Friday, December 18, 2020

Syndicated Michael Baisden To EXIT Radio


Michael Baisden is leaving Radio at the end of the year and will discontinue syndication of his daily show. 

He will be replaced by The Jeff Foxx Show with Keke Brown and Nina on the Sun Broadcast Group’s network lineup and is available now for affiliations through Blue Tag Media. Baisden plans to pursue his digital arm of his show which has over 4 million followers.

Jeff Foxx
“Sun Broadcast Group has been an incredible network partner and their team, along with Mike Love, have worked diligently to grow my show for the past two years,” stated Michael Baisden. “Unfortunately, due to the historic issues we faced with covid-19 and the subsequent economic crisis it’s been challenging to grow affiliation and revenue for the show. To that end, The Michael Baisden Show will not be returning for 2021.”

The Jeff Foxx Show with Keke Brown and Nina is a daily blaze of fun with entertainment, information and listener participation at every step. Foxx’s career resume highlights include syndication at Superadio; mornings at WRKS (KISS 98.7)/NEW YORK; mornings at WBLS (107.5) NEW YORK; WJMO/CLEVELAND; and WJPC/CHICAGO. Built for afternoon drive on Urban AC stations, the show broadcasts weekdays from 3 PM to 7 PM EST.

To learn more about The Jeff Foxx Show with Keke Brown and Nina click here.

Vivendi Buys Another 10% of Universal Music Group


Vivendi said on Friday a Tencent-led consortium would exercise its option to buy an additional 10% stake in Universal Music Group (UMG), home to Taylor Swift and The Beatles, based on a deal giving UMG an enterprise value of 30 billion euros.

Reuters reports the French conglomerate, in which billionaire Vincent Bollore’s holding company has the biggest stake, said it was “pursuing its plan to sell additional minority interests in UMG with the assistance of several mandated banks” and that a listing was planned at the latest in 2022.

In March 2020, the Tencent-led consortium closed the initial purchase of a 10% stake in UMG, with the option to acquire an additional 10% on the same valuation basis until Jan. 15, 2021.

Vivendi said it planned to use proceeds from these transactions to reduce its financial debt and to finance share buybacks and acquisitions.

Westwood One Inks Partnership With Rich Eisen

Rich Eisen
CUMULUS MEDIA’s Westwood One today announced a partnership with Emmy-nominated broadcaster Rich Eisen to bring The Rich Eisen Show and future projects to the Westwood One Podcast Network. In the new partnership, Westwood One will monetize, market, and distribute all existing and forthcoming podcasts. In addition, Westwood One will assist in the distribution of the Rich Eisen radio show.

Westwood One will work directly with Eisen to format show highlights and interviews into The Rich Eisen Show podcast that will be available at Apple Podcasts, Spotify, Stitcher, TuneIn, Pocket Casts, Google Podcasts, Amazon Music, and Pandora, among other platforms.

Now in its sixth year, the Emmy Award-nominated The Rich Eisen Show originates out of Los Angeles, CA and features an engaging mix of sports, humor and pop culture, while attracting the most recognizable names in sports and entertainment, including Tom Brady, Matt Damon, Jodie Foster, Matthew McConaughey, Regina King, Aaron Rodgers, Larry David, Morgan Freeman and more. The show airs nationally on Peacock TV and is also available on Channel 211 NBC Sports Audio on SiriusXM.

A new podcast, Just Getting Started, is scheduled to debut in February 2021. Just Getting Started will be Eisen’s first step into the world of personal fulfillment podcasting. Eisen will interview the biggest names from news, entertainment, sports, and pop culture, discussing their career origins and mining their stories on how they got started, in a format where audiences can be inspired by their endeavors.

As part of the partnership, Westwood One will also assist with the audio uplink, satellite connection, and distribution to existing and future local radio station partners for the Rich Eisen radio show.

"In relaunching my podcast and terrestrial radio businesses, I couldn't find a better partner to bring my content to more hearts, minds and ears than Westwood One," said Eisen, president and CEO of Rich Eisen Productions, which owns The Rich Eisen Show. "I also could not be more excited to launch a new podcast and podcast shingle with my new partners. The fact that they're also the radio home to the National Football League makes this even more of a wonderful fit."

“Rich is a legendary sports broadcaster, widely known for his sharp insights and colorful NFL commentary. It is exciting to welcome him and The Rich Eisen Show to the Westwood One Podcast Network and to work on new projects together,” said Suzanne Grimes, EVP Marketing, CUMULUS MEDIA, and President, Westwood One. “Rich has met some of the most interesting, successful, and colorful characters around – and not just in football. It will be a lot of fun to hear Rich talk with titans of sports, business, and entertainment about their paths to success in Just Getting Started.”

Futuri’s AI-Driven Technology Sees Record Usage Growth


In a year of unprecedented change in the ways broadcasters do business and audiences consume content, usage of Futuri’s AI-driven audience engagement and sales intelligence technology hit record highs. Analysis of 2020 product usage data proves that content creators and broadcasters are more reliant than ever on technology across all aspects of their business:

TopicPulse, Futuri’s AI-powered story discovery, show prep, and social content system, has seen 135,688,133 minutes — that’s more than 94,000 days — of usage by partners in 2020. The 61% growth spike in user sessions TopicPulse saw earlier this year when disruptions began has sustained throughout the year as broadcasters look for new ways to differentiate their brands by discovering and creating content that engages their specific target audiences.

POST, Futuri’s podcasting system, has now published podcasts with over ONE BILLION plays, enabling content creators and broadcasters to grow audience and revenue on multiple platforms. Exclusive POST features specifically designed to make the podcasting process fast, easy, and efficient for broadcasters have been key in driving this growth.

TopLine, Futuri’s revolutionary sales intelligence system that pairs cutting-edge AI with expert human analysis, has helped deliver $130 million in advertising/sponsorship revenue for its partners in 2020. This represents TopLine’s highest revenue number ever, despite the fact that this has been an unquestionably tough revenue year for media sales executives.

“This year, there have been seismic shifts in the way broadcasters and publishers create, produce, distribute, and monetize content, and there is no sign that we’re going back to the old way of doing things,” said Futuri CEO Daniel Anstandig. “The massive growth in usage of Futuri’s AI-driven solutions shows that we’re uniquely capable of helping media companies and content creators grow audience and revenue now and in the ‘next normal.’”

December 18 Radio History






➦In 1890...Edwin Howard Armstrong was born in New York City. He was an early radio pioneer and also the inventor of FM, Frequency Modulation. A motorcycle visit to the Armstrong Tower in Alpine, NJ, the world's first FM radio tower.

Rather than varying ("modulating") the amplitude of a radio wave to encode an audio signal, the new method varied the frequency FM enabled the transmission and reception of a wider range of audio frequencies, as well as audio free of "static", a common problem in AM radio. (Armstrong received a patent on wide-band FM on December 26, 1933.

Edwin H. Armstrong
In 1934 Armstrong began working for RCA at the request of the president of RCA, David Sarnoff. Sarnoff and Armstrong first met at a boxing match involving Jack Dempsey in 1920. At the time Sarnoff was a young executive with an interest in new technologies, including radio broadcasting. In the early 1920s Armstrong drove off with Sarnoff's secretary, Marion MacInnes, in a French sports car. Armstrong and MacInnes were married in 1923. While Sarnoff was understandably impressed with Armstrong's FM system, he also understood that it was not compatible with his own AM empire. Sarnoff came to regard FM as a threat and refused to support it any further.

From May 1934 until October 1935, Armstrong conducted the first large scale field tests of his FM radio technology from a laboratory constructed by RCA on the 85th floor of the Empire State Building. An antenna attached to the spire of the building fired radio waves at receivers about 80 miles away.  However RCA had its eye on television broadcasting, and chose not to buy the patents for the FM technology.  A June 17, 1936, presentation at FCC headquarters made headlines nationwide. He played a jazz record over conventional AM radio, then switched to an FM broadcast. "[I]f the audience of 50 engineers had shut their eyes they would have believed the jazz band was in the same room. There were no extraneous sounds," noted one reporter. He added that several engineers described the invention "as one of the most important radio developments since the first earphone crystal sets were introduced."

In 1937, Armstrong financed construction of the first FM radio station, W2XMN, a 40 kilowatt broadcaster in Alpine, New Jersey. The signal (at 42.8 MHz) could be heard clearly 100 miles away, despite the use of less power than an AM radio station.


➦In 1920...broadcaster Willis Conover was born in Buffalo. He was known as the man who “fought the Cold War with cool music.”  For 40 years he presented American jazz heard round the world on The Voice of America.  He died May 17 1996 at age 75.


➦In 1956...Former shortstop Phil Rizzuto signed-on to be a New York Yankee radio-TV play-by-play announcer, a job he held for 40 years.



➦In 1967...Radio Personality Scott Muni started at WNEW 102.7 FM NYC.

Born Donald Allen Muñoz in Wichita, Kansas, Muni grew up in New Orleans. He joined the United States Marine Corps and began broadcasting there in 1950, reading "Dear John" letters over Radio Guam. After leaving the Corps and having considered acting as a career, he began working as a disc jockey; in 1953 he began working at WSMB in New Orleans. In 1955 he began broadcasting at station WAKR in Akron, Ohio, and after that worked in Kankakee, Illinois.

Muni then spent almost 50 years at stations in New York City. He became a Top 40 broadcaster at WMCA in the late 1950s, just before the start of their "Good Guys" era. In 1960, he moved to rival Top 40 station WABC. There, he did an early evening show called "Scotland's Yard" and was the first WABC DJ to capture the attention of the teenage audience the station would become famous for. He also participated in the competition to cover The Beatles on their first visits to the United States, and thus began a long association with them.

In 1965, Muni left WABC and ran the Rolling Stone Night Club while doing occasional fill-in work for WMCA. Muni had explored some opportunities beyond radio: he had recently co-hosted a local weekly television show on WABC-TV with Bruce "Cousin Brucie" Morrow.

In 1966, Muni joined WOR-FM, one of the earliest pioneers of freeform-based progressive rock radio. The notion did not last at that station, but in 1967 Muni moved to legendary rock station WNEW-FM, where the format really took hold. Muni stayed there for three decades as the afternoon DJ and sometimes program director. Muni was described by fellow WNEW-FM DJ Dennis Elsas as "the heart and soul of the place". Under assorted management changes during the 1990s WNEW-FM lost its way, and in 1998 Muni ended up as a one-hour noontime classic rock personality at WAXQ "Q104.3", where he worked until suffering a stroke in early 2004.

He died on September 28, 2004 at the age of 74 in New York City.  Muni was inducted into the Rock Radio Hall of Fame in the "Legends of Rock Radio-Programming" category for his work at WNEW in 2014. He was inducted into the National Radio Hall of Fame in 2015.


➦In 1993...WNCN changed to active rock WAXQ in NYC



➦In 2010...Clay Cole died from a heart attacked at age 72 (BornAlbert Rucker Jr., January 1, 1938). He was a radio, TV personality host and disk jockey, best known for his eponymous television dance program, The Clay Cole Show, which aired in New York City on WNTA-TV and WPIX-TV from 1959 to 1968.

During the 1960s "British Invasion", musical acts arriving from the UK often appeared on Cole's television shows before doing network shows such as The Ed Sullivan Show. The Rolling Stones and The Who were among those who first appeared on Cole's television show.


➦In 2012…Global audience-measurement giant Nielsen, the dominant source of TV ratings, agreed to buy Arbitron for about $1.26 billion as they expanded into radio measurement.


➦In 2013...longtime Chicago ‘superjock’ Larry Lujack, who early in his career had a stint at KJR Seattle, succumbed to esophageal cancer at age 73.

Larry Lujack
Lujack initially came to Chicago to work for WCFL-AM. He spent a few months there before being hired at WLS. While at WCFL, Lujack drew the air studio curtains during public visiting hours.

"Animal Stories" came about because WLS was still receiving farm magazines long after they went into Rock and Roll in 1960.

Lujack started reading some of them and began airing stories from them.

A perfectionist about his work, Lujack would review every word he said on the air after each broadcast by listening to a "skimmer" cassette tape.

First at WCFL-AM and later at WLS-AM, a clear-channel station that could be heard far beyond Chicago, Lujack — known on the air as Uncle Lar’ or Superjock — spent 20 years spinning records and spouting opinions.

He became famous for regular features including “Klunk Letter of the Day” and “Cheap and Trashy Showbiz Report.” His best-known feature, done in collaboration with his longtime on-air partner Tommy Edwards (“Li’l Snot-Nose Tommy,” Mr. Lujack fondly called him), was “Animal Stories.”

Growing directly from the farm reports Mr. Lujack had to give early in his career, the feature involved his reading comic news reports about animals — among them the tale of a chicken who lived on despite having parted company with his head days before — to an astonished Edwards.

Lujack’s style, which also included strategic pauses, audible paper-shuffling and grandiloquent references to himself in the third person, demonstrably shaped that of Rush Limbaugh, who in 1990 told The New York Times Magazine that Lujack was “the only person I ever copied.”

According to The NY Times, Larry Lee Blankenburg was born in 1940 in Quasqueton, Iowa, and reared in Caldwell, Idaho. At 18 he joined KCID-AM in Caldwell, adopting the surname of his idol, the Chicago Bears quarterback Johnny Lujack.

After working at stations in Idaho and Washington State, Lujack joined WCFL in 1967 and moved to WLS four months later. Except for a four-year stint back at WCFL, he remained with WLS for the next two decades.

In 1984 WLS gave Lujack a 12-year, $6 million contract, making him one of the country’s highest-paid radio personalities. (“I am not the least bit excited,” he was reported to have said.) But in 1987, amid declining ratings, the station’s corporate parent, Capital Cities-ABC, bought out his contract.

His honors include membership in the Illinois Broadcasters Association Hall of Fame (“It’s not Mount Rushmore,” he said on learning of his induction) and the National Radio Hall of Fame.


➦In 2017...ESPN announced the surprise resignation of network President John Skipper over substance-abuse issues.


🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Actor Cicely Tyson is 96. 
  • Katie Holmes is 42
    Actor Roger Mosley (“Magnum, P.I.”) is 82. 
  • Guitarist Keith Richards of The Rolling Stones is 77. 
  • Director Steven Spielberg is 74. 
  • Movie critic Leonard Maltin is 70. 
  • Guitarist Elliot Easton of The Cars is 67. 
  • Actor Ray Liotta is 66. 
  • Comedian Ron White is 64. 
  • Singer Angie Stone is 59. 
  • Actor Brad Pitt is 57. 
  • Wrestler-actor Stone Cold Steve Austin (“Chain of Command”) is 56. 
  • Actor Shawn Christian (“Days of Our Lives”) is 55. 
  • Actor Rachel Griffiths (“Brothers and Sisters,” ″Six Feet Under”) is 52. 
  • Singer Alejandro Sanz is 52. Country singer Cowboy Troy is 50. 
  • Rapper DMX is 50. 
  • DJ Lethal of Limp Bizkit is 48. 
  • Singer Sia is 45. 
  • Country singer Randy Houser is 44. 
  • Actor Josh Dallas (“Once Upon A Time”) is 42. 
  • Actor Katie Holmes (“Dawson’s Creek”) is 42. 
  • Singer Christina Aguilera is 40. 
  • Actor Ashley Benson (“Pretty Little Liars”) is 31. 
  • Actor Bridgit Mendler (“Wizards of Waverly Place”) is 28. 
  • Singer Billie Eilish is 18. 
  • Actor Isabella Crovetti (“Vampirina”) is 16.

Thursday, December 17, 2020

Is Music Streaming Stalling?

Music streaming services have continued to add U.S. subscribers this year, according to MIDiA Research, growing by 11 million paying users from January to September, to 117.9 million. But in a potentially troubling sign for the recorded music business, the number of total streams has remained the same, reports Billboard.

For the past four months and counting, audio music streams have averaged 17.5 billion a week. That’s up slightly from the early March pre-pandemic peak, before the lockdown cut music listening down by 13% to a year low of less than 15 billion streams, as consumers stopped commuting and obsessed over the news. Streaming gradually rebounded, increasing 15% by the end of June — but has plateaued since.

This could actually be good news for streaming services, which for the past two years have been pouring money into podcasts, which cost them less. Streaming companies don’t have to share as much revenue on podcasts — a growing number of which they own — as they do on streams of music, most of which they don’t. But for record labels, publishers, songwriters and artists, this may be the calm before the storm. In the short term, at least, the lack of growth in the number of streams won’t  impact the music industry’s aggregate streaming revenue — if subscribers are added and consumption stays flat, rights holders just make more per stream. But a move toward podcasts could cost rights holders leverage in licensing negotiations.

Perhaps more important, with some 55,000 new tracks being uploaded onto streaming services every day — up from the 40,000 reported in April 2019 — you have a dilemma: more songs (and more users) competing for a fixed number of streams.

A number of factors seem temporary. Label sources point to the previous year, where cyclical trends in the release schedule led to finite periods of flatness. The presidential election also appears to have cut into music time, given the sharp dip in streaming during election week itself. Thanksgiving has also historically seen a 2% to 3% dip in music streaming. (The U.K., by comparison, where neither occurred, saw streaming dip 5% when the pandemic hit but regained momentum in three weeks and has continued to edge upwards since.) Another obvious factor limiting music streaming time for now is the lack of commuting, with most offices still closed.

Other forces are putting permanent pressure on streaming volume, though. Gaming is competing for attention with music. Market research firm IDG Consulting reports increasing average gameplay hours per user across the board. Counter Strike Global Offensive play increased 40% since the pandemic started and Defense of the Ancients is up 38%. Roblox, which appeals to kids 9 and up, hit 120 million global monthly active users in June 2020, and IDG Consulting now puts that figure at about 160 million — a fifth of which are likely in the U.S. That’s a 33% increase in just the past five months.

Greensboro NC Radio: 2 Guys Named Chris Achieves Monster Ratings


With a monster 32 Share in Men 25-54 in a Top 50 market, 2 Guys Named Chris (2GNC) achieves the highest home-market share of any classic rock morning program. Known as a smart, funny morning show for intelligent rockers, 2GNC is the classic rock morning program that relates to the music heard throughout the rest of the day, combining humor, pop culture, and current events -- all with ongoing audience interaction.

Produced at Dick Broadcasting’s WKRR-FM Rock 92 in Greensboro, NC, and syndicated nationally through Global Media Services, the 2 Guys Named Chris team consists of Chris Kelly, Chris Demm, their partner Dave Aiken, and producer Biggie. Demm is a walking encyclopedia of music, and he engages listeners with informative insights and stories behind the songs… and the bands.

“2 Guys Named Chris is a breath of fresh air. We couldn’t be happier about the ratings and revenue success that the show has brought to WKRR-FM,” said Dick Harlow, Chief Operating Officer of Dick Broadcasting Company. “Knowledge about the music and the bands is essential to rock music fans, and it’s part of the fabric of the 2 Guys Named Chris program. It’s that extra edge that that puts 2 Guys Names Chris ahead of any other morning program.”

Tony Garcia, President of Global Media Services which syndicates 2 Guys Named Chris, observed, “Classic rock audiences don’t want morning show dribble. 2 Guys Named Chris has been engaging audiences with relatable conversation and topics from the inane to the insightful, and always fun. It’s a perfect fit for the target demo.”

2 Guys Named Chris has received numerous awards and accolades, including a 2015 NAB Marconi Award and North Carolina Broadcasters’ 2016 Morning Show of the Year Award.

The top-rated show airs M-F 6A-10A Eastern Time and is available on a market-exclusive basis. Global Media Services is the exclusive syndication representative for the show. For more information, stations may contact Tony Garcia at 303-916-6333 and garciatony60@gmail.com.

The AM Rundown: Biden, Pence To Get Jabbed

AP Photo


Nursing home residents in Florida started getting vaccinated for the coronavirus on Wednesday, one day after similar residents in West Virginia began to get the vaccine, with thousands more to take place in the coming days and with other states to soon follow. Nursing homes have been hard hit by the virus. Meanwhile, President-elect Joe Biden and Vice President Mike Pence will publicly receive the vaccine soon, with AP citing transition officials that Biden will get it as early as next week, and the White House saying Pence and his wife, Karen, will get it publicly on Friday.

That news came as the U.S. had a staggering 3,400 deaths yesterday from Covid-19, according to The COVID Tracking Project, a new record, and more than 113,000 hospitalized, also a record. California is currently particularly struggling with new cases and strained hospitals, and is distributing 5,000 body bags, mostly in the Los Angeles and San Diego areas, and has 60 refrigerated trailers ready to serve as makeshift morgues.

➤CONGRESS CLOSE TO CORONAVIRUS RELIEF BILL DEAL: Congressional negotiators are finally getting close to agreement on a $900 billion coronavirus relief bill that would give a $600 stimulus payment to most Americans, include $300 per week in unemployment assistance, and give more help to businesses affected by the pandemic, including a second round of Paycheck Protection Plan payments. It would be the first significant legislation in response to the pandemic since the CARES Act in March. Democrats have been calling for months for further aid, while Republicans have been more reluctant. 


➤SENATE HEARING PERPETUATES BASELESS VOTER FRAUD CLAIMS: Two days after Joe Biden was officially confirmed as the president-elect by the electoral college and more than six weeks after the presidential election, Senate Republicans held a hearing Wednesday that perpetuated and elevated baseless claims of voter fraud that have been relentlessly pushed by President Trump, who has refused to concede that he lost. The Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing was held over Democratic objections, and there were back-and-forth heated exchanges between members of the two parties. Republican committee chairman Senator Ron Johnson of Wisconsin said his goal was to examine the election, but he repeated baseless voter fraud claims without any evidence that have been made by Trump's legal team. Christopher Krebs, the former head of the U.S. Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency who oversaw election security, testified at Democrats' request. Krebs, who was fired by Trump after he said publicly that the election had been secure, said that the ongoing attempts to undermine confidence in the electoral process were harmful, stating, "We have to stop this. It’s undermining confidence in democracy."


➤MORE THAN 330 BOYS KIDNAPPED BY EXTREMISTS STILL BEING HELD IN NIGERIA: Parents of more than 330 boys who were kidnapped in Nigeria last week by extremists are still waiting for news about their sons, who were taken from a government boys' school. A small number of them, 17, have been rescued, and one boy was found roaming in the forest. Boko Haram jihadist rebels have claimed responsibility for the kidnapping, which they carried out because they believe Western education is un-Islamic. There was a similar kidnapping of a large group of girls from a government boarding school in Nigeria in 2014.

➤10 STATES SUE GOOGLE, CLAIMING 'ANTI-COMPETITIVE CONDUCT' IN ONLINE ADVERTISING: Ten states filed a federal lawsuit against Google yesterday (December 16th), accusing the search giant of, quote, "anti-competitive conduct" in online advertising that included a deal with rival Facebook to manipulate sales. The suit charges that Google is using monopoly power to control pricing of online ads, fix the market in its favor, and eliminate competition. Google called the accusations "meritless." The 10 states, which all have Republican attorneys general, are: Texas, Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kentucky, Mississippi, Missouri, North Dakota, South Dakota and Utah.

➤CHRISTIE REGRETS NOT WEARING MASK: Republican former New Jersey Governor Chris Christie says in a new national TV ad that he regrets not wearing a mask while at the White House earlier this year, which led to him landing in the hospital for a week in October with the coronavirus. Before contracting the virus, Christie attended an event introducing then-Supreme Court nominee Amy Coney Barrett, at which it's believed several others contracted the virus, and also did debate prep with President Trump. 

CNN reported that the ad is being paid for by the family foundation of philanthropist Ray Chambers, a former New Jersey financier who's the ambassador for global strategy for the World Health Organization.

➤TOM CRUISE SCREAMS AT CREW FOR DROPPING COVID GUIDELINES: Tom Cruise was recorded dressing down crew members who he felt were abandoning COVID guidelines on the set of Mission: Impossible 7. In a two-minute recording released first by The Sun, the 58-year-old yelled at the production team for neglecting social distancing guidelines.


He said: "No apologies. You can tell it to the people who are losing their f------ homes because our industry is shut down. It’s not going to put food on their table or pay for their college education. That’s what I sleep with every night — the future of this f-----g industry! So I’m sorry, I'm beyond your apologies."

Cruise added: "I have told you, and now I want it, and if you don’t do it, you’re out. We are not shutting this f------ movie down! Is it understood? ... Am I clear? Do you understand what I want? Do you understand the responsibility that you have? Because I will deal with your reason, and if you can’t be reasonable and I can’t deal with your logic, you’re fired. That’s it. That is it. I trust you guys to be here."

On Twitter, Cruise got support. Wrote one: “I wish MORE people in charge would react like this to people who violate protocols or not wearing masks. If only more people saw the bigger picture that Tom is highlighting here.”






➤IKEA SELLING TINY HOMES DURING COVID-19 PANDEMIC AS MORE AMERICANS LEAVE CITIES: Swedish furniture retailer Ikea has teamed up with tiny home maker Escape and VOX Creative to design, build, and furnish a tiny custom tiny homes for anyone who aspires to downsize in style. The customized trailers are on sale via manufacturer Escape, and include eco-friendly features like solar panels, composting toilets, and an on-demand heated water supply. Inside, inhabitants will have a queen-size bed, fold-flat couch, and storage. Home designers can choose to outfit their space with their own furniture, or Ikea furniture. Tiny home prices begin at $47,550.



⚾MLB SAYS RECLASSIFYING NEGRO LEAGUES AS A MAJOR LEAGUE: Major League Baseball announced Wednesday that it's reclassifying the Negro Leagues as a major league, meaning the statistics and records of Negro League greats like Josh Gibson, Satchel Paige and others are set to join MLB's books. The announcement came on the centennial of the Negro Leagues founding, with MLB saying it was, quote, "correcting a longtime oversight in the game’s history." The Negro Leagues consisted of seven leagues, and MLB will include records from those leagues between 1920 and 1948. The Negro Leagues began to break up one year after Jackie Robinson broke baseball's color line when he was signed by the Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. MLB will work with the Elias Sports Bureau to review Negro Leagues stats and records and figure out how to incorporate them into MLB's history. Although there was no standard method of record keeping for the Negro Leagues, there are enough box scores to put together some verifiable statistics.

➤SUPREME COURT TO HEAR CASE ON NCAA ATHLETE COMPENSATION: The U.S. Supreme Court agreed yesterday to hear an antitrust case that the NCAA contends has blurred, quote, "the line between student-athletes and professionals" by removing caps on compensation that major college football and basketball players can receive. An appeals court ruling upheld a lower court in barring the NCAA from capping education-related compensation and benefits for student-athletes in Division I football and basketball programs. The last time the Supreme Court heard an NCAA case was in 1984.

🏈NFL DELAYS DECISION ON 17-GAME SEASON: NFL owners yesterday delayed a decision on whether to have a 17-game regular season in 2021. During a teleconference call that replaced the usual December gathering of owners due to the pandemic, they decided to delay any move on the expanded season until early next year. The NFL and the players’ union agreed earlier this year to add one regular-season game to the schedule, but not before next season.

🎾AUSTRALIAN OPEN BEING PUSHED BACK: The Australian Open is being pushed back three weeks early next year to begin on February 8th, the delayed schedule revealed as part of the 2021 tennis calendar released by the men's professional tour with changes due to the pandemic. The ATP said that before the tournament in Melbourne, there will be a14-day quarantine period for players and their coaches or other support staff. The ATP said the season will start with a tournament beginning in the first week of January in Delray Beach, Florida.

➤RETIRED MLB PLAYER VIZQUEL DENIES DOMESTIC ABUSE ACCUSATIONS BY WIFE: Retired longtime MLB shortstop Omar Vizquel is denying domestic abuse allegations made by his wife in a story published in The Athletic yesterday. Blanca Vizquel claimed her husband first assaulted her in 2011, three years before they got married, and then again in 2016. The 36-year-old described another angry dispute with him last August, which she said led her to file for divorce. Omar said in a statement that he'd cheated on Blanca and apologized, but the 53-year-old stated, "Let me be clear and unequivocal. I have never hit or been violent towards my wife, Blanca. Any accusation to the contrary is false." The Athletic said Vizquel was taken into police custody in 2016 after an incident in which Blanca said Omar pushed her over, injuring her shin and breaking several finger nails. She later asked prosecutors to drop the charges, but told The Athletic she only did so because Omar threatened her financially. Blanca also charged that Omar strangled her in the 2011 incident.

D-C Radio WHUR Launches 'Quiet Storm' Station



Known as the home of the “Original Quiet Storm,” WHUR 96.3 FM is rolling out a new sister station with the iconic format that can now be heard morning, noon, and night. Formally WHUR-World 96.3HD2 is now “The Quiet Storm Station.”

The Quiet Storm Station gives listeners the ability to hear their favorite slow jams around-the-clock seven days a week. Programmed by WHUR Music and Assistant Program Director Traci LaTrelle, the music on The Quiet Storm Station holds true to the flavor originated on WHUR back in 1976 by the late Melvin Lindsey.

“You will hear classic hits like ‘Old Friend’ by Phyllis Hyman to new favorites from Kem. It’s the perfect blend of music to help you unwind or to set the right romantic mood,” said LaTrelle. Occasionally, you will even hear Lindsey’s satin voice between songs.

“We are deeply humbled and very excited over the opportunity for Washingtonians and listeners beyond the DMV to hear the voice and music of Melvin once again. The launch of this station ensures that Melvin’s legacy will live on,” said the Lindsey family.

The Quiet Storm Station comes as heritage station 96.3 WHUR prepares to celebrate its 50th Anniversary December 10, 2021. “What better way to kick-off the road to our Golden Anniversary than to have in place a new station with the Quiet Storm format that helped to put 96.3 WHUR on the map,” said WHUR General Manager Sean Plater.

As a bonus, the station will also keep listeners informed and engaged weeknights from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. with the award-winning news/talk “Daily Drum Show,” hosted by veteran broadcaster Harold Fisher. Often copied by urban stations around the globe, the true sound of the Quiet Storm can also still be heard at its original home 96.3 WHUR with John Monds from 7:30 p.m. to midnight. The Quiet Storm Station is available now at 96.3HD2, TheQuietStormStation.com, and on the Quiet Storm Station mobile app.

NYC Radio: WCBS-FM To Again Air 'Holiday Spectacular'



Entercom announces WCBS-FM 101.1 morning show “Scott Shannon in the Morning with Patty Steele” will host its annual “Big Show Holiday Spectacular” on December 18 from 6:00 a.m. to 10:00 a.m. ET.

The annual broadcast, which benefits Blythedale Children’s Hospital, will feature virtual musical performances by Kelly Clarkson, Rob Thomas of Matchbox Twenty, Johnny Rzeznik of the Goo Goo Dolls, Billy Joel's sax man Mark Rivera and Holiday Express. Throughout the broadcast, the morning show will encourage listeners to donate via phone bank or by texting BCHKIDS to 76278.

“Our calendars are marked every year for this special broadcast, which gives us to opportunity to showcase the selfless generosity of the WCBS-FM listeners,” said Scott Shannon, morning show host, WCBS-FM 101.1. “We look forward to another heartwarming day of spreading holiday cheer with our friends at Blythedale.”



Blythedale Children’s Hospital, New York State’s only independent, specialty children’s hospital, is dedicated to improving the health and quality of life of children with complex medical illnesses and conditions. Over the years, Scott Shannon has been a longtime supporter both professionally and personally of Blythedale Children’s Hospital’s mission and has helped raise more than $4 million.

Retail Sales See Sharp Drop



U.S. retail sales, a measure of purchases at stores, restaurants and online, dropped a seasonally adjusted 1.1% in November from the prior month, the Commerce Department said Wednesday. 

The Wall Street Journal reports October sales were revised to a decline of 0.1% from an earlier estimate of a 0.3% increase. Sales were up by 4.1% in November when compared with the same month a year ago.

Restaurants, department stores and vehicle dealerships all reported sharp sales declines in November, with clothing and furniture purchases falling. Purchases of groceries and building materials increased, along with online sales.

The November and October drops marked the end of several months of growth in retail spending after sharp declines earlier this year when the coronavirus pandemic triggered widespread business closures.

“Anywhere there’s crowds people stayed away from,” said Joshua Shapiro, chief U.S. economist at consulting firm Maria Fiorini Ramirez Inc. “It underscores the difficulty here till the vaccine is widely distributed,” he said.

The retail sales report and other readings on the U.S. economy suggest the recovery is slowing after a burst of growth over the summer.

Hiring growth eased in November while worker filings for unemployment benefits recently increased. Surveys of factories and service-industry companies released on Wednesday separately showed U.S. output grew at a solid pace in early December, but at the weakest pace in about three months.

Online Sales Expected To See Continued Growth



Online retail sales are expected to reach new heights in 2020, as the global coronavirus pandemic has forced many homebound consumers to shop online, reports The Wall Street Journal.

E-commerce spending is expected to grow by low-double-digit percentages through the next six years even after the end of social distancing measures forced by the pandemic, according to a new forecast from media-buying giant GroupM, part of WPP PLC.

Global retail e-commerce will amount to $3.9 trillion in 2020, or 17% of global retail sales, according to GroupM’s report. The figures exclude food and delivery services to ensure consistency across markets, GroupM said.

GroupM anticipates that sum will rise to $7 trillion by 2024, or 25% of retail sales, and reach $10 trillion globally by 2027.

Brands selling more products online are spending a greater portion of their budgets on digital marketing and placing more emphasis on advertising that directly drives sales, said Christian Juhl, global chief executive of GroupM. The shift toward e-commerce will also change the way ad agencies operate, he said.


Online shopping habits are expected to stick.

“After a year of sitting at home, a lot of our behaviors are going to be permanently oriented toward these direct- and digital-commerce behaviors,” said Jay Pattisall, a principal analyst at research company Forrester Research Inc., referring to an uptick in traditional e-commerce and consumer offerings like curbside pickup.

World's Largest Ad Company Expects Sales Rebound



WPP, the world’s biggest advertising company, expects to return to its 2019 level of net sales by 2022 after the pandemic accelerated its strategy switch to providing more digital services for clients, reports Reuters.

The British group set out its medium-term targets in a trading update that revealed its key measurement of underlying net sales had fallen by 6.7% in the two months to November, an improvement on the 7.6% drop in the quarter to end September.

For the year, it sees a drop of 8.4%.

The owner of the Ogilvy, Grey and GroupM agencies was hit earlier this year when clients slashed spending to conserve cash during the pandemic, but it has since performed strongly in winning new work to help businesses build out their e-commerce operations.

A return to the 2019 level of total net sales would imply a 2021 underlying growth rate of 4.7% and 4.5% in 2022, slightly ahead of market expectations.

The group, which plans to make targeted acquisitions and invest further in technology, will also resume its share buyback in 2021 and intends to grow its dividend with a pay-out ratio around 40% of headline earnings per share.

“The events of 2020 have only accelerated the structural changes in our industry, from the expansion of digital channels to growing demand for ecommerce solutions,” Chief Executive Mark Read said.

10 States Accuse Google of Monopoly in Online Ads



Ten state attorneys general on Wednesday accused Google of illegally abusing its monopoly over the technology that delivers ads online, adding to the company’s legal troubles with a case that strikes at the heart of its business, according to The NY Times.

The state prosecutors said that Google overcharged publishers for the ads it showed across the web and edged out rivals who tried to challenge the company’s dominance. They also said that Google had reached an agreement with Facebook to limit the social network’s own efforts to compete with Google for ad dollars. Google said the suit was “baseless” and that it would fight the case.

The complaint, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, adds to the fierce bipartisan backlash against one of the country’s biggest tech companies. Regulators in the United States and Europe have focused on the outsize role Amazon, Apple, Facebook and Google play in the modern economy, shaping everything from how we shop to what information and entertainment we see.

In October, the Justice Department and 11 states said Google had illegally maintained a monopoly over online search engines and the ads that appear in users’ results. An additional case against Google, brought by a separate set of states, is expected soon. Last week, the Federal Trade Commission and more than 40 states accused Facebook of illegally crushing competition by acquiring younger rivals, and argued that the company should be broken up. Apple and Amazon are both under federal antitrust investigations, too.

The lawsuit filed on Wednesday is the first by regulators in the United States to focus on the tools that connect buyers of advertising space with publishers who sell it. Advertisements generate a vast majority of the company’s profits. The Justice Department has its own antitrust inquiry into advertising technology, said a person with knowledge of the investigation.

The prosecutors asked for monetary penalties and structural changes at the company, but they did not add specifics.

Facebook Slams Apple


Facebook on Wednesday ran newspaper ads, published a new website and ran blog posts outlining its arguments opposing Apple over a privacy change that it claims “threatens the personalized ads that millions of small businesses rely on to find and reach customers.” 

CNBC reports Facebook, in its blog post, argued that Apple’s new tracking rules are “about profit, not privacy,” and said it believes Apple is behaving anticompetitively by using control of the App Store in a way that benefits its bottom line at the expense of developers and small businesses.

The company is running print and digital ads in The Wall Street Journal, New York Times and Washington Post that say: “We’re standing up to Apple for small businesses everywhere.” It also has a new website on an upcoming change to iOS 14 that affects how apps can use ad-tracking tools with Apple’s ad identifier, the IDFA.

“Without personalized ads, Facebook data shows that the average small business advertiser stands to see a cut of over 60% in their sales for every dollar they spend,” Facebook’s print ad reads. “While limiting how personalized ads can be used does impact larger companies like us, these changes will be devastating to small businesses, adding to the many challenges they face right now.”

Fox Sports Poaches Tom Rinaldi From ESPN



Tom Rinaldi, one of ESPN’s top on-air reporters, is leaving for Fox, where he is expected to be featured across all of its major events from the Super Bowl to the World Series to the World Cup and college football, according to The NY Post citing sources.

Tom Rinaldi
At ESPN, Rinaldi was probably best known for the poignant features he would do for “College GameDay” and on the sidelines for the national championship. He has worked on most of the major sports for the network with a deep association with golf.

In 2010, Rinaldi conducted the first interview with Tiger Woods after his car accident and subsequent scandal. Rinaldi has also become well known for his touching features, regardless of sport; those have led to him winning three Regional Emmy Awards, three Associated Press Awards and a USA Today Feature-of-the-Year Award.

Rinaldi joined ESPN in 2002 after being a reporter at CNN/SI. ESPN recently had layoffs in which it eliminated 500 positions and let go of 300 employees. Rindaldi was a favorite there, but left at his own discretion.

Over the past year, Fox has been swiping top ESPN on-air people. Among them, Fox has signed Adam Amin, Jonathan Vilma and Emmanuel Acho.