democrats have a 3-2 majority.

Other decisions, like overseeing the merger of T-Mobile and Sprint, will be harder to reverse.

“It has been the honor of a lifetime to serve at the Federal Communications Commission, including as Chairman of the FCC over the past four years,” Pai said in a statement.

He highlighted some of his other achievements in Monday’s statement, including “closing the digital divide” and designating 988 as the new number of the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline.

President-elect Joe Biden will now have the opportunity to either promote one of the two Democrats on the commission — Jessica Rosenworcel and Geoffrey Starks — or bring in a new chair from outside the FCC.

Republican Commissioner Brendan Carr, who still has several years left on his term, is unlikely to depart. The other seat is up in the air.

In a prepared statement released Monday morning (11/30), Pai said, “It has been the honor of a lifetime to serve at the Federal Communications Commission, including as Chairman of the FCC over the past four years. I am grateful to President Trump for giving me the opportunity to lead the agency in 2017, to President Obama for appointing me as a Commissioner in 2012, and to Senate Majority Leader McConnell and the Senate for twice confirming me. To be the first Asian-American to chair the FCC has been a particular privilege. As I often say: only in America.”

Pai also said he “deeply appreciates” the chance to have worked alongside the FCC’s talented staff. “They are the agency’s best assets, and they have performed heroically, especially during the pandemic. It’s also been an honor to work with my fellow Commissioners to execute a strong and broad agenda. Together, we’ve delivered for the American people over the past four years: closing the digital divide; promoting innovation and competition, from 5G on the ground to broadband from space; protecting consumers; and advancing public safety. And this FCC has not shied away from making tough choices. As a result, our nation’s communications networks are now faster, stronger, and more widely deployed than ever before.”

Pai continued, “I am proud of how productive this Commission has been, from commencing five spectrum auctions and two rural broadband reverse auctions in four years, to opening 1,245 megahertz of mid-band spectrum for unlicensed use, to adopting more than 25 orders through our Modernization of Media Regulation Initiative, to aggressively protecting our communications networks from national security threats at home and abroad, to designating 988 as the three-digit number for the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline, and much, much more. I’m also proud of the reforms we have instituted to make the agency more accountable to the American people. In particular, for the first time ever, we’ve made public drafts of the proposals and orders slated for a vote three weeks before the agency’s monthly meetings, making this the most transparent FCC in history.”

FCC: Clyburn Or Rosenworcel Likely To Be Chair

Mignon Clyburn and Jessica Rosenworcel

The Federal Communications Commission will soon shift to Democratic control, and speculation has already begun about who will assume the chairmanship under the Biden administration, reports Variety.

Jessica Rosenworcel, the senior Democrat on the commission, is widely considered to be one of the leading candidates to succeed Ajit Pai in the powerful regulatory post. She has been vetted twice and would likely have a smooth path to confirmation, which would be a key consideration assuming the Senate remains in Republican hands.

“I think Jessica Rosenworcel probably has the best chance of becoming chair,” said John Orlando, former head of global government affairs at CBS. “The ease of her getting confirmed is far easier than anybody else.”

She also has the backing of Sen. Richard Blumenthal, D-Conn. He issued a statement to Variety praising Rosenworcel’s work on net neutrality and on expanding broadband access to low-income students since she joined the commission in 2012.

Another possibility is Mignon Clyburn, who served on the commission from 2009-18. A former newspaper publisher, Clyburn is the daughter of House Majority Whip James Clyburn, whose endorsement proved critical to Joe Biden’s win in the Democratic primary. Mignon Clyburn has been named to Biden’s transition team for the FCC.

But relationships are also important, and Biden could select someone other than a current commissioner to chair the regulatory body. Edward “Smitty” Smith, a partner at DLA Piper in Washington, is one such possibility.

Gomez and Smith
Smith is a D.C. native who served as an adviser to former FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler. He was also a bundler for Biden’s presidential campaign, and hosted a fundraiser for Vice President-elect Kamala Harris in the fall of 2019. (Harris’ husband, entertainment attorney Douglas Emhoff, works in DLA Piper’s Los Angeles office.) Along with Mignon Clyburn, Smith was named to the Biden FCC transition team.

Another name that has been floated is Anna Gomez, a partner at Wiley Rein, a major D.C. law firm. She was an official at the National Telecommunications and Information Administration until 2013, and prior to that worked for a dozen years in various roles at the FCC. She has also been named to the Biden transition’s agency review team for the Department of Commerce.

With a 3-2 majority, the Democratic commissioners are widely expected to work to restore net neutrality.

Radio Vet Bill Hendrich to Retire From Cox Media Group

Bill Hendrich

Cox Media Group today announced the retirement of EVP, Radio Bill Hendrich, effective December 31, 2020. Hendrich will remain in an advisory capacity in 2021.

“Bill’s retirement comes with a wealth of gratitude and mixed emotions”

Throughout his career with CMG spanning three decades, Hendrich has served as EVP, Radio, overseeing programming, operations and sales for the company’s radio stations. He also has oversight of CMG’s Radio Revenue team and Radio Digital team.

“Bill’s retirement comes with a wealth of gratitude and mixed emotions,” said Dan York, President & CEO, CMG. “In the time I have known him, he has shared his exceptional passion, focus and leadership from which our company, and our industry, has immeasurably benefited. Bill’s legacy of decisive leadership, his personal style and his deep experiences in radio and beyond will inform our work well into the future.”

“Although I’m retiring from CMG, I will remain an active and passionate supporter of this great company,” said Hendrich. “For the past 31 years, I have been able to work with the best and most talented team in the radio industry. With NewCity Communications, Cox Enterprises and Apollo, I have been a part of three outstanding companies–each bringing valuable and innovative ideas to keep radio viable in today’s media landscape. I look forward to continuing our work together in an advisory capacity to help the team at CMG serve their audiences, customers and communities with best-in-class services. I joined a great company in 1989 and I get to leave that same great company with pride 31 years later. I am a lucky man.”

Prior to his current role, Hendrich led integrated Radio and TV in multiple major media markets for CMG. He also led the company’s Healthcare Acceleration efforts that helped CMG’s markets and advertising sellers succeed in healthcare by developing proven marketing solutions that meet the needs of local healthcare practices, physician groups, and locally-owned and operated hospitals. Hendrich has also previously served as the VP and Market Manager of CMG’s six-station radio group in Jacksonville, Florida. In that position, he oversaw all sales, programming, digital and business operations for the group. Hendrich has also served as VP and General Manager of CMG’s AM580 WDBO and WWKA FM in Orlando for 10 years and oversaw the internet sales and operations for CMG Orlando.

NuVoodoo Turns On New OTT Video Marketing Tool


NuVoodoo Media Services, a data-driven media marketing, programming and content intelligence provider, announces the launch of an effective and budget-friendly new marketing tool for radio stations – one that is helping NuVoodoo clients reach and influence likely ratings participants at home, supported by results from a recently completed study of 3,400 radio listeners. The new tool, OTT Video Marketing, is supported by recent NuVoodoo research findings that those people most likely to participate in PPM ratings are watching OTT TV at a more significant rate than the majority who would never carry a meter. Details of NuVoodoo’s research findings and new OTT Video Marketing tool designed to help boost radio listening in the time of COVID are available at: https://nuvoodoo.com/webinars/

OTT stands for “over the top” and refers to streaming media offered directly to viewers via the Internet. OTT bypasses cable, broadcast, and satellite television platforms and is accessed on personal computers, apps on mobile devices (such as smartphones and tablets), digital media players (including video game consoles), integrated Smart TV’s or TV’s connected to the internet through a device like Roku, Google Chromecast, and others.

Since the lockdown in March, Mike O’Connor, EVP, Marketing, NuVoodoo Media Services, and his team started seeing TV screens becoming a significant placement for YouTube ads. One particular YouTube metric really stood out: the conversion to video views lasting 30 seconds or longer. In the world of digital video, 30 seconds is just about forever. That was the first indication of a huge upshift in the time spent watching OTT content.

While there are lots of options for advertisers in OTT, NuVoodoo wanted to know if the reach is big enough to justify the marketing expense. To get the facts, NuVoodoo fielded over 3,400 interviews across all PPM markets among adults 18-54 the first weekend in November, and discovered that there is a tsunami of video viewing going on.

Specifically, NuVoodoo split OTT viewing into two buckets: those watching OTT on Smart TV’s and connected devices like Roku, Google Chromecast, etc. (labeled OTT-CTV) and those watching OTT on smartphones, tablets or computers (labeled OTT-Mobile/Comp). Groups of just under 1/3 a piece are spending 10+ hours per week with OTT in both modes.


O’Connor noted: “This is a BIG change. We watched years ago as Emmy nominations drifted from the broadcast networks to premium cable channels … and now we watch as they drift from premium cable channels to Netflix, Hulu, Disney+ and on and on. Even now, you can see that the groups spending 10+ hours a week with Cable or Satellite TV or Broadcast are smaller – about a quarter for Cable/Satellite and a fifth for OTA (over the air). “ 

He added: “As we suspected, gender and demographics matter. Men are more likely than women to watch 10+ hours a week on Cable/Satellite and Over-the-air TV – primarily due to live sports. While digital-native 18-34’s are most likely to spend 10+ hours a week consuming OTT content on a computer, tablet or smartphone.”


Among those people most likely to participate in PPM ratings - which NuVoodoo has identified using proprietary questions developed to mimic the process of empaneling respondents (labeled “PPM Yes”) - about 50% a piece are spending 10+ hours a week using either OTT/Connected TV or OTT content on a non-TV device. Those are big numbers compared to the overall sample (or the large subset of the sample who would reject the opportunity to carry a meter – the PPM No’s here).

O’Connor observed: “Note the columns labeled PPM 60 - the subset of the PPM Yes group who say they listen to broadcast radio at least an hour – 60 minutes – per day. If you’re going to make a splash in the ratings, you need to connect with those heavy listeners from the ratings sample – and viewing of OTT/Connected TV is mammoth.”


O’Connor and the NuVoodoo marketing team use third-party targeting from the Nielsen marketing cloud to reach the most likely ratings respondents, delivering OTT video impressions based on heavy format and daypart listening. The result is a cost-efficient mix of OTT impressions across the spectrum of devices to keep budgets reasonable. 

Carolyn Gilbert, President, NuVoodoo Media Services, commented: “With half of those likely to accept a meter spending well over 10 hours a week watching long form linear TV on a connected device (and a third over 25 hours a week!), OTT Video Marketing has become our best weapon for boosting client ratings in 2020’s stay at home environment. For the time being, we’ve sidelined some of our tried-and-true tactics like workplace telemarketing in favor of this powerful new strategy, and the results have been terrific. The data in the video we’re sharing validates the client ratings pops we’ve been seeing consistently this fall.”

FOR MORE INFORMATION, visit: https://nuvoodoo.com/webinars/ or contact Carolyn Gilbert, President, NuVoodoo Media Services, at: cg@nuvoodoo.com or at 888.9VooDoo (888.986.6366).

Podcasts: More Advertisers Are Using Live Reads


While host-read ads started at radio and continue to be one of the medium’s most sought after ad units, they’re getting their biggest uptake at podcasting, where endorsement ads form the very foundation of the channel’s monetization strategy reports InsideAudioMarking.  Agency Veritone One places roughly 50,000 talent endorsement ads in audio a year for more than 100 clients, from sports book Draft Kings to audio book publisher Audible. 

“Host-read ads have a good reputation with these brands. It’s on their roadmap when they start to tap out on Facebook or search-based ads,” says Conor Doyle, Senior VP at the San Diego-based shop, which specializes in helping brands use audio in their marketing mix. For example, Honey, the deal-finding software that keeps shoppers updated on potential bargains and coupon opportunities, is endorsed by syndicated radio personalities Elvis Duran, Bobby Bones and Dave Ramsey. “Aligning with Dave Ramsey, who is all about personal finance, is a natural fit,” says Doyle. “It’s sort of an endemic message for his audience.”

Live reads have become so indispensable to direct-to-consumer brands that they’re listed in the 
Interactive Advertising Bureau’s playbook as a media channel DTC companies should explore. And as podcast consumption continues to rise, last year it surpassed radio as Veritone One’s largest media channel.

Successfully executing an endorsement campaign at scale with hundreds of local air talent is a complex undertaking that can be fraught with risk and pitfalls. To improve its success rate with large scale host-read campaigns, Veritone relies on sophisticated technology to track the tens of thousands of host-read ads it places a year. “We immediately locate the reads, we verify they took place and evaluate them,” Doyle explains. “We built that agency work flow because we recognize that it’s challenging to our clients. They want to know what’s being said and how the campaign is doing.”

Each individual endorsement is rated on a variety of criteria and the information is aggregated and used to optimize the campaign. “If we start to see a talent whose reads are getting shorter or their ratings are going down, we need to get on the phone with them,” Doyle elaborates. “It’s a relationship and we need to make sure that we’re setting them up for success.”

Just like a program director understands the need to give the talent creative leeway, so do agencies like Veritone One, where the motto is no two reads should sound the same.

“The reason they are effective is because you are getting the talent’s point of view on your product and hopefully their use of your product,” Doyle contends. “They know how to position things and when you let them do it, it can be very effective.”

Over the past year a parade of studies have shown host-read ads out-perform produced ads by often staggering margins. A survey of 412 podcast listeners conducted by audio researcher Signal Hill Insights for Stitcher found host reads produced 91% more lifts than the announcer reads. Presented in October at the IAB’s virtual 2020 Reach Conference, the study found host-read ads generated greater lifts in top-of-mind awareness, brand familiarity and total awareness than the announcer ads for both established and emerging brands.

At this year’s Podcast Movement online conference, Nielsen aggregated 250 different podcast brand effect studies, finding that host-read ads drove 71% higher recall, 60% greater intent to seek information about the advertised product, 50% more purchase intent and 50% higher recommendation intent than non-host read ads. The host read ads also tended to yield higher brand fit scores.

“The Veritone Uplift Study” showed live reads are two times more effective at driving responses than pre-recorded spots.

D/FW Radio: KSCS ’s Hawkeye Collects 45K+ Holiday Cards For Troops


New Country KSCS 96.3 morning show, Hawkeye in the Morning, concluded the second annual 10,000 for the Troops holiday card drive to send warm, hopeful wishes to the brave men and women serving our country overseas this holiday season. 

The station has partnered with Support Our Soldiers, a local 501(c)(3) organization, to send the holiday cards to “high risk” units/individuals that are either in isolated areas or do not have support coming from home. 

The campaign kicked off November 2, 2020 with the goal of collecting 10,000 cards. Listeners and supporters were able to mail cards to the radio station or deliver them to the T-Mobile Experience Store at The Shops at Legacy in Plano, TX or any of the Dallas/Fort Worth Gigi’s Cupcakes and Sun & Ski Sports store locations. 

The station’s Mark “Hawkeye” Louis took lead on this campaign and announced today that the station collected 46,751 cards, with more cards expected to arrive in the mail over the next week. 

"We are overwhelmed by the outpouring of support that our listeners showed for our troops serving overseas. It was a much-needed feel good story for 2020," comments Louis on the success of the campaign.

The cards will be included in care packages sent to the Troops by Support Our Soldiers just in time for Christmas.

The AM Rundown: Fauci Sees Difficult Days Ahead


Doctor Anthony Fauci said the U.S. could be entering into a difficult period of the coronavirus pandemic, with Thanksgiving weekend travelers creating a "surge superimposed on the surge we are already in." On NBC's Meet the Press yesterday, the nation's top infectious disease expert urged Americans to be cautious throughout the December holidays in order to help alleviate what he calls "a really precarious situation."



The U.S. recorded more than 150,000 new cases of coronavirus on Saturday. That's a new record, and brings the total number infected in the U.S. to 13.4 million, according to The New York Times. An estimated 266,000 have died.


➤TRUMP SUGGESTS FBI AND DOJ RIGGED THE ELECTION: In his first interview since Election Day, President Donald Trump repeated his accusation that the election was rigged against him and suggested that the FBI and the Department of Justice might have been involved in a conspiracy to elect Joe Biden. "This is total fraud and how—the FBI and Department of Justice, I don't know, maybe they're involved—but how people are allowed to get away with this stuff is unbelievable," the president told Fox News' Maria Bartiroma in the interview yesterday morning. He again blamed mail-in voting, which he called "a total disaster." He said the FBI and Department of Justice is at least "missing in action" if not involved in the conspiracy.

On Saturday, the Pennsylvania Supreme Court rejected a challenge that sought to invalidate millions of mail-in votes in that state. The suit was one of at least 26 pro-Trump election challenges that have been dismissed by courts in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, Arizona, Nevada and Georgia.
In Wisconsin, a recount paid for by the Trump campaign came up with 87 additional votes for Joe Biden.

➤VACCINE ON BOARD: Charter flights to bring millions of doses of Pfizer's COVID-19 vaccine from Belgium to the U.S. began on Friday. Distribution won't begin until after mid-December, when the Food and Drug Administration is expected to approve use of the vaccine. Two plants are manufacturing it, one in Belgium and the other in Kalamazoo, Michigan. The Pfizer product is one of three promising vaccines that have been developed since the pandemic began.

➤NOT YOUR ORDINARY BLACK FRIDAY: The traditional door-busting Black Friday shopping event flopped this year. In-store sales cratered by 52 percent, according to early estimates. But shopping online increased 21.6%, hitting a new record, according to data from Adobe Analytics. 

With online shopping surging throughout the pandemic, retail giant Amazon has gone on an extraordinary hiring binge, The New York Times reports. Since March, the company has added about 427,300 employees in its hundreds of warehouses in rural communities and suburbs around the world. Its global workforce is now about 1.2 million.

➤MASS SHOOTING IN MISSISSIPPI BAR: At least 11 people were wounded during a shooting at a biker bar in Grenada, Mississippi, early Sunday, authorities said. Grenada police said the shooting occurred at a club called the SSMC. No arrests have been made.


➤JOE BIDEN FRACTURES HIS FOOT: President-elect Joe Biden suffered a couple of hairline fractures in one foot after slipping while playing with his German shepherd, Major, his office announced yesterday. His doctor said Biden will probably have to wear a walking boot for several weeks.

🐾The White House will soon be practically swarming with pets. The Bidens have two German shepherds, and Jill Biden was recently heard saying she'd really like to have a cat, too.


🌨OH NO, IT'S SNOW! The first major storm system of the season is about to hit the East Coast, according to meteorologists. Heavy rain and strong winds are expected from Louisiana to North Carolina. Some snow is expected in the Great Lakes region all the way to parts of the Southeast. Florida may even get a bit of a chill in midweek.


😷SAINTS WHACKED FOR MASK-FREE PARTY: The New Orleans Saints have been fined $500,000 by the NFL and lost a 7th-round draft pick as punishment for an unmasked locker room celebration of the team's win against the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in Week 9. ESPN says the Saints are appealing the penalties.

A reporter for the NFL Network says the Patriots have been fined $350,000 for COVID-19 protocol violations in October when Cam Newton and others tested positive.

🏈LIONS FIRE HEAD COACH AND GENERAL MANAGER: Detroit Lions head coach Matt Patricia and general manager Bob Quinn had a very bad no good Thanksgiving. Both were fired two days after the Lions lost to the Houston Texas 41-25 on Thanksgiving. Offensive coordinator Darrell Bevell will take over as interim coach.

The Jacksonville Jaguars general manager is out, too. Dave Caldwell was fired right after yesterday's loss to the Cleveland Browns, the team announced. Yesterday's loss was the team's 10th in a row.

🥊GOLDEN OLDIES MATCH DECLARED A DRAW: Mike Tyson, age 54, and Roy Jones Junior, 51, got into the ring one more time on Saturday. The match in Los Angeles was not officially scored, but the celebrity judges called it a draw. Yahoo Sports scored it for Tyson at six rounds to two, 78-74. Columnist Kevin Iole opined that the fight was "far from a vintage performance from either fighter, but it wasn't embarrassing, either." Many viewers declared rapper-turned-sports analyst Snoop Dogg the winner for his extremely colorful color commentary.


🏎ROMAIN GROSJEAN IS LUCKY TO BE ALIVE: Formula One driver Romain Grosjean miraculously emerged from the flames of his car after it crashed during the Bahrain Grand Prix yesterday. His car veered off the track during the first lap, ploughed into the barriers, exploded on impact and broke in half. He was pulled from the flames by emergency services and treated for light burns. Seven-time world champion Lewis Hamilton won the race.

🏈MAKING HISTORY AT VANDERBILT: A Vanderbilt senior made history Saturday when she kicked off the second half of the Commodores' football game against the Missouri Tigers. That's right: she. Sarah Fuller is the first woman ever to participate in a Power 5 conference game. Fuller is a goalie on the university's women's soccer team. She tried out for a spot on the football team after several players got stuck in COVID quarantine.


🏈NFL SCORES--WEEK 12:
  • Miami Dolphins 20, New York Jets 3
  • New England Patriots 20, Arizona Cardinals 17
  • Minnesota Vikings 28, Carolina Panthers 27
  • Cleveland Browns 27, Jacksonville Jaguars 25
  • Tennessee Titans 45, Indianapolis Colts 26
  • New York Giants 19, Cincinnati Bengals 17
  • Buffalo Bills 27, Los Angeles Chargers 17
  • Atlanta Falcons 43, Las Vegas Raiders 6
  • San Francisco 49ers 23, Los Angeles Rams 20
  • New Orleans Saints 31, Denver Broncos 3
  • Kansas City Chiefs 27, Tampa Bay Buccaneers 24
  • Green Bay Packers 41, Chicago Bears 25
Tonight's Monday Night Football game on ESPN:
  • Seattle Seahawks at Philadelphia Eagles, on ESPN 8:15 PM EST



➤THE WORD OF THE YEAR:  If you were to choose a word that rose above most in 2020, which word would it be? Ding, ding, ding: Merriam-Webster on Monday announced “pandemic” as its 2020 word of the year. “That probably isn’t a big shock,” Peter Sokolowski, editor at large for Merriam-Webster, told The Associated Press.

“Often the big news story has a technical word that’s associated with it and in this case, the word pandemic is not just technical but has become general. It’s probably the word by which we’ll refer to this period in the future,” he said.

Biden Names All Female WH Communications Team

Jen Psaki

President-elect Joe Biden on Sunday named his White House senior communications staff, choosing a team of all women led by Jen Psaki, a veteran of President Barack Obama's administration, as his first press secretary, reports USAToday.

Psaki, who wore many hats under Obama including White House communications director, has overseen the confirmations team for Biden's transition team.

Turning to top campaign aides, Biden also tapped Kate Bedingfield as White House communications director and Vice President-elect Kamala Harris named Symone Sanders senior adviser and chief spokesperson for the vice president. Bedingfield worked as deputy campaign manager and communications director for the Biden-Harris campaign. Sanders served as a campaign senior adviser.

Other communications hires are: Elizabeth Alexander, communications director for first lady Jill Biden; Ashley Etienne, communications director for Harris; Karine Jean-Pierre, principal deputy press secretary; and Pili Tobar, deputy White House communications director.

The announcements come as Biden continues to build his Cabinet and White House staff, led by Chief of Staff Ron Klain while President Donald Trump refuses to concede the election that Biden won.

"Communicating directly and truthfully to the American people is one of the most important duties of a President, and this team will be entrusted with the tremendous responsibility of connecting the American people to the White House," Biden said in a statement. "I am proud to announce today the first senior White House communications team comprised entirely of women. These qualified, experienced communicators bring diverse perspectives to their work and a shared commitment to building this country back better."

From 2013 to 2015, Psaki served as the primary spokeswoman for the State Department, traveling 600,000 miles to more than 50 countries with Secretary John Kerry.

She earlier served as deputy White House communications director during Obama’s first term, coordinating and implementing the public response of the government to the financial crisis. 

Journalist Tears Into News Media

Glenn Greenwald
Journalist Glenn Greenwald blasted the media for "scaring" people unnecessarily after President Trump recently suggested he would voluntarily leave the White House ahead of an incoming Biden administration, reports FOX News. 

Ever since Trump launched legal battles challenging the results of the 2020 presidential election, the president has been constantly attacked in the media. CNN anchor Brianna Keilar accused Trump of "undermining democracy," while her colleague Jake Tapper slammed what he called Trump's "clownish failed" "coup" and Anderson Cooper compared the president's actions to those of a "dictator." 

During an exchange with reporters on Thursday, President Trump appeared to put such worries to bed. 

When one reporter asked if he would leave the White House if the Electoral College votes for Biden, Trump responded, "Certainly I will, and you know that.”

On Friday, Greenwald slammed the media's weekslong totalitarianism scare in a series of Twitter messages.  

Greenwald was referring to the Russia investigation headed by former Special Counsel Robert Mueller, who concluded there was no collusion between Russia and the Trump campaign despite media hype throughout the first three years of Trump's presidency.

TV Ratings Macy's Parade Draws 20M+ Viewers

NBC's Parade Hosts

The 2020 Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade was a welcome — but atypical — sight. Though no crowd could be in attendance, 20.7 million TV viewers tuned in from 9 a.m. to noon, when it averaged a 5.3 rating among adults 18-49, according to The Wrap citing Nielsen.

Those numbers made the Thanksgiving parade NBC’s highest-rated and most-watched entertainment broadcast of 2020.

The parade had 4.7 million YouTube streams, NBC said. An encore presentation of the parade got 3.5 million TV viewers and had a 0.9 rating in the key demo.

The year-ago 2019 parade, when people were still allowed to congregate in the New York City streets (and around Thanksgiving tables, for that matter) scored 22.11 million total viewers, the annual event’s smallest TV audience since 2008 (21.69 million viewers). This year’s eclipsed that mark (in the wrong direction).

See how the previous dozen Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parades have fared here. In 2013, the parade topped 25 million viewers, the largest sum of this grouping.

The Macy’s Thanksgiving Day Parade has been a consistent and reliable ratings hit for NBC. The Manhattan march was last below 20 million total TV viewers back in 1996.

The 2020 National Dog Show followed Santa Claus’ parade arrival, and fetched 11.3 million total viewers to go along with its 3.4 demo rating from noon to 2 p.m. Good dogs.

While the parade and dog show both scored big audiences, NBC suffered a tough (ratings) break later on Thursday. Due to COVID-19 running rampant within the Baltimore Ravens organization, last night’s primetime NFL game vs. the Pittsburgh Steelers was postponed until Sunday afternoon. It’s now been postponed again until Tuesday, according to ESPN’s Adam Schefter. That initial postponement off turkey day likely cost NBC 20 or so million viewers — at least, temporarily. Tuesday night should have a nice haul.

Nielsen: Podcasting Continues to Thrive


According to Nielsen Scarborough data, at a 20% rate of growth, the audience for podcasting could double by 2023, and the IAB projects that U.S. podcast advertising revenues will surpass $1 billion by 2021. 

Given the growth and ad opportunities in the podcast space, Arica McKinnon, VP of Client Consulting, discussed how podcast ads drive brand impact during Podcast Movement 2020. Arica’s presentation leveraged insights from more than 250 Nielsen podcast ad effectiveness studies involving 240 brands across auto, CPG, education, financial services, DTC retail and technology. These studies contain ad engagement findings from 541 podcast clips and 195 podcast shows that were tested across various podcast genres. 

She noted that this research, which involves presenting listeners with podcasts’ clips and assessing their engagement versus those not exposed across an array of key brand metrics and content measures allows brands to assess the impact of their advertising and sponsorship on podcasts. 

“When we asked podcast listeners to rate the host of the show they were exposed to, an average of 66% rated the talent or host as excellent or very good, with two-thirds describing the talent as likable and 42% describing the talent as credible,” said Arica. “Podcasting is known for having host-read ads, which come off as authentic to listeners because the talent actually has a personal experience with the brand. So it’s natural to select a host that is more credible, reliable and fun to sell your products.” 

Arica continued, “Our analysis across our studies demonstrates that exposure to mid-roll ads yield stronger content scores, and shows that 64% of those exposed indicated that they would seek similar content in the future, driving  a 5% increase over those who were exposed to the pre-roll ad.” 

A wide spectrum of clients and advertisers are coming into the space, and advertisers are finding value and continue to take advantage of host-read ads and tailor-made messages for specific consumer segments. 

Following Arica’s presentation, Bruce Supovitz, SVP of National Audio Services, hosted two panels on ways to use industry insights to optimize monetization opportunities in podcasts. Panelists discussed the importance of these metrics in providing accountability to brands and media agencies as well as the impact of host-read advertising as compared to more traditional advertising modalities. 

Pierre Bouvard
“What has been a pleasant surprise to me, as someone who sees all the requests coming through from the various podcasters on these studies, is a really wide spectrum of clients and advertisers coming into this space,” said Bruce. “It’s refreshing, and I think it speaks highly of the medium that they are putting their dollars into it, whether it be a direct-response client or a well-known brand.”

Advertising effectiveness is of paramount importance for brands and advertisers, and having ways with which to showcase the differences of specific audiences is a part of the future trajectory of understanding this much coveted space.

As brands and advertisers continue to look for the best places to reach audiences, looking at the audience composition is a way to ensure that brands are resonating most. 

“There is a huge interest in the profile of audience,” said Pierre Bouvard, Chief Insights Officer, Cumulus Media/Westwood One. “There were a  number of companies measuring raw audience or rank, but no one was showing the buying habits of the consumer. We knew brands were looking for certain consumer profiles to connect to specific titles.” 

In describing the importance of understanding the nuances of what kind of content is most appropriate for audiences and advertisers, Paul Riismandel, Sr. Director of Marketing & Insights at Stitcher/Midroll said, “Content is king, but it is certainly for content that advertisers and audiences are interested in. It really helps us to look at how we put shows together into packages, and how we help advertisers reach scale by looking not just at the content vertical but also looking at the audiences themselves.

iHM Pittman Says Advertisers Are 'Really Interested' In Podcasts Now



In an interview Wednesday on FOX Business,  iHeartMedia CEO Bob Pittman talked on how the coronavirus pandemic has impacted his company’s concerts, podcasts and other services.

Podcasting’s Biggest Advertisers Show ‘Back To Normal’



The list of the ten biggest podcast advertisers during October is a sign that the industry continues to shake-off any impact of COVID-19. “This is a back-to-normal. There are a lot of advertisers here that were big advertisers in 2019, and pre-pandemic,” Magellan CEO Cameron Hendrix said during a company webinar last week, reviewing the top ten monthly spenders.

Magellan’s data shows the online mental health service provider BetterHelp and the recruitment company ZipRecruiter were the top two spenders during October, followed by retailer Amazon which nearly doubled its outlay compared to a month earlier. “ZipRecruiter had pulled back spending during the pandemic and have certainly come back pretty strong,” said Hendrix. Seven of the top ten had month-to-month increases with Volvo the biggest mover as it promoted the release of its XC90 and XC90 Hybrid models with a podcast ad budget that was up a whopping 968%. “These brands picking up in October are very much a return back to some of the bigger spenders that we saw last year,” said Hendrix.

Among the various advertising categories, Magellan says financial services was one of October’s standouts with five brands significantly increasing their ad spending – including Chase, Virginia529, Ally, MasterCard, and LoanDepot. Overall, the entire category jumped about 27% between September and October.

“In the financial services jump that we’re seeing in this month, we’re really not seeing a real similarity in the message these advertisers are bringing to market,” said Hendrix. LoanDepot promoted options for loans and refinancing, Virginia529 offered information about saving for children’s future college tuition bills, while Chase promoted a new credit card. 

Hendrix noted that although Chase was not new to podcast advertising, Magellan estimates October was the bank’s biggest month ever for podcast ad spending. “Each of these brands had different reasons for getting into the market, but nonetheless October was the month in which all of them really jumped in and increased their spending quite significantly,” he said.

There were also some new advertisers that came roaring into podcasting. Magellan data shows the men’s watch brand Christopher Ward spent about $100,000 on podcast ads in October. Hendrix said that “big splash” followed a much smaller test of the medium during September. And while 72 jewelry brands bought podcasts ads during the month, Christopher Ward accounted for 21% of the category’s overall podcast ad spending during October. 

The year-end gift-giving season typically sees an uptick in jewelry ad spending. Last year jewelry companies increased their podcast ad spending by 50% month-over-month during the fourth quarter. “It seems likely they may be increasing their spending again in November and December as we head into the holiday season,” said Hendrix.

Toronto Radio: SportsNets Parts Company With Mike Wilner

Mike Wilner

Toronto Blue Jays radio announcer Mike Wilner and Sportsnet have parted ways, the network announced Friday. 

Sportsnet said Wilner spent more than 20 years on its airwaves, becoming "synonymous with Blue Jays baseball."

The announcer said in a Friday statement released on Twitter his "heart is broken" to not be a part of the Blue Jays broadcast moving forward without citing specific reasoningfor the departure. He called his job "an absolute dream."


Sportsnet said in its statement that Wilner was the first Blue Jays play-by-play radio announcer born and raised in Toronto. 

For over 20 years, @Wilnerness590 has helped bring #BlueJays fans closer to the game we all love.

Thank you, Mike 👏 https://t.co/5h8JOd8DgU

— Toronto Blue Jays (@BlueJays) November 27, 2020 >

Wilner was a backup announcer and hosted the pre- and post- game for "Blue Jays Talk" starting in 2002. In 2018, he called most games after the retirement of former announcer Jerry Howarth before becoming the full-time voice in 2019. 

Newsmax Attracts More Followers On Social Media


Conservative media outlet Newsmax continues to has enjoy a massive surge in followers across Facebook, Twitter and YouTube over the past month, reports Newsweek.

Rising social media subscribers, viewers and interactions trends continued this weekend after the outlet's content was again amplified by President Donald Trump, who has turned on Fox News in recent weeks, broadly citing its coverage about his election defeat.

On Saturday, Trump tweeted that Fox was "virtually unwatchable" and pointed his vast Twitter following in the direction of Newsmax and the One America News Network (OANN), another outlet sympathetic to the president.


For Newsmax, a long-running media endeavor overseen by a Trump confidant called Christopher Ruddy, the high-profile endorsements appear to be paying off.

According to data from analytics platform Social Blade, which tracks the daily shifts of profiles, "likes" on the Newsmax Facebook page have spiked by over 1.4 million in the past 30 days, with a daily average rise of 47,241. On Saturday, when the channel was talked about by Trump, its Facebook page attracted over 30,000 new likes.

The pattern was echoed on Twitter, where its account gained 563,735 new followers in the past 30 days, a daily average of 18,791. It amassed 27,105 new fans Saturday.

On YouTube, Newsmax brought in 1.18 million new subscribers over the past 30 days, a daily average rise of nearly 40,000. It gained 20,000 new subscribers on Saturday. Video views on the platform rose by 108 million in the past 30 days, according to Social Blade.

Comcast To Charge More For Heavy Internet Usage


Comcast Corp. will charge more for heavy users of home internet in Northeast states — including Pennsylvania and New Jersey — angering customers who work and study online due to the pandemic, reports The Philadelphia Inquirer. 

The vast majority of Comcast’s Xfinity customers won’t be affected by the “data threshold” next year, company officials said last week. But the extra charges come as internet usage soars across the country, with consumers increasingly making video calls and bingeing shows while stuck at home. Average monthly data usage in the United States jumped 40% during the third quarter this year compared with the same period in 2019, according to OpenVault, a Hoboken, N.J., broadband software firm.

Starting in April, Xfinity will let customers use up to 1.2 terabytes of data a month before billing them more — unless they buy an unlimited data plan. Customers without unlimited data will have to pay $10 for every extra 50 gigabytes used. Unlimited data plans cost an additional $25 to $30 a month, depending on whether you rent or own your own router, a Comcast spokesperson said.

The Philadelphia-based cable giant said just 5% of its nearly 28 million home internet customers exceed 1.2 terabytes of data a month. But the news sparked criticism from customers and industry observers, who noted that the pandemic has closed schools and offices and forced consumers to do more online. Some said they would flee to Verizon Fios, which doesn’t have any data caps or thresholds, according to a company spokesperson.

Comcast said 1.2 terabytes is a “massive” amount of data, enough to watch 500 hours of high-definition video, or video conference for nearly 3,500 hours a month. Even with more people working at home, average monthly data usage was 383.8 gigabytes from July through September, OpenVault reported.

Comcast already imposed the data limit in 25 states in western and central parts of the U.S. The company had lifted the data limit on those states from March to July due to COVID-19. Now it’s rolling out the plan in the remaining 14 states across its footprint.

The company’s broadband business has boomed during the pandemic, signing up a record number of internet customers last quarter. But the coronavirus has battered its other businesses, particularly theme parks and film studios. Comcast’s net profit fell 37% during the third quarter, to $2 billion.

FCC Kills Attempt To Allow In-Flight Cellphone Calls

The U.S. Federal Communications Commission killed a proposal to allow in-flight voice calls via mobile phones, ending its examination of an idea that evoked fears of air rage from passengers trapped beside jabbering seat mates, reports Bloomberg.

The idea drew “strong opposition” from pilots and flight attendants, the agency said Friday in a four-paragraph order.

The FCC in 2013 proposed allowing mobile telephone conversations above 10,000 feet, adopting practices followed in Europe and elsewhere, where in-flight voice calling is more common.

But the proposal led to strong and immediate pushback, with travelers, flight attendants, members of Congress and others saying they were troubled by the idea of passengers talking on phones in flight. One group raised “the potential for air rage if passengers are using their cell phone.”

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai in 2017 signaled the agency would move to kill the proposal, which was created under a predecessor.

“Taking it off the table permanently will be a victory for Americans across the country who, like me, value a moment of quiet at 30,000 feet,” Pai said at the time.

Restrictions on in-flight calling were put in place to prevent interference with flight controls, radios and navigation equipment. The FCC in 2013 anticipated using technology that funneled calls through an onboard system.

America's Top-Scoring Car Brands For Reliability

by Niall McCarthy, Satista

American nonprofit consumer organization Consumer Reports has released its annual study about the reliability of new cars sold in the U.S. and its contents make for grim reading for several automobile manufacturers, especially Tesla. The study's findings are based on customer feedback and they focus on 17 potential trouble spots on cars from the engine to the electrical system and body work. Brands with at least two vehicle models were assigned an index score on a 0-to-100 point scale and the average worked out at between 41 and 60 points.

The three car brands with the highest reliability scores are all from Japan with Mazda ranked top with 83 out of 100. Toyota came second with 74 while Lexus, its luxury vehicle brand, rounded off the top-three with 71. Buick was the first U.S. name on the list with 70 while one European brand, Porsche, was present in the top-10 with a score of 55. That was still better than its parent company Volkswagen which came third last ahead of Tesla.

A report from Reuters attributed Tesla's dire reliability ranking to quality issues present in the new Model-Y crossover. It states that "owners of the Model Y, which began production in January, have reported misaligned body panels that had to be fixed and mismatched paint including, in one case, human hair stuck in the paint". Even though the Model-Y dragged Tesla down towards the bottom of the ranking, its score was not helped by the Model S and X which were both rated "worse than average" for reliability. While quality issues are common on new vehicles, the poor scores of the S and X show that Tesla surely has work on its hands at enhancing build quality across its range. Unsurprisingly, the brands with no major changes to their lineups tended to be ranked higher for reliability.

Infographic: America's Top-Scoring Car Brands For Reliability | Statista You will find more infographics at Statista

R.I.P.: Paul 'Tank' Sferrussa, Former Boston Radio Personality

'Tank" Sferrussa
Former Boston radio personality Paul "Tank" Sferrussa died last Wednesday at age 67.  He had been in decliding health in recent years.

Sferrussa was a  graduate of Boston Trade School, he originally aspired to be a baker. His radio career radio started in 1977 when he volunteered to answer the "listener line" at WBCN Radio. Paul rose through the ranks as WBCN van driver, producer, voice of "YOOP," and sports reporter/director.

He was also a sports reporter at WZLX until his retirement in 2003.


R.I.P.: Jack Horohoe, Buffalo Radio Personality

Jack Horohoe
Buffalo has lost a longtime radio broadcaster whose deep, resonant voice touched so many Western New Yorkers over the years.

Jack Horohoe, known as the gentleman broadcaster, died of coronavirus Friday, reports WIVB-TV4.  He was 77-years-of-age.

He grew up in Ken-Ton and first worked as a DJ here back in the 1950s, then was hired by George Lorenz ‘The Hound Dog’ as his newsman.

His lifelong connection to radio stretched on for 49 years. Horohoe also spent decades as a real estate agent.

Most recently, he worked middays on WEBR radio.  He returned to the air last summer after a 49-year hiatus. At the time, he told WKBW-TV,  "I thought maybe it was time to go back on the radio." Horohoe radio career began in the 1960's with stints at WNIA and WBLK. In 1968 he began doing mid days for WEBR (then 970 AM). 

Jack has never really been out of the limelight. Over the years he's done voice over work, commercials and numerous stage productions as an actor.

Nov 30 Radio History


➦In 1924...the first radio photo facsimile was transmitted across the Atlantic.

The concept of sending images by wire had been around for a long time before it was ever applied to radio.  The first rudimentary fax patent was issued in Paris in 1843 and used a swinging pendulum to draw the image.  Englishman Edwin Belin first demonstrated his Belinograph in 1913.  Western Union and AT&T both transmitted photos via wire in the early 1920’s, and the technology was quickly accepted by the press as a way to send newspaper photos instantly to cities around the country.  RCA was the first company to adapt facsimile to radio, and sent a transoceanic image of President Calvin Coolidge from New York to London on November 29, 1924.



Two years later, RCA began a commercial service of transmitting transoceanic photos by shortwave radio for the newspaper industry, and transmitting weather maps to ships at sea.  RCA’s patented “Photoradio” technology was invented by RCA scientists Richard H. Ranger and Charles J. Young.  It used a rotating drum and a photoelectric scanner to convert a document into a continuous tone that varied in pitch with changes in the image.  The image was reproduced on the receiving end with another rotating drum having a stylus that pressed black carbon paper against white paper to reproduce the image.

 A few radio broadcasters showed early interest in adapting the technology to send pictures to the public.  KPO in San Francisco, owned by the San Francisco Chronicle, became the first radio broadcaster to transmit a photograph by radio when it transmitted a picture of cartoon character Andy Gump on August 22, 1925.  The image was signed by Chronicle publisher George T. Cameron with the message "Radio's latest wonder - pictures through the air.  What new marvels will this science bring forth?"   The image was received on a single machine invented by C. Francis Jenkins.


➦In 1929...Dick Clark born (Died at age 82 - April 18, 2012). He was a radio and television personality, television producer and film actor, as well as a cultural icon who remains best known for hosting American Bandstand from 1957 to 1988.

As host of American Bandstand, Clark introduced rock & roll to many Americans. The show gave many new music artists their first exposure to national audiences, including Iggy Pop, Ike & Tina Turner, Smokey Robinson and the Miracles, Stevie Wonder, Prince, Talking Heads, Simon & Garfunkel and Madonna. Episodes he hosted were among the first in which blacks and whites performed on the same stage, and likewise among the first in which the live studio audience sat without racial segregation. Singer Paul Anka claimed that Bandstand was responsible for creating a "youth culture". Due to his perennially youthful appearance and his largely teenaged audience of American Bandstand, Clark was often referred to as "America's oldest teenager" or "the world's oldest teenager".

Dick Clark
In his off-stage roles, Clark served as Chief Executive Officer of Dick Clark Productions (a financial interest in which he sold off in his later years). He also founded the American Bandstand Diner, a restaurant chain modeled after the Hard Rock Cafe.[vague] In 1973, he created and produced the annual American Music Awards show, similar to the Grammy Awards.

Clark suffered a stroke in December 2004. With speech ability impaired, Clark returned to his New Year's Rockin' Eve show a year later on December 31, 2005. Subsequently, he appeared at the 58th Primetime Emmy Awards in 2006, and every New Year's Rockin' Eve show through the 2011–12 show. He died on April 18, 2012, of a heart attack, at the age of 82, following prostate surgery.

In 1945, Clark began his career working in the mailroom at WRUN 1150 AM (now silent) in Rome, NY, that was owned by his uncle and managed by his father. Almost immediately, he was asked to fill in for the vacationing weatherman, and within a few months he was announcing station breaks.

While attending Syracuse, Clark worked at WOLF-AM, then a country music station. After graduation, he returned to WRUN for a short time where he went by the name Dick Clay.  After that, Clark got a job at the television station WKTV in Utica, New York. His first television-hosting job was on Cactus Dick and the Santa Fe Riders, a country-music program. He later replaced Robert Earle (who later hosted the GE College Bowl) as a newscaster.

In addition to his announcing duties on radio and television, Clark owned several radio stations. From 1964 to 1978, he owned KPRO (now KFOO) in Riverside, California under the name Progress Broadcasting.  In 1967, he purchased KGUD-AM-FM (now KTMS and KTYD respectively) in Santa Barbara, CA.

In 1952, Clark moved to Drexel Hill, Pennsylvania, a suburb of Philadelphia, where he took a job as a DJ at radio station WFIL 560 AM, adopting the Dick Clark handle. WFIL had an affiliated television station (now WPVI) with the same call sign, which began broadcasting a show called Bob Horn's Bandstand in 1952. Clark was responsible for a similar program on the company's radio station, and served as a regular substitute host when Horn went on vacation. In 1956, Horn was arrested for drunk driving and was subsequently dismissed. On July 9, 1956, Clark became the show's permanent host.


Bandstand was picked up by the ABC television network, renamed American Bandstand, and debuted nationally on August 5, 1957.





➦In 1959...In a Billboard magazine article, disc jockey Alan Freed said his career had gone "down the drain" due to the recent "payola" scandal. In their story, Billboard claimed the scandal "will substantially damage the careers of at least twenty-five DJs."


➦In 1966...the radio time signal, WWV, moved from Greenbelt, Maryland to Boulder, Colorado.


➦In 1977...Newsman, commentator Eric Sevareid retired from CBS after 38 years with the company. He was one of a group of elite war correspondents dubbed "Murrow's Boys," because they were hired by pioneering CBS newsman Edward R. Murrow.

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Country singer-record company executive Jimmy Bowen is 83. 
  • Director Ridley Scott is 83. 
  • Writer-director Terrence Malick (“The Thin Red Line”) is 77. 
  • Bassist Roger Glover of Deep Purple is 75. 
  • Tyla Harris
    Singer-actor Mandy Patinkin is 68. 
  • Guitarist Shuggie Otis is 67. 
  • Country singer Jeannie Kendall of The Kendalls is 66. 
  • Singer Billy Idol is 65. 
  • Guitarist John Ashton of Psychedelic Furs is 63. 
  • Comedian Colin Mochrie (“Whose Line Is It Anyway?”) is 63. 
  • Rapper Jalil of Whodini is 57. 
  • Actor-director Ben Stiller is 55. 
  • DJ Steve Aoki is 43. 
  • Singer Clay Aiken (“American Idol”) is 42. 
  • Actor Elisha Cuthbert (“24”) is 38. 
  • Actor Kaley Cuoco (“The Big Bang Theory”) is 35. 
  • Model Chrissy Teigen is 35. 
  • Actor Christel Khalil (“The Young and the Restless”) is 33. 
  • Actor Rebecca Rittenhouse (“The Mindy Project”) is 32. 
  • Actor Adelaide Clemens (“Rectify”) is 31. 
  • Actor Tyla Harris (“For Life”) is 20.

Saturday, November 28, 2020

Nov 29 Radio History


Thomas Edison - 1878
➦In 1877..U-S inventor Thomas Edison demonstrates his hand-cranked phonograph for the first time.  Edison was one of the great inventors and designers in the history of the world. He invented the first practical light bulb, the motion picture camera and the phonograph. Others had attempted to invent the latter but Edison's was the first to actually reproduce the sound.

The phonograph was Edison's first major invention and the one that earned him the moniker "the wizard of Menlo Park" as the invention was so unexpected by the public as to appear magical. His first invention recorded on tinfoil around a grooved cylinder, and although the recordings could only be played a few times due to low quality, Edison's reputation was cemented.

He demonstrated the device on November 29, 1877, having announced its invention days before. He would patent it later that February. Recalling a demonstration in December, an employee of Scientific American magazine wrote: " "In December, 1877, a young man came into the office of the SCIENTIFIC AMERICAN, and placed before the editors a small, simple machine about which very few preliminary remarks were offered. The visitor without any ceremony whatever turned the crank, and to the astonishment of all present the machine said: "Good morning. How do you do? How do you like the phonograph?" The machine thus spoke for itself, and made known the fact that it was the phonograph..."

Edison did not improve on his design but Alexander Graham Bell invented an improved phonograph using wax cylinders in 1880.

➦In 1913...Announcer and actor Harry Bartell born (Died at age 90 – February 26, 2004). With his rather youthful sounding voice, Bartell was one of the busiest West Coast character actors from the early 1940s until the final end of network radio drama in the 1960s.

He was the Petri Wines announcer who interacted with “Dr. Watson” on 1940’s episodes of “The New Adventures of Sherlock Holmes,” and in the ’60’s was the announcer on CBS Radio’s “Dear Abby.”  His TV acting credits include Gunsmoke and Dragnet plus Get Smart, I Love Lucy, Wild Wild West, and The Twilight Zone.


➦In 1917...Announcer George Walsh was born in Cleveland (died from heart failure at age 88 -  Dec 5, 2005). He was also a newscaster at KNX 1070 AM L-A from 1952 to 1986.

Beginning in 1952, Walsh opened the weekly series that was broadcast live on radio with these words: “Around Dodge City and in the territory out West, there’s just one way to handle the killers and the spoilers, and that’s with a U.S. marshal and the smell of ‘Gunsmoke.’ ”

George Walsh
The radio version of “Gunsmoke,” which starred William Conrad as Marshal Matt Dillon, aired until 1961. When it moved to television in 1955, James Arness took over the starring role but Walsh remained as the show’s announcer.

For 34 years, Walsh worked at KNX as an interviewer, sports reporter, newscaster and announcer for a number of shows, including a fashion show hosted by film costume designer Edith Head.

One show, “Music ‘Til Dawn,” featured mainly classical music and aired overnight from 1952 until about 1970. The show won a Peabody Award in 1966.  Another, “This Is Los Angeles,” aired nightly at 8:15 and earned him a Golden Mike Award in 1961 from the Radio and Television News Assn. of Southern California.


➦In 1917...Merle Robert Travis born in Rosewood, KY (Died from a heart attack at age 65 – October 20, 1983).  He was a country singer, songwriter, and guitarist.

His songs' lyrics often discussed both the lives and the economic exploitation of American coal miners. Among his many well-known songs are "Sixteen Tons," "Re-Enlistment Blues," "I am a Pilgrim," and "Dark as a Dungeon." However, it is his unique guitar style, still called Travis Picking by guitarists, as well as his interpretations of the rich musical traditions of his native Muhlenberg County, KY for which he is best known today. "Travis Picking" is a syncopated style of guitar fingerpicking rooted in ragtime music in which alternating chords and bass notes are plucked by the thumb while melodies are simultaneously plucked by the index finger.

During the '30 and '40s, he was heard regularly on WLW radio Cincinnati as a member of The Drifting Pioneers.
\

➦In 1918...Humorist, radio personality ad TV host Herbert Arthur "Herb" Shriner born (Died in a car accident at age 51 – April 23, 1970). He was frequently compared to humorist Will Rogers.

In 1940, Shriner was hired by NBC for occasional radio appearances, which led to a regular spot in 1942 and 1943 on the comedy-variety program Camel Caravan. During World War II, he served in a United States Army special services unit and performed for two years in USO shows for GIs in Europe. After the war, he appeared on a number of radio shows, including The Philip Morris Follies of 1946 with Johnny Desmond and Margaret Whiting.

In 1947 he appeared in a Broadway musical review called Inside U.S.A. The performances were panned by critics, but Shriner's monologues made it a success and carried the show for over a year. Shriner hosted Herb Shriner Time, a CBS Radio weekday program, in 1948 and 1949 with the Raymond Scott Quintet, singer Dorothy Collins, and announcer Durward Kirby. The program was initially titled Alka-Seltzer Time (not to be confused with the later Alka-Seltzer Time that starred Curt Massey and Martha Tilton).  In August 1949, Shriner decided not to continue the program because it was too much work.


➦In 1927...Legendary sportscaster Vin Scully was born in the Bronx NY.

His 60-plus-year tenure with the Brooklyn & LA Dodgers is the longest of any broadcaster with a single club in professional sports history. Scully has called six World Series championships and 14 National League pennants for the club.

Vin Scully cica 50s
After serving in the United States Navy for two years, Scully began his career as a student broadcaster and journalist at Fordham University. While at Fordham, he helped found its FM radio station WFUV (which now presents a Vin Scully Lifetime Achievement Award each year), was assistant sports editor for Volume 28 of The Fordham Ram his senior year, sang in a barbershop quartet, played center field for the Fordham Rams baseball team, called radio broadcasts for Rams baseball, football, and basketball, earned a degree, and sent about 150 letters to stations along the Eastern seaboard. He received only one response, from CBS Radio affiliate WTOP in Washington, which made him a fill-in.

Scully was then recruited by Red Barber, the sports director of the CBS Radio Network, for its college football coverage. Scully impressed his boss with his coverage of a November 1949 University of Maryland versus Boston University football game from frigid Fenway Park in Boston, despite having to do so from the stadium roof. Expecting an enclosed press box, Scully had left his coat and gloves at his hotel, but never mentioned his discomfort on the air.  Barber mentored Scully and told him that if he wanted to be a successful sports announcer he should never be a "homer", never listen to other announcers, and keep his opinions to himself.

In 1950, Scully joined Barber and Connie Desmond in the Brooklyn Dodgers radio and television booths. When Barber got into a salary dispute with World Series sponsor Gillette in 1953, Scully took Barber's spot for the 1953 World Series. At the age of 25, Scully became the youngest man to broadcast a World Series game. Barber left the Dodgers after the 1953 season to work for the New York Yankees. Scully eventually became the team's principal announcer. Scully announced the Dodgers' games in Brooklyn until 1957, after which the club moved to Los Angeles.


➦In 1929...NBC began using the iconic chimes as an identification sounder.



The NBC chimes came to their familiar configuration and sound after several years of on-air development. They were first broadcast over NBC's Red and Blue networks on November 29, 1929. However, there are disagreements about the original source of the idea. One story is that they came from WSB in Atlanta, Georgia, which allegedly used it for its own purposes until one day someone at NBC's headquarters in New York City heard the WSB version of the notes during a networked broadcast of a Georgia Tech football game and asked permission to use it on the national network.

NBC Xylophone circa 1930
The company tested the chimes during 1927 and 1928, when it experimented with several possible combinations of notes. The first sequence consisted of the seven notes G-C-G-E-G-C-E. However, since the original NBC chime was an actual set of four-note chimes made by the J.C. Deagan Company, which the announcer would play 30 seconds before the end of every half-hour to signal the end of a program, it was left to the announcers to play this trademark sequence without error, which was unavoidable with such a lengthy cue. The chime sequence was shortened to G-C-G-E and then, on November 29, 1929, the cue was shortened for the final time, and the three well-known notes G-E-C were heard on NBC radio for the first time.

Despite the relative simplicity and efficiency of the new, shorter chime sequence, problems still existed in other musical aspects of the sequence, such as the tempo, rhythm, and volume at which it was played, as well as the musical tone of the set chimes. Therefore the NBC chimes were mechanized in 1932 with a unit that could play the sequence perfectly and consistently. Richard H. Ranger, a former Radio Corporation of America (RCA) engineer who also invented an early form of the modern fax machine, invented the NBC chime machine that generated the notes by means of finely tuned metal reeds that were plucked by fingers on a revolving drum, much like a music box.

The technical purpose of the mechanical chimes was to send a low level audio signal of constant amplitude that would be heard by the various switching stations manned by NBC and AT&T engineers, but not disturb the listening audience. This would serve as the system cue for switching the myriad local stations between the NBC Red Network and NBC Blue Network feeds as scheduled, as well as signalling the pause for local station identification immediately thereafter. In essence, it was the audio equivalent of a traffic signal. Because of fears of offending commercial sponsors by cutting their live network programs off mid-sentence, the mechanized chimes were always rung by an announcer pushing a button in conjunction with the program’s conclusion; they were never set to an automatic timer, although heavy discussions on the subject were held between the Engineering and Programming departments throughout the 1930s and 1940s.

On November 20, 1947, NBC filed with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office to make the chimes a registered service mark for identification of radio broadcasting services, the first such audible service mark to be filed with that office. Registration was granted on April 4, 1950; the registration number was 0523616, serial number 71541873. This registration expired on November 3, 1992, as NBC Radio became part of broadcasting history. However a separate service mark registration was made in 1971 for identification of television broadcasting services (serial 72349496, registration 0916522). While this registration is still active, the chime was heard for the final time on the NBC television channel in 1976, the 50-year anniversary of the chime; the chime is now used only for various smaller purposes on the network.

The Fourth Chime

The variant sequence B - D + G = G, based on a G-major arpeggio in second inversion, was known as "the fourth chime". An NBC Interdepartment Correspondence memo, dated April 7, 1933, documents the conception and initial purpose of the fourth chime.

The memo states "In anticipation of the Spring and Summer months, when many in key positions will not always be available at home telephones, the following Emergency Call System will go into effect on Monday morning, April 16."

The memo goes on to say that whenever a fourth tone is heard on the network chimes rung at 15-minute intervals, it will indicate that someone on an attached list is wanted. Upon hearing this fourth chime, all personnel on the list are instructed to call in to the PBX operator to ascertain whether or not the Emergency Call is for them. The chime would continue at 15-minute intervals over stations WEAF and WJZ until the wanted person communicated with the PBX operator. The list contained the names of the following NBC executives:

The "fourth chime" was also used to notify affiliates and their employees of pending urgent programming. This variant saw such use during wartime (especially in the wake of the attack on Pearl Harbor) and other disasters, most notably the Hindenburg disaster in 1937. According to NBC historians, the last official use of the "fourth chime" was in 1945, shortly after the end of World War II. However, according to a handwritten note appended to an NBC internal memo originally dated 1964 on the history and usage of the standard chime, this chime variant was used one final time in 1985 to symbolize the merger with GE.


➦In 1933...one of the earliest police ‘true crime’ radio dramas 'Calling All Cars' debuted on the CBS West Coast network. Calling All Cars is an old-time radio police drama in the United States. It also aired on the Mutual-Don Lee Network.   November 29, 1933 - September 8, 1939 and carried by transcription on stations in other areas.


➦In 1941...the passenger ship, "Lurline", sent a radio signal after sighting a Japanese war fleet in the Pacific.  Lurline was half-way from Honolulu to San Francisco on 7 December 1941, when the Japanese bombed Pearl Harbor. The ship's alleged reception of radio signals from the Japanese fleet became part of the Pearl Harbor advance-knowledge conspiracy theory.


➦In 1963..."I Want to Hold Your Hand" single released by the Beatles in the United Kingdom



➦In 1964...Dean "Dino On Your Radio" Anthony debuted on Top40 WMCA 570 AM, NYC.
He then went to an FM station for a while, then to Top 40 WWDJ in Hackensack NJ in 1971. He has since has worked for a variety of stations including mornings at WTFM in New York. Dean lives on Long Island where he is program director for WHLI, which he programmed for years.

Before coming to WMCA, Anthony was program director and afternoon personality at WPGC Washington, D.C., from 1960 to 1964 as Dean Griffith. Prior to that, he was at WGH Norfolk, Va.

Anthony died in October 2003 at age 68 from cancer.


Gene Rayburn
➦In 1999...Gene Rayburn, host of the TV game show Match Game and a host on the NBC Radio Weekend Show 'Monitor', died at 81 (Born December 22, 1917).

Before appearing in television, Rayburn was a very successful actor and radio performer. He had a popular morning drive time radio show in New York City, first with Jack Lescoulie (Anything Goes) and later with Dee Finch (Rayburn & Finch) on WNEW (now WBBR). Radio history pegs Rayburn's pairings with Lescoulie and Finch as the first two-man teams in morning radio.  When Rayburn left WNEW, Dee Finch continued the format with Gene Klavan.

Rayburn later landed the lead in the Broadway musical Bye Bye Birdie when Dick Van Dyke left the production to star in his eponymous classic sitcom The Dick Van Dyke Show.  Listen to an aircheck from 1964 with Rayburn hosting NBC Radio Network's weekend Monitor Show. Click Here.


➦In 2001...Beatle George Harrison died of lung cancer at the age of 58. In May 2001, it was revealed that Harrison had undergone an operation to remove a cancerous growth from one of his lungs, and in July, it was reported that he was being treated for a brain tumour at a clinic in Switzerland.

Speaking outside his home northwest of London, Paul McCartney said, "I am devastated and very, very sad." Ringo Starr, speaking from Vancouver, British Columbia said, "We will miss George for his sense of love, his sense of music and his sense of laughter."


➦In 2008...Pioneering "Boss Radio" programmer Bill Drake, died of lung cancer at age 71.

Bill Drake
Born Phillip Yarbrough, he chose his last name from among his relatives' surnames, because it rhymed with "WAKE", the station in Atlanta, where he worked as a programmer and disc-jockey in the late 1950s.  Later, Bartell Broadcasting, who owned WAKE that he had programmed to number one, transferred him to KYA in San Francisco, which also became number one.

It was later at KYNO in Fresno, California that he met Gene Chenault, who became his business partner. Together, the pair developed highly influential radio programming strategies and tactics, as well as working with future "Boss Jocks".

Drake-Chenault perfected the Top 40 radio format, which had been created by Todd Storz, Gordon McLendon and other radio programmers in the late 1950s, which took a set list of popular songs and repeated them all day long, ensuring the widest possible audience for the station's music. Jingles, news updates, traffic, and other features were designed to make Top 40 radio particularly attractive to car listeners. By early 1964, the era of the British Invasion, Top 40 radio had become the dominant radio format for North American listeners.

Drake streamlined the Top 40 format, using modern methods, such as market research and ratings demographics, to maximize the number of listeners. He believed in forward momentum, limiting the amount of disc jockey chatter, the number of advertisements and playing only the top hits, as opposed to less-organized programming methods of the past. Drake created concepts such as 20/20 News and counter programming, by playing music sweeps, while his competitors aired news. Drake-Chenault controlled everything from the specific DJs that were hired, to radio contests, visual logos, promotions and commercial policy. Drake essentially put radio back into the hands of programming, instead of sales. Drake hired the Johnny Mann Singers to produce the Boss Radio jingles, ensuring a bright, high-energy sound that engaged the listener, while providing a bridge from song to song.



After turning around the fortunes of Fresno's KYNO, Drake applied similar tactics to take KGB, from 14th to 1st in San Diego. KGB's owner, Willett Brown, suggested to his fellow RKO board members, that Drake could turn KHJ around.

In the Spring of 1965, Drake-Chenault were hired to turn KHJ in Los Angeles, from a financial and ratings loser into a success. Drake hired Ron Jacobs as program director, Robert W. Morgan in the mornings and "The Real Don Steele" in the afternoons. KHJ quickly jumped from near-obscurity, to the number one radio station in Los Angeles. Although it was criticized, "Boss Radio" moved faster and sounded more innovative than the competition, making it the #1 choice over competitors in Southern California.



Bill Drake also programmed KFRC in San Francisco, WOR-FM in New York, KAKC in Tulsa, WHBQ in Memphis, WUBE (AM) in Cincinnati, WRKO in Boston and 50,000 watt CKLW, in Windsor, Ontario, across the Detroit River from the city of Detroit.

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