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Saturday, November 8, 2025

Radio History: Nov 9


➦In 1895
...George Dewey Hay born in Attica, Indiana (Died – May 8, 1968). He was radio personality, announcer and newspaper reporter. He was the founder of the original Grand Ole Opry radio program on WSM-AM in Nashville, Tennessee, from which the country music stage show of the same name evolved.

In Memphis, Tennessee, after World War I, he was a reporter for the Commercial Appeal, and when the newspaper launched its own radio station, WMC-AM, in January 1923, he became a late-night announcer at the station.  His popularity increased and in May 1924 he left for WLS-AM in Chicago, where he served as the announcer on a program that became National Barn Dance.

George D Hay
On November 9, 1925, he moved on to WSM-AM in Nashville. Getting a strong listener reaction to 78-year-old fiddler Uncle Jimmy Thompson that November, Hay announced the following month that WSM would feature "an hour or two" of old-time music every Saturday night. He promoted the music and formed a booking agency.

The show was originally named WSM Barn Dance, and Hay billed himself as "The Solemn Old Judge." The Barn Dance was broadcast after NBC's Music Appreciation Hour, a program featuring classical music and grand opera. One day in December 1927, the final music piece on the Music Appreciation Hour depicted the sound of a rushing locomotive. After the show ended, "Judge Hay" opened the WSM Barn Dance with this announcement:

“ Friends, the program which just came to a close was devoted to the classics. Doctor Damrosch [host of the program] told us that there is no place in the classics for realism. However, from here on out for the next three hours, we will present nothing but realism. It will be down to earth for the 'earthy'. ”

Hay then introduced the man he dubbed "The Harmonica Wizard," DeFord Bailey, who played his classic train song, "The Pan American Blues," named for the crack Louisville and Nashville Railroad passenger train The Pan-American. After Bailey's performance, Hay commented, "For the past hour, we have been listening to music taken largely from Grand Opera. From now on we will present the Grand Ole Opry."

During the 1930s, he was involved with Rural Radio, one of the first magazines about country music, developing the Opry for NBC and working on the movie Grand Ole Opry (1940). He was an announcer with the radio show during the 1940s and toured with Opry acts, including the September 1947 Opry show at Carnegie Hall.

He was featured in Hoosier Holiday, a 1945 film from Republic Pictures, in a cast that also included Dale Evans.  Hay was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame two years before his death in 1968.

➦In 1925...KQP in Portland Oregon signed-on and the station changed its call sign to KOIN on April 12, 1926.

It became an affiliate of the Columbia Broadcasting System (CBS), now known as the CBS Radio Network, on September 1, 1929.  During the golden years of radio, KOIN was one of Portland's major radio stations, with an extensive array of local programming, including live music from its own studio orchestra.

As a CBS radio affiliate, KOIN was the local home for CBS radio programs such as the CBS World News Roundup, Lux Radio Theater and Suspense. An FM station, KOIN-FM at 101.1, was launched in 1948. Both stations were owned by Field Enterprises, Inc. from 1947 until sold in 1952 to the Mount Hood Radio and Television Broadcasting Corporation.

KOIN and KOIN-FM were sold on May 1, 1977 to the Gaylord Broadcasting Company, and effective May 12, 1977 their call signs changed to KYTE (both AM and FM).  Its affiliation with CBS ended, and the CBS Radio Network's programming in the Portland market moved to KYXI at that time.

The stations using the former KOIN frequencies currently are KUFO (AM) and KXL-FM.

➦In 1925...the three day Fourth National US Radio Conference began in Washington, D.C. During the year since the previous conference, the number of US stations with 500 watts or more had nearly doubled from 115 to 197.

➦In 1930...sportscaster Charlie Jones was born in Fort Smith, Arkansas. For more than 30 years he called NFL football for NBC Sports.  He also broadcast baseball, golf, tennis, track & field at the Olympics, and soccer.  Jones died June 12 2008 at age 77.

➦In 1948...“This is Your Life” debuted on NBC radio. Ralph Edwards hosted the radio show for two years and for nine more (1952-1961) on television.

➦In 1961...Brian Epstein saw the Beatles play for the first time, at one of their lunchtime sessions at the Cavern Club in Liverpool. He became interested in the group after a customer in his record store inquired about a German import single of the Beatles backing singer Tony Sheridan on “My Bonnie.” Epstein soon became the Beatles’ manager, cleaning up their greasy, Teddy Boy image with collarless grey suits and the now familiar Beatle haircuts.

FCC Chair to Testify At Oversight Hearing


FCC Chairman Brendan Carr will testify before the Senate Commerce Committee on December 17, 2025, in a bipartisan oversight hearing that also includes Commissioners Olivia Trusty and Anna Gomez.

The hearing stems from Carr’s September threats to investigate ABC affiliates for “news distortion” unless they dropped Jimmy Kimmel Live! after Kimmel joked about the assassination of conservative activist Charlie Kirk. 

Carr told a podcast, “We can do this the easy way or the hard way,” implying license reviews for Disney-owned ABC and local stations.

Senator Ted Cruz
Within hours, Sinclair and Nexstar—operating 70 ABC affiliates reaching nearly 25 % of U.S. households—preempted the show. Disney suspended Kimmel for six days, citing “ill-timed” remarks. Both station groups later restored the program with no editorial concessions.

Even committee chair Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX) blasted Carr’s tactics as “mafioso” pressure that could boomerang on conservative media. Democrats, led by Sens. Adam Schiff and Elizabeth Warren, accused Carr of “coordinated attack on the free press.”

Carr insists he only “called out” Kimmel’s conduct and empowered local stations to serve their communities. He has denied any threat to licenses.

Senators will grill Carr on FCC-White House contacts, merger leverage, and whether the agency is now a political censorship tool. The December 17 session marks the first time in years local broadcasters successfully pushed back on a national network—exactly the outcome Carr says he wants.

Rock Hall To Induct 2025 Honorees


Outkast, Cyndi Lauper, Salt-N-Pepa, Soundgarden, and artists spanning the 1950s to the 2000s — including Chubby Checker and the White Stripes — will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame during Saturday night’s 2025 class ceremony at the Peacock Theater in Los Angeles.

Chappell Roan will induct Lauper with Avril Lavigne performing alongside her; Donald Glover will induct Outkast; and Elton John will pay musical tribute to the late Brian Wilson. Other announced guests include Missy Elliott, Olivia Rodrigo, and Twenty One Pilots, though their roles remain undisclosed amid the event’s tradition of surprises. 

Fans are speculating on potential onstage appearances by guests with living members of Bad Company and Soundgarden, as well as possible reunions for Outkast and the White Stripes to perform or accept their honors — a common induction highlight featuring essential songs.

The ceremony rotates among Los Angeles, New York, and Cleveland (the hall’s home) and starts at 8 p.m. Eastern (5 p.m. Pacific). Ticket holders attend live; others can stream it on Disney+ (a platform addition since 2023), with on-demand access on Hulu starting Sunday and an edited ABC broadcast on Jan. 1.

YouTubeTV Claims It Is Willing to Deal With Disney


Google’s YouTube declared Friday it is open to a fair deal that would immediately restore Disney’s ABC broadcast stations and the full ESPN suite to YouTube TV, while the two giants keep negotiating carriage fees.

The blackout, now in its eighth day, has stripped 10 million YouTube TV subscribers of 20+ Disney channels—including ESPN, ABC locals, FX, Freeform, Nat Geo, and Disney Channel—right through Election Night and two college-football Saturdays.

What each side says

✔YouTube: Disney is demanding rates higher than what Charter and DirecTV pay for ABC, and more than Disney charges its own Hulu + Live TV and Fubo. Google insists it wants only “market” terms and offered Monday to flip ABC and ESPN back on in hours if Disney agrees.

✔Disney: YouTube is seeking below-market “preferential” pricing and has made “few concessions.” An internal memo to staff says Disney opened with a cheaper package than the expired deal and has matched terms given every other distributor since summer 2024.

Customer fallout 
YouTube TV has promised a $20 credit if the channels stay dark “an extended period” (not yet triggered) and deleted all prior Disney recordings from users’ cloud DVRs. 

Sports fans are streaming ESPN’s new $29.99/mo “Unlimited” app or switching to Hulu + Live TV; election viewers used ABC News’ free YouTube livestream (19M subs) or antennas.

Why it’s stuck  Google wants rates that drop further once YouTube TV passes Comcast and Charter in size. Disney refuses to subsidize a rival it says already pays preferred rates. Both lose ~$5M a day in fees and ads, but Google’s deep pockets and Disney’s owned alternatives (Hulu, Fubo, ESPN app) let the fight drag.

Next moves
  • YouTube says its ops teams can restore ABC/ESPN in hours with Disney’s sign-off. 
  • Talks continue daily; history (Disney-Charter 10 days in 2023, DirecTV 13 days in 2024) suggests a deal before Thanksgiving, but no public deadline exists.
Bottom line:  A handshake could end the blackout tonight; until then, 10 million homes are flipping between antennas, rival streamers, and free YouTube feeds for the sports and news they already paid $83/mo to watch.

Disney Says YouTube TV Making Few Concessions


Disney blasts YouTube TV for making “few concessions” as the biggest TV blackout in a decade enters Day 8, leaving 10 million subscribers without ESPN, ABC, FX, and 18 other channels just as college football rivalry week kicks off.

In a fiery Nov. 7 memo, Disney chiefs Dana Walden, Alan Bergman, and ESPN’s Jimmy Pitaro accused Google of “insisting on preferential terms that are below market” while refusing flexible sports-only or family-tier packages Disney says it has granted to 500+ other distributors—including giants far larger than YouTube TV.

The standoff began October 30 when talks collapsed over carriage fees. Disney wants rates that reflect ESPN’s $10B+ annual sports bill; YouTube TV calls the ask “unprecedented” and warns it would force yet another price hike on consumers already paying $83/month.

Fans have already missed two Saturdays of college football, Monday Night Football, and Election Night on ABC (YouTube TV rejected Disney’s one-day restore plea). A new survey shows 24% have canceled or plan to imminently, with 82% threatening to bolt if the blackout drags on.

YouTube TV is dangling a $20 credit and slashing its effective price to $63 for now, while ESPN stars Stephen A. Smith and Scott Van Pelt rally viewers to a Disney petition site.

History says resolution is near—Disney’s last two big fights (Charter ’23, DirecTV ’24) ended after 11 and 13 days—but neither side is blinking. Disney gains sign-ups at Hulu + Live TV and Fubo; Google, backed by $2 trillion in market cap, can out-wait anyone.

Quick workaround: Grab an antenna for ABC, stream ESPN via the new ESPN app ($10.99/mo), or jump ship to Hulu + Live TV, Fubo, or DirecTV Stream—each still carries the full Disney lineup.

Grab the popcorn; the Mouse and the algorithm are still swinging.

Trump Questioned On Affordability


President Trump snapped “I don’t want to hear about the affordability!” during a White House Q&A Thursday, instantly turning the phrase into a viral soundbite that critics called a “Let them eat cake” moment.

Fox News’ Jacqui Heinrich this week pressed him on a judge’s order to restore full SNAP benefits amid soaring grocery costs; Trump countered with a rambling claim that Walmart’s 2025 Thanksgiving basket is “25% cheaper” and prices are “way down.”

The pushback began Wednesday on Bret Baier’s Special Report. Baier played a plea from “Regina,” a three-time Trump voter: “Wall Street numbers do not reflect my Main Street money… Please do something, President Trump.” 

Trump blamed Republicans for not using the “new word” affordability often enough while insisting groceries and energy are already lower.


Fox’s own data undercut him: coffee +19%, utilities +12%, electricity +5%, car repairs +11.5% since January. Seven in ten Americans tell pollsters groceries cost more than last year; 60% blame Trump.The timing stings. 

Democrats swept Tuesday’s off-year races—Zohran Mamdani in NYC, Abigail Spanberger in Virginia, Mikie Sherrill in New Jersey—by hammering “affordability.” Exit polls showed even economy-first voters broke blue.

Trump now floods Truth Social with “AFFORDABILITY IS A REPUBLICAN STRONGHOLD” posts and touts a smaller, generic-heavy Walmart basket as proof. Critics pounce: the 2025 bundle has 15 items vs. 21 last year.

Even the Murdoch-owned New York Post scolded: “Prices aren’t going down… and probably never will.”




Meanwhile, The Justice Department has launched an investigation into meatpacking companies and whether they are colluding to drive up beef prices, the latest review of an industry that competition regulators have scrutinized in recent years.

“Action must be taken immediately to protect Consumers, combat Illegal Monopolies, and ensure these Corporations are not criminally profiting at the expense of the American People,” President Trump said in a post Friday on Truth Social.

The Justice Department’s antitrust division is leading the probe in partnership with the Agriculture Department, Attorney General Pam Bondi said in a post on X.

NBC's MTP Delivers Largest Key Demo Audience


Meet the Press with Kristen Welker was the #1 Sunday public affairs show among A25-54 demo viewers this past Sunday, November 2, according to Nielsen.

Meet the Press averaged 458,000 key A25-54 demo viewers this past Sunday, leading CBS by +14,000 (+3%), and delivering the most key demo viewers of any program season-to-date. This marks Meet the Press’s seventh time in the last eight weeks ranking #1 among key A25-54 demo viewers.

In addition, Meet the Press averaged 301,000 A18-49 demo viewers, tied with CBS. Compared to the prior week, MTP was up +15% vs. CBS up +7%.

Meet the Press averaged 2.554 million total viewers this past Sunday, reaching its largest total viewership in seven weeks. Season-to-date, Meet the Press is leading ABC among total viewers for the first time in five seasons.

In addition to Nielsen-tracked viewers, on NBC News’ TikTok account, Sunday’s exclusive interview with Gov. Gavin Newsom (D-Calif.) scored nearly five million views and NBC News Chief Data Analyst Steve Kornacki’s breakdown of a new NBC News poll resulted in over 700,000 views. Clips of Sunday’s show garnered over one million views on NBC News’ YouTube account.

Meet the Press was the #1 Sunday public affairs show among key A25-54 demo viewers for the 2024-25 broadcast season. Meet the Press has never lost a month in the Washington, D.C. market among total viewers.

Triangle Radio: Kitty Kinnin Ends Marvelous 40-Year

Kitty Kinnin
Kitty Kinnin, a 40-year Triangle radio icon, retired Friday after her final midday show on Curtis Media Group’s Adult Hits 96.1 BBB (WBBB-FM) in Raleigh.

The station aired a heartfelt on-air tribute and posted online: “Today we say farewell to a true Triangle radio legend… Kitty’s voice, warmth, and wit have been part of the soundtrack of this community for decades.” 

No replacement was announced; middays are jockless for now.

Kinnin, 75, joined WBBB in 2013 after stints at WRDU (Classic Rock), WFXC/WFXK (Urban AC), WRVA-FM (Adult Contemporary), and WNCU (Jazz). She also voiced commercials, narrated documentaries, and hosted the 2022 podcast Sound Palate with Kitty Kinnin.

Raised in Miami, she began in radio in Winston-Salem and Wilmington before dominating Raleigh airwaves. Her Sunday Jazz & Blues Brunch ended with her final shift.

Listeners flooded social media and the station text line with tributes. One wrote: “Kitty wasn’t just the midday host—she WAS the midday.”

The station replayed her final hour commercial-free Friday night and posted highlights on the 96.1 BBB app.

After A Month, How Is CBS News Doing With Bari Weiss?


Bari Weiss’s CBS News overhaul—launched Oct. 6 with a $150M Free Press buyout—has triggered mass layoffs (including eight female on-air stars), a culture-war clash, and Election Night chaos, leaving veteran staffers “freaking out” and viewers fleeing.

Just 33 days in, Weiss axed eight women—among them South African correspondent Debora Patta and weekend anchor Adriana Diaz—while sparing white male veterans, sparking instant #JimCrow2 hashtags and accusations of “Israeli white supremacism.” 

Talent chief Laurie Orlando became the latest exec casualty; dozens more pink slips hit producers and POCs across bureaus.

Ratings hemorrhage:
  • Evening News dipped below 3.5M for the first time since 1987.
  • Streaming uniques fell 28% week-over-week.
Internal survey: 41% of remaining staff “actively job-hunting.”

CBS News is spending $10,000 a day—$3.6 million a year—on an eight-man, ex-Navy SEAL security bubble for President Bari Weiss, complete with armored SUVs, advance scouts, and bathroom sweeps, while 200 staffers clear out their desks.

”Why the fortress?Zero “credible threats” on NYPD or FBI logs.  But Weiss’s pro-Israel stance and spiked Gaza stories have unleashed a social-media storm—death threats, doxxing, and one NY Assemblyman openly floating revocation of her team’s carry permits.

Weiss’s pro-Israel tilt already shows: Tony Dokoupil’s Netanyahu softball aired unedited; Gaza famine pieces were spiked. A secret “antisemitic actors” blacklist—shared with CAA—has A-listers scrambling.

Silver linings? Free Press podcasts cracked the Apple Top 10; Trump praised Weiss on 60 Minutes (“finally a network that gets it”). David Ellison calls it “creative destruction.”

Fox Sports Fires Mark Sanchez


Fox Sports has  fired NFL analyst Mark Sanchez after he was stabbed in a drunken Indianapolis alley brawl on Oct. 4, 2025, leading to felony battery charges and his immediate removal from the broadcast booth.

The network confirmed the termination Frisday, stating, “Mark Sanchez is no longer with Fox Sports,” and named Super Bowl-winning QB Drew Brees as his permanent replacement alongside play-by-play voice Adam Amin.

Sanchez stab wounding
Surveillance footage shows a heavily intoxicated Sanchez, 38, aggressively pursuing 69-year-old truck driver Perry Tole outside the Westin hotel at 12:30 a.m. After grabbing and slamming Tole into a wall, Sanchez was pepper-sprayed—then stabbed two to three times in the torso when he charged again. 

He was heard yelling, “This guy is trying to kill me!”

Arrested in his hospital bed, Sanchez faces one count of felony battery resulting in serious bodily injury (possible 1–6 years in prison). Tole, who suffered a deep facial laceration, has filed a civil lawsuit against Sanchez and Fox Corp.

Sanchez has not appeared on air since the incident. Interim analysts Brady Quinn and Mark Schlereth covered his games. Trial is set for Dec. 11, 2025.

Key facts:
  • Sanchez joined Fox in 2021 after a 10-year NFL career.
  • Brees makes his debut in Week 11 (Chiefs vs. Bills).
  • No charges filed against Tole—video supports self-defense.
From USC star to NFL bust to rising broadcaster, Sanchez’s career ends in scandal—capped by a stabbing and a pink slip.

The Printed Farmer's Almanac Ending With 2026 Edition


Lewiston, Maine-based Farmers’ Almanac—America’s beloved 208-year-old guide to weather, gardening, and folk wisdom—will print its final edition in 2026 and shut down its website by December 2025.

Editor Sandi Duncan announced the closure on Thursday, citing “growing financial challenges of producing and distributing the Almanac in today’s chaotic media environment.” 

The 2026 issue—already on shelves at stores and Amazon for about $4.79—features a cover blending skyscrapers and a farmhouse, nodding to its urban-rural readership of 2.1 million at its 2017 peak.

Founded in 1818 by astronomer David Young, the Almanac outlasted wars, depressions, and digital disruption with long-range forecasts (claimed 80% accurate), moon-phase planting charts, and quirky “best days” for everything from fishing to potty-training. 

Its secret weather formula, guarded for two centuries, will retire with it.

Fans mourn the loss—“like losing a cherished friend,” one reader said—but Duncan insists the spirit lives on: “Plant your peas when daffodils bloom. Tell the kids how granddad swore by the Almanac.”


Not going anywhere: The separate Old Farmer’s Almanac (yellow cover, founded 1792 in New Hampshire) will keep publishing print and online editions “for generations to come.”

Grab the last Farmers’ Almanac now—before the red sky at night becomes just a memory.

Radio History: Nov 8



➦In 1939
...WQXR-FM NYC signed-on as W2XQR.

WQXR-FM is the outgrowth of a "high-fidelity" AM station, WQXR 1560 AM, which was founded in 1936 by John V. L. Hogan and Elliott Sanger. Hogan began this station as a mechanical television station, W2XR, which went on the air on March 26, 1929.

One of the station's listeners was the inventor of frequency modulation, Edwin Howard Armstrong. When Armstrong put his experimental FM station, W2XMN, on the air, he arranged to rebroadcast some of WQXR's programming. This ended in 1939, when Hogan and Sanger put their own experimental FM station on the air, W2XQR on this date, just down the dial from Armstrong at 42.3 MHz.

When the Federal Communications Commission began licensing commercial FM stations, W2XQR moved to 45.9 MHz and became W59NY; the special FM call signs were later dropped and the station became WQXQ.

➦In 1953...Buddy Holly and Bob Montgomery (billed as “Buddy & Bob”) appeared on radio station KDAV in their hometown of Lubbock, Texas, in the first of a series of Sunday country music shows.


➦In 2012
....WXRK NYC changed call letters to WNOW-FM. The calls today are WINS-FM. The station is owned by Audacy Communications and airs an All-News format via a simulcast with 1010WINS-AM. (An Alternative music format airs on HD-2)

The station, first known as WMCA-FM, went on the air on December 25, 1948. It was co-owned with WMCA 570 AM by former New York state senator Nathan Straus. FM radio was not a successful venture for Straus, and he sought to either sell it or close the station down altogether.

WNYL logo
In late 1950, Straus sold the station to the owners of WHOM 1480 AM, now WZRC, and WHOM-FM appeared on February 26, 1951, featuring a variety of formats, including ethnic, background music, classical, Spanish, and easy listening. By the early 1970s, WHOM-FM had a Spanish-language easy listening format.

Following the sale of the WHOM stations to SJR Communications, the FM station became WKTU, taking on an adult contemporary format that began on June 5, 1975. At that point, WKTU was positioned as a "soft rock" station and called "Mellow 92". Ratings were relatively low. The station held on to the format in spite of low ratings until 1978.

Friday, November 7, 2025

Dallas/FW Radio: Vince Richards To Exit Audacy


Vince Richards, Audacy’s Vice President of Rock Programming and Director of Programming & Operations for Dallas trio 100.3 JACK FM (KJKK), ALT 103.7 (KVIL) and 98.7 The Spot (KSPF), will exit the company November 30 after four decades in radio.

Dallas SVP/Market Manager Bob Mackay broke the news in a Thursday staff memo obtained by RAMP 24/7, praising Richards for “elevating our rock brands to new heights” while overseeing 27 rock-leaning stations in 22 markets nationwide.

Vince Richards
Richards, 58, told colleagues he is “ready for the next chapter” but has not announced plans. Industry sources say he is fielding consulting offers and may launch a programming syndicate.

A St. Louis native who started as a KSHE-95 night jock, Richards rose through Clear Channel Dallas/Houston, Townsquare Media, iHeart and Audacy Sacramento before returning to DFW in 2020. He earned multiple Marconi and R&R awards for turning around under-performing rock outlets.

Mackay wrote: “Vince’s passion for talent development and fearless format evolution leaves every station stronger. We wish him nothing but continued success.”

No successor has been named; Richards will assist with transition through month-end. The departure is the latest high-level exit from Audacy’s rock bench amid Chapter 11 restructuring.

YouTubeTV Subscribers Threatening To Cancel


Nearly 25% of YouTube TV’s 10 million subscribers have already canceled or plan to cancel the $83/month service because Disney-owned channels—ESPN, ABC, FX, and 16 others—went dark on October 30 after the companies failed to renew their carriage deal, a new Drive Research survey of 1,107 users reveals.

The same poll shows churn could explode: 82% say they are “likely” to drop YouTube TV if the blackout drags on, with 30% already adding or planning to add Hulu + Live TV or ESPN Unlimited to keep Disney content.

Among YouTube TV subscribers in the Drive survey, the reasons they were or are subscribers show how high the stakes are for this dispute:

  • 56% subscribed to watch live sports
  • 43% point to the overall channel lineup
  • 33% subscribed specifically to watch ABC programming
  • 27% say NFL Sunday Ticket access played a role

Google blames Disney for demanding “costly” rate hikes that would force price increases on customers; Disney counters that YouTube TV is refusing “fair rates” and using its market power to “eliminate competition.”

Subscribers have now missed two weeks of college football, Monday Night Football, and Election Night coverage on ABC. YouTube TV is offering $10 off for six months plus a one-time $20 credit, but only 30% of surveyed users say that’s enough to stay.

YouTube disputes the poll, telling Variety its actual cancellation rate “does not align” with the 24% figure and remains “manageable.”

This is YouTube TV’s fifth carriage fight in 2025; Disney channels have blacked out on major providers for 10–13 days in each of the past three years. Analysts expect a deal before Thanksgiving, but both sides have leverage—Disney owns rival live-TV bundles, Google has deep pockets—and neither is blinking yet.

Comcast Possible New Suitor for WBD


Comcast has hired Goldman Sachs and Morgan Stanley to evaluate a bid for Warner Bros. Discovery’s studio and streaming businesses, gaining access to confidential financial data as it explores a formal offer.

The potential deal targets Warner Bros. film and TV studios, HBO Max (nearing 150 million subscribers), HBO linear, and Discovery+—but excludes linear cable networks and TNT Sports, which will spin off as Discovery Global in April 2026.

Netflix has also retained Moelis & Co. to study the same assets, while Paramount Global’s three all-company bids ($19–$23.50/share) were unanimously rejected by WBD’s board.

Mike Cavanagh
Comcast’s strategic rationale includes instant scale (Peacock + HBO Max ≈ 200 million global subs), IP synergy (DC with Universal Parks), and a clean post-spin structure after offloading its own cable networks into Versant in January 2026.

Hurdles include antitrust scrutiny under a Trump DOJ, a $35–45 billion price tag, and WBD CEO David Zaslav’s leverage as the spin-off nears.

Comcast President Mike Cavanagh recently signaled openness to big deals, stating the bar is high but more is viable than public commentary suggests.

Separately, Comcast’s Sky is in exclusive talks to acquire ITV’s UK broadcasting arm for ~£1.7 billion. Markets reacted positively: WBD shares rose 4.8% to $12.87, Comcast gained 1.2%, while Netflix dipped 0.6%. Formal bids are expected by year-end.

Boise Radio: PD Tim Johnstone Out At The River

Tim Johnstone

Tim Johnstone, program director and afternoon host at 94.9 The River (KRVB) in Boise, was laid off Tuesday, ending his 25-year run at the Lotus Communications adult-alternative station.

The departure featured no on-air goodbye, no social media post, and no statement from Lotus Boise GM Nick Coe; Johnstone’s bio and show page disappeared from riverboise.com within hours, with afternoons now using music-intensive imaging and voicetracked sweeps.

Part of a company-wide 8–10% cut after missing Q3 revenue targets, the Boise cluster is reportedly is down 12% year-over-year in local billing.  Johnstone received 60 days’ pay plus unused vacation.

Programming shifts include Rochelle Smith moving to 11 a.m.–4 p.m. middays and syndicated “Acoustic CafĂ©” expanding into afternoons; mornings with Melissa & Kevin remain unchanged.

Johnstone, 53, launched The River in 2000 after flipping 100.3 The X to AAA in 1995, became PD in 2012, and kept the station #2 25–54 in Boise; he voiced promos for 20 years, emceed Treefort Music Fest’s main stage 2017–2024, and sat on the Idaho Humane Society board.

Listeners posted over 400 comments on The River’s Facebook, launched a Change.org petition with 1,100 signatures in 24 hours, and pushed #SaveTimJ locally; ex-co-host Ken Bass called him “the heart of the station.”

Johnstone is considering offers from Townsquare’s WOW 104.3, Cumulus Boise, and a 2026 Treefort Music Director role; he told a colleague he’s “walking the Greenbelt with the dogs this week” before deciding next steps.

NYC Radio: 77WABC Owner John Cats Threatens Relocation


John Catsimatidis, the $4.8 billion owner of Gristedes and D'Agostino's supermarkets and owners of Talk Radio 77WABC, has threatened to slash his New York City workforce and relocate operations to Florida after socialist Democrat Zohran Mamdani's landslide mayoral victory.

The threat escalates Catsimatidis' June warning that Mamdani's plan for five city-run, tax-exempt grocery stores would force him to close or sell all 30 Manhattan locations. 

John Catsimatidis
In a Forbes interview, he said business leaders are "reducing their exposure to New York City" and confirmed Florida—where he owns property and pays zero state income tax—as the new target over earlier New Jersey plans.

Mamdani fired back at his victory party: "The billionaires said they’d leave if we won. Let them. We’ll use their empty penthouses for affordable housing." 

The mayor-elect's platform includes the grocery stores, rent freezes, and a 2% millionaire surcharge.

Catsimatidis, a Trump ally and GOP donor whose Red Apple Group generates $7.8 billion annually, previously shifted operations during COVID-era tax disputes. Analysts view the latest threat as leverage, noting the high cost and brand damage of shuttering the 137-year-old Gristedes chain. Still, Florida developers report a surge in inquiries from New York executives the day after the election.Other billionaires echoed unease: hedge-fund manager Bill Ackman congratulated Mamdani but offered policy advice, while Ken Griffin hoped he "governs differently than he campaigned." 

Barstool Sports' Dave Portnoy has also renewed vows to move headquarters to Montauk or Florida.

NYC Radio: MediaCo Stations To Add HD2 Multicast Signals


MediaCo Holding Inc. is expanding its iconic New York radio stations—WQHT “Hot 97” (Hip-Hop) and WBLS (Adult R&B)—to HD2 digital multicast signals in four major markets: Los Angeles, Riverside-San Bernardino, Dallas, and Houston, starting December 1.

The publicly traded owner of Estella Media, which acquired the brands from Emmis, announced the national push Thursday, aligning the stations with existing FMs in those California and Texas cities to reach multicultural audiences nationwide.

CEO Albert Rodriguez called the move “a major step” in connecting urban music and culture, stating: “HOT 97 and WBLS are cultural movements. Bringing these brands to Dot 2 audio... allows us to deepen our connection with audiences who have influenced and amplified urban music and culture for decades.”

EVP of Content & Growth Kudjo Sogadzi added that HD2 (“Dot 2”) channels offer “nonstop access to two of the most trusted and influential brands in music.”

MediaCo did not disclose the specific affiliate stations in the announcement.

TV Ratings: October Recap Of Cable News Channels


MSNBC was the only major cable news network to post gains in primetime during October, rising 1% in total viewers and 6% in the Adults 25-54 demographic, according to Nielsen data.

Fox News led the field but saw sharp declines, averaging 2.334 million primetime total viewers (down 8% from September and 15% from October 2024) and 228,000 in A25-54 (down 19% month-over-month and 36% year-over-year). It ranked No. 2 in primetime total viewers and No. 4 in the demo; in total day, it held first in total viewers (1.508 million, down 6%) and second in the demo (145,000, down 19%)—the only network with double-digit demo losses in that daypart.

MSNBC finished second overall with 815,000 primetime total viewers (up 1%) and 73,000 in A25-54 (up 6%); total day slipped 1% to 504,000 total viewers but held flat at 45,000 in the demo. Year-over-year, it plunged 41% in primetime total viewers and 54% in the demo. It ranked fifth in primetime total viewers, No. 19 in the demo, third in total day total viewers, and No. 14 in the demo.

CNN averaged 504,000 primetime total viewers (down 7% from September, 39% from October 2024) and 77,000 in A25-54 (down 11% and 56%); total day fell to 388,000 total viewers (down 3%, 27% year-over-year) and 58,000 in the demo (down 6%, 42%). It placed sixth in primetime total viewers, No. 17 in the demo, fifth in total day total viewers, and eighth in the demo (tied with Food Network).

Fox Business:  The network was ahead of CNBC during business day, market hours, and total day in total viewers. Varney & Co. was the top show in total viewers with 267,000 viewers, while Making Money with Charles Payne took the top spot in the demo, with 13,000 viewers.
 
CNBC:  It finished in front of Fox Business in the demo during business day, market hours, and total day. Fast Money Halftime Report was the most-watched program in total viewers with 165,000. Squawk on the Street was the most-watched program in the A25-54 demo with 37,000 viewers.

Programming:  Fox News dominated with The Five (3.692 million total viewers at 5 p.m. ET) topping all cable news and Gutfeld! leading A25-54 (325,000). MSNBC’s The Rachel Maddow Show drew 1.639 million total viewers and 156,000 in the demo at 9 p.m. CNN’s top shows were The Arena with Kasie Hunt (611,000 total viewers at 4 p.m.) and NewsNight with Abby Phillip (95,000 in A25-54 at 10 p.m.).

News Corp Beats Wall Street Expectations


News Corp beat Wall Street estimates for fiscal first-quarter 2026 revenue, posting $2.144 billion versus expectations of $2.10 billion, driven by strong growth in its Dow Jones and digital real estate units.

Dow Jones, the company’s most profitable segment, saw revenue rise 6%, fueled by an 8% jump in paid digital subscriptions to 6.4 million across The Wall Street Journal, Barron’s, and other titles, plus new AI content-licensing deals.

Robert Thompson
Digital real estate services grew 5%, led by higher pricing and listings at Australia’s REA Group and improved lead-generation products at U.S.-based Move (realtor.com).

Adjusted earnings per share came in at $0.22, topping forecasts of $0.19, while total segment EBITDA climbed 5% to $340 million.

Other units showed mixed results: News Media revenue edged up 1%, but Book Publishing slipped 2% due to a weaker title slate.

CEO Robert Thomson called the results a continuation of record profitability, highlighting the company’s digital transformation and AI revenue streams. News Corp also accelerated its share buyback program to four times last year’s pace and reaffirmed strong full-year free-cash-flow guidance.

Shares traded flat to slightly higher in after-hours action.

Las Vegas Radio: Beasley Shuffles Morning Shows


Beasley Media Group announces exciting new on-air lineup changes involving two of its popular Las Vegas radio stations, 96.3 KKLZ and 102.7 Coyote Country (KCYE-FM).

Longtime Las Vegas favorite Shawn Tempesta, most recently heard on KVGS-FM, will be joining Carla Rea as Co-host of “The KKLZ Morning Show with Carla and Shawn” beginning Monday, November 17th. The new pairing brings together two dynamic and familiar personalities known for their humor, authenticity, and strong connection to the Las Vegas community.

In addition, Aimee Thomas, Shawn’s former morning show partner at VGS, will be returning to 102.7 The Coyote as part of the station’s morning lineup pairing with longtime Coyote Country PD and on-air talent, Shawn Stevens. Aimee’s fun, relatable style, and passion for connecting with listeners make her a perfect addition to the Coyote team.

“Las Vegas is home to some of the best talent in the country, and these moves strengthen two of our incredible brands,” said Beasley Media Group Chief Content Officer Justin Chase. “We’re thrilled to see Shawn join forces with Carla on KKLZ and to welcome Aimee back to The Coyote family. Our listeners are going to love what’s ahead.”

Grand Rapids Radio: Classic Rock WLAV Refreshes Line-Up


Cumulus Media Classic Rock “97 LAV” WLAV in Grand Rapids, MI, has refreshed its on-air lineup after two hosts departed last month: morning co-host Gregg Henson and afternoon personality Brian Vander Ark.

The morning show continues with Michelle McKormick and Travis Gibbs. Afternoons (3-7 p.m.) now feature Jordan Lass, who shifts from the same daypart at sister CHR “105.3 Hot-FM” WHTS-FM. Jackie Green holds middays, and Westwood One’s “Steve Gorman Rocks” remains in nights.

Lass, a Grand Rapids native, joined Cumulus Grand Rapids in September 2024 as APD and afternoon host at WHTS-FM. His radio journey began in Port Huron, MI (2016-2019) at CHR 96.9 WBTI and Rock 105.5 WHLS. 

Jordan Lass
Lass also continues hosting nights on AAA “94.5 The Q” WKLQ in Grand Rapids.On October 30, Lass posted: “Today marks a new chapter in my radio career. After more than ten years in Alternative and Top 40, I’m moving down the hall to transition to Classic Rock. As a Grand Rapids native, words can’t express what it means to be part of the legendary WLAV – catch me weekday afternoons from 3-7.”

Henson arrived at WLAV in December 2022 from Richmond, VA, where he programmed Audacy News/Talk 1140/96.1 WRVA and Sports “910/105.1 The Fan” WRNL. He previously hosted a dual-market afternoon show for 1130 WDFN Detroit and 96.1 WMAX Grand Rapids, and has programmed and hosted at Sports 1130 WDFN and 1270 WXYT Detroit, 950 WPEN Philadelphia, 970 WBGG Pittsburgh, 1300 KVET Austin, 105.3 KRLD-FM Dallas, and News/Talk 1190 WOWO Fort Wayne.

Filling Lass’ afternoon vacancy at “105.3 Hot-FM” is Ali Aaron, who also hosts afternoons for Cumulus siblings KQHN Shreveport, LA, and WIOG Saginaw, MI. Aaron previously handled middays at CHR “Hot 93.3” KLIF-FM Dallas, co-hosted mornings at Country 101.1 KRMD-FM Shreveport, and served as MD and morning host at KQHN.

Streaming Fans Getting Frustrated By Experience


Streamers are growing frustrated with the fragmented streaming landscape despite its mainstream dominance, with nearly half struggling to find specific content amid too many services and 49% ready to cancel subscriptions if nothing appeals, according to a new Gracenote report from Nielsen.

The survey of 3,000 consumers across the U.S., U.K., Germany, France, Brazil and Mexico—500 per country, collected this past summer—found 75% enjoy streaming overall, but 46% say the abundance of platforms makes pinpointing shows, movies or live events difficult (rising to 51% in the U.S. and U.K.).

Over 45% call the market oversaturated, and 32% report occasional negative experiences from overwhelm.

On average, users spend 15 minutes browsing for something to watch—26 minutes in France, 12 in the U.S. (up two minutes from two years ago)—with 19% abandoning searches entirely (29% among younger viewers). Cancellation threats peak at 56% for ages 25-34.

Two-thirds of respondents want a unified guide across apps and a cross-platform search tool to locate content, even on rivals. This echoes trends from Bango’s bundling platforms, MyBundle’s marketplaces and Antenna data showing Amazon Prime Video Channels boosting niche services via single-app management—prompting Apple and NBCUniversal to sell through it.

TV Ratings: Final Numbers Confirm World Series Was A Classic


The Los Angeles Dodgers etched their names into baseball immortality, outlasting the Toronto Blue Jays in a pulse-pounding, seven-game 2025 World Series thriller—capping a back-to-back championship run not seen since the Yankees’ dynasty a quarter-century ago. And the world watched.

Game 7—an 11-inning, edge-of-your-seat classic—drew a jaw-dropping 51 million viewers across the U.S., Canada, and Japan, making it the most-watched MLB game in 34 years. 

From Dodger Stadium’s electric roar to living rooms in Tokyo and Toronto, baseball’s biggest stage became a global spectacle.In the U.S., 27.33 million gripped their remotes as FOX delivered the highest-rated World Series game since 2017’s epic Astros-Dodgers showdown. 

The entire series averaged 15.71 million viewers—a 2% surge over last year’s five-game clash and the best seven-game average in eight years. For context? The 2025 NBA Finals barely cracked 10.27 million.But north of the border, the Blue Jays’ first World Series in 32 years ignited a national fever.


Forbes reports Game 7 shattered records with 10.9 million Canadians glued to Sportsnet and Citytv—the most-watched English-language broadcast in history outside the 2010 Olympics. Nearly half the country (18.5 million) tuned in at some point, with 14 million holding their breath in the 9th as Ernie Clement stepped up with two on and two out. 

The full series averaged 7.5 million per game, and 23 million Canadians caught the action—making all seven the most-watched Blue Jays games ever.In Japan, Shohei Ohtani and series MVP Yoshinobu Yamamoto turned the Fall Classic into a cultural event, pushing global viewership to 34 million per game—a 19% leap from 2024 and the largest World Series audience since 1992.Two games went to extra innings. 

The Dodgers became repeat champs. And for one electric week, baseball didn’t just dominate sports—it owned the world.

Journey Announces The Final Tour


Journey, the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame band behind “Don’t Stop Believin’,” “Separate Ways (Worlds Apart),” and “Any Way You Want It,” is calling it quits after a massive 2026 farewell tour titled “A Special Evening With Journey.”

The 60-date North American arena trek kicks off February 28, 2026, in Hershey, PA, and ends July 2, 2026, in Laredo, TX, with more legs planned for 2027 and possibly beyond. 

Tickets go on sale November 14 at 10 a.m. local via JourneyOfficial.com.

The Final Frontier Tour 2026
  • What: A massive farewell trek billed as “A Special Evening With Journey” (no opener, just 2½+ hours of hits, deep cuts, and a brand-new cosmic stage production).
  • First Leg: 60 arena dates across North America.
  • Kicks Off: February 28, 2026 – GIANT Center, Hershey, PA.
  • Wraps (for now): July 2, 2026 – Sames Auto Arena, Laredo, TX.
  • More Legs: Expected to spill into 2027 and possibly beyond; international dates TBD.
  • Tickets: Citi presale Nov 11; general on-sale Nov 14 at 10 a.m. local (JourneyOfficial.com).
The current lineup—Neal Schon (guitar), Jonathan Cain (keyboards), Arnel Pineda (vocals), Deen Castronovo (drums), Jason Derlatka (keys), and Todd Jensen (bass)—will perform 2½+ hour sets of hits, deep cuts, and a new cosmic stage production, with no opening act.

Schon said the tour is a “heartfelt thank-you” to fans and hinted he’s not retiring, while Cain confirmed he’s “ready to pass the baton.” 

Pineda called it an honor to close the legacy.After 52 years, 100 million albums, and 19 Top-40 singles, the band ends amid resolved tensions between Schon and Cain, who had feuded publicly over touring and business.

The tour includes a Stagecoach Festival headline slot in April 2026. Expect “Separate Ways” as the final song.

Houston Radio: 104.1 KRBE Fights Hunger

Turkey Tour with Kevin & Audrey

Cumulus Media’s 104.1 KRBE, Houston’s #1 Hit Music Station, proudly wrapped its 3rd annual Turkey Tour with Kevin & Audrey in partnership with Kroger, an initiative dedicated to supporting local food banks during the holiday season.

From November 1st through November 5th, the 104.1 KRBE team hit the road for a series of live broadcasts from Kroger locations across the Houston area. Thanks to the incredible generosity of listeners, sponsors, and community partners, the Turkey Tour raised over 10,000 pounds of food, helping provide meals to families in need throughout the region.

“Every year, our community shows up in a big way,” said Leslie Whittle, Content Director at KRBE-FM. “We’re so grateful to everyone who donated. This event is a true reflection of Houston’s heart and spirit.”

In addition to collecting canned goods and non-perishable food items, each stop on the tour featured exclusive giveaways and on-site fun with 104.1 KRBE afternoon drive hosts Kevin & Audrey, bringing energy and excitement to every location. All donations benefited the Houston Food Bank and other local partners committed to fighting hunger.

KRBE-FM remains committed to uplifting the community through meaningful initiatives like the Turkey Tour. The station will continue working with local organizations year-round to foster connection, compassion, and support across Houston.

For more information or to stream 104.1 KRBE, visit: www.krbe.com.

iHM, Amazon Partner For Programmatic Audio Offering


Amazon Ads and iHeartMedia have expanded their partnership to launch a new programmatic audio offering.

This enables advertisers using Amazon DSP to access iHeartMedia’s streaming audio portfolio. Additionally, iHeartMedia’s integrated streaming music and live radio inventory is now available on Amazon DSP. 

Access to iHeartPodcasts and broadcast radio stations will launch in 2026.

This expanded partnership builds on a long history of innovation and collaboration between iHeartMedia and Amazon Ads. Over the past decade, the two companies have developed advertising innovation spanning smart devices, mobile apps, and voice technology. With today’s announcement, that relationship expands into programmatic audio, bringing iHeart’s addressable and broad audience reach to marketers and ad buyers.

“Making iHeart’s premium audio inventory available through Amazon DSP, unlocks scale with deep listener engagement and proven performance,” said Lisa Coffey, Chief Business Officer, iHeartMedia. “And with accessibility to Broadcast Radio inventory soon to follow, this partnership is another step in making broadcast radio behave like digital media; addressable, measurable, and available programmatically, so marketers of all sizes can buy with greater ease and consistency.