It must be disappointing for members of the bands Kansas, Chicago, and Boston to find out that they ultimately failed to represent their namesakes to the fullest extent possible, according to Fast Company.
As a new map of the United States reveals, however, none of these bands were the top-selling musical artists in Kansas, Illinois, or Massachussetts. (That would be Martina McBride, R. Kelly, and New Kids On The Block.)
Redditor "Ooosh-E" recently took some data from the RIAA’s list of the 250 top-selling musicians in the United States and used it to label each state according to the most unit-moving bands to hail from them. While nobody will flinch upon finding out that Prince dominates Minnesota and Billy Joel is the king of New York, there are many surprises to be found.
Since 2010: Now 68.2M+ Page Views, Edited by Tom Benson, News Tips, Feedback: pd1204@gmail.com
Monday, February 24, 2014
Baby Mama Loses Settlement After Stern Radio Interview
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| Oksana Grigorieva |
It all has to do with an interview she did in October with Howard Stern. Oksana -- who promised in her settlement agreement with Mel she would say nothing about him publicly -- blabbed about the actor.
In the Stern Interview:
- Howard sympathizes about her problems with Mel, telling her she has to go forward in life. She refers to her "painful and dark" experience and says now she wants to help others.
- Howard asks if Mel wined and dined her. She says it's too painful to even talk about.
- Howard, who referenced portions of Mel's rants during the interview, told her a woman shouldn't be treated that way, especially the mother of your child. She said, "Thank you."
Pretty amazing, since Mel initially offered her $15M but she rejected it.
Jimmy Fallon Ratings Start Strong
Jimmy Fallon capped off a strong first week at the Tonight Show desk on Friday night, averaging 8.8 million viewers -- despite a shrinking audience for NBC's Sochi Olympics coverage.
With fall five days of Fallon's first week as the Tonight host now accounted for, the series pulled a nightly average of 8.5 million viewers, according to THR.
That's more than double the prior season-to-date average and makes it the most-watched week since the Cheers send-off drove NBC to highs in 1993.
Among adults 18-49, Fallon averaged a 2.8 rating through Friday. With adults under 50, Tonight earned its best week since 2005.
Fallon, Timberlake Present 'History Of Rap' Vol 5.
Jimmy Fallon closed out the first week of his new gig hosting The Tonight Show with a new installment of one of his most beloved Late Night franchises: the History of Rap.
With Justin Timberlake at his side, Fallon launched Volume 5 with LL Cool J's "I'm Bad," and breezed through hits by the Beastie Boys, Tone Loc, DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince, Salt-N-Pepa, Notorious B.I.G., Outkast, Kris Kross, Drake and Kendrick Lamar, among others, before closing with a dash out into the audience for Run DMC's "Walk This Way."
With Justin Timberlake at his side, Fallon launched Volume 5 with LL Cool J's "I'm Bad," and breezed through hits by the Beastie Boys, Tone Loc, DJ Jazzy Jeff and the Fresh Prince, Salt-N-Pepa, Notorious B.I.G., Outkast, Kris Kross, Drake and Kendrick Lamar, among others, before closing with a dash out into the audience for Run DMC's "Walk This Way."
Report: Bieber To Reject Plea Deal
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| Bieber mugshot |
The 19-year-old, who was arrested in January, is facing charges in Miami of resisting officers and driving under the influence.
The State Attorney was alleged ready to drop both charges if Bieber agreed to undergo random testing for substance use and commit 40 hours of community service, but sources say the singer will reject the offer in a sensational turn of events.
Bieber is expected to decline the prosecutor's offer because he doesn't want to be under the constant threat of probation.
As part of the deal, prosecutors also asked that Bieber also attend an alcohol education course as well as a victim impact panel, where he will hear stories from the family and friends of DUI victims.
He would also be required to have an ignition interlock device installed in his vehicle for three months.
Meanwhile, Bieber is reportedly fighting with Florida police over a video that shows him peeing in a jail cell after his arrest for DUI last month.
Miami police have already released one video of the pop star's arrest, showing the 19-year-old getting a pat down at the station.
But Bieber is afraid of a more embarrassing video which shows him urinating and his lawyers are currently asking the court to block the video from being released because it shows his 'private parts'.
According to his lawyers, the video shows Beiber in 'various states of undress which show personal parts'.
Read More Now
Justin Bieber Tweets About "Broken"
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| Justin Bieber |
"Broken," which features L.A. rapper Blake Kelly, marks Bieber's first song since his January arrest in Miami Beach on drunk driving charges. The song strikes a defiant note, lashing out against unnamed tormentors with the opening line, "I guess they want a reaction/but I ain't gonna give it to them," and in the track's refrain, "I cannot be broken/like I know you were hopin'."
Checkout some new exclusive music on http://t.co/eJTTJ93KtD comes out in 1 minute http://t.co/GoXCm4eKbP
— Justin Bieber (@justinbieber) February 22, 2014
In addition to the Miami DUI (the trial for which is set for March 3rd), the singer may also be facing felony vandalism charges for allegedly egging his neighbor's house, and Bieber's friend Lil Za was arrested last month on drug possession charges after police searched Bieber's home for surveillance footage. The singer's private plane was also detained earlier this month when he tried to reenter the U.S. from Canada because customs officials suspected there was marijuana onboard. (No drugs were found and no charges filed.)
NIMBY: Buckhead Wants To Be Bieber Free
The Buckhead section of Atlanta does not want Justin Bieber as a neighbor.
According to ajc.com, the pop star has been in Atlanta, which he calls his second home, for several weeks now working on a new recording project. He’s popped up at an east Cobb County ice rink, an area Zaxby’s, the Phipps Plaza movie theater, partying with other artists including Jermaine Dupri, Diddy and Rick Ross and in the studio with artist T.I.
“Good to be back,” he posted soon after his arrival. “Focused on building up positive energy.”
But once word spread that the Biebs might like a Buckhead address, a “Protest Justin Bieber Moving to Buckhead” Facebook page popped up like a spring crocus.
The page, started the other day by the Buckhead Neighborhood Coalition, has attracted hundreds of supporters.
Read More Now
According to ajc.com, the pop star has been in Atlanta, which he calls his second home, for several weeks now working on a new recording project. He’s popped up at an east Cobb County ice rink, an area Zaxby’s, the Phipps Plaza movie theater, partying with other artists including Jermaine Dupri, Diddy and Rick Ross and in the studio with artist T.I.
“Good to be back,” he posted soon after his arrival. “Focused on building up positive energy.”
But once word spread that the Biebs might like a Buckhead address, a “Protest Justin Bieber Moving to Buckhead” Facebook page popped up like a spring crocus.
The page, started the other day by the Buckhead Neighborhood Coalition, has attracted hundreds of supporters.
Read More Now
Lyricist Gail Collins Dead, Murdered Felix Pappalardi
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| Pappalardi, Collins circa 1969 |
Collins, 72, had been undergoing experimental cancer treatments in Ajijic, an expat resort town south of Guadalajara.
Collins became an intriguing figure in New York’s 1960s music scene as a result of her relationship with Bronx-born bassist/producer Pappalardi of Mountain, the New York band fronted by Leslie West.
She wrote the trippy lyrics that Eric Clapton sang in “Strange Brew” for Cream’s “Disraeli Gears,” which Pappalardi produced. And she became a creative force in Mountain, writing lyrics and painting album cover art.
On April 17, 1983, police found Pappalardi dead in bed at their Waterside Plaza apartment in Manhattan, shot through the neck with Collins’ Derringer.
Convicted of criminally negligent homicide, Collins spent two years in prison and disappeared after her 1985 parole.
Read More Now
Cumulus Announces Maternity Leave Policy
The policy takes effect immediately and is available to all full-time, non-commission employees with at least one year of service.
"Cumulus continues to grow and innovate thanks to the dedication of our colleagues across the country. We are committed to providing benefits that recognize employees' health and family needs, and providing fully-paid leave to new mothers after they give birth is the right thing to do," said Lew Dickey, chairman and CEO of Cumulus.
Employees are being notified of this new benefit today in an updated employee handbook.
February 24 In Radio history
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| Franklin Rutherford |
WBBR's programming schedule included
programs in several languages, including Yiddish and Arabic.
Judge Rutherford later expanded the
radio operations into ownership of at least 7 stations in the United
States and Canada, including outlets in the Chicago, Toronto, and
Oakland areas.
On August 5, 1928, Rutherford broadcast
on a chain of 96 stations, the largest radio network organized till
that time, according to New York Radio History. But, Rutherford's attacks on other
religions led many stations to drop his programs, sometimes cutting
him off before he was finished.
WBBR started off on a frequency of 1230
AM in 1924, then moved to 1100 later that year. In 1925, the station
moved to 720 AM, unauthorized. In 1927, WBBR moved again to 1170, and
in 1928 to 1300 - in both instances, sharing time with other
stations.
In 1941, WBBR's license was transferred
to the Watchtower Bible And Tract Society, the religion's publishing
arm, and in March of that year, WBBR (and its share-time partners)
moved to 1330 AM. In 1946, power was
increased to 5000 watts.
In 1957 the Watchtower Bible And Tract
Society sold its station to H. Scott Killgore's Tele-Broadcasters Of
New York Inc. for $133,000. Call letters were changed to WPOW on
May 1, 1957, the religious talks and placid string and organ music
disappeared, and the new station embarked on a series of changes that
would repeatedly make it something of a pioneer in New York area
radio.
On the morning of September 5, 1957,
WPOW became the first New York station to play a form of rock music
during most of its daily schedule.
The remainder of WPOW's schedule was
filled with easy-listening music, paid religious programs including
"Glad Tidings Tabernacle" and "The Hebrew Christian
Hour".
Under its share-time arrangements, WPOW
often broadcast at unusual times, occasionally signing on at 3a and
then leaving the air while the morning drive-time audience was at its
peak.
In February 1958, the station moved to
foreign-language programming, mostly Spanish but also including some
Polish, French, Armenian and Byelorussian.
In July 1959, Killgore sold WPOW for
$250,000 to John M. Camp, an Illinois-based advertising agent and
broker of religious broadcast time. In 1973, Camp purchased share-time
station WHAZ in Troy NY and starting operating it as a daytimer,
opening up Monday nights for WPOW.
In 1979, WPOW's other share-time
station on 1330 AM, WEVD, was sold to Salem Media, and became WNYM. In the early 1980's, Salem bought out
WPOW for $4 million, most of that sum simply for the Staten Island
real estate.
On December 31, 1984, WPOW signed off
without ceremony, and the last time-sharing arrangement in New York
AM radio came to an end.
Today, the WBBR call letters are being
used by Bloomberg on 1130 AM. The WPOW calls are being used by
Beasley Broadcasting for one of its FM's in Miami. And WPOW's 1330 AM frequency in NYC is occupied by religious WWRV.
In 1987...Radio personality Larry King was stricken with a heart attack.
In 1987...Jim Connors, Legendary Radio personality died at age 47.
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| Jim Connors |
Connors also earned gold with Chuck Berry for "My Ding-a-ling," Wayne Newton for "Daddy Don't You Walk So Fast," Joe Simon for "Power of Love," and Mouth & MacNeal for "How Do You Do," along with many others, for exposing the songs to the mainstream audience.
Connors was well known amongst radio programmers of the 1960s and 1970s for his programming and promotional abilities along with his Think Sheet. The 'Think Sheet' was a monthly publication he wrote and distributed to fellow radio programmers making recommendations on airplay for new artists, along with jock jokes and trend analysis based on market research.
WJET Erie, Pennsylvania was his first official radio job outside of duties performed in the U.S. Air Force. At WJET, he held the title of Production Director for WJET Radio & WJET Television channel 24. Initially, he was the midday host for WJET and was rated #1 in the market ahead of the morning drive team. It wasn't long before JC was promoted to the AM drive shift.
After a long run at WJET, Connors was hired at WMEX in Boston, Massachusetts, where he was the Music Director and AM drive host. His daily program was consistently rated #1 in the New England marketplace in the early 1970s.
After having great success in Boston, and becoming nationally renowned by many record executives for his programming and promotional abilities, JC moved towards Erie, Pennsylvania to be closer to his children from his first marriage. The impact of Chapin's song "W*O*L*D" hit his ex-wife hard, as the local 'Jocks' in Erie would often take their shots at him and his life on air.
Soon he found an opening at WYSL in Buffalo, New York, where he could be closer to his children while working through some family concerns. Connors was the AM Drive host in Buffalo, NY. JC had great success in Western New York, and on WYSL he frequently featured many of the well-known performers with whom he had connections.
While in Buffalo, JC met his second wife, and the couple would find out they were pregnant with their first of two children shortly before moving to Rochester, New York for a job at WROC as Operations Manager & AM Drive Host.
After the passing of his father, JC wanted to be back in New England with the rest of his family. He was offered a position with WCIB in Falmouth, Massachusetts and Cape Cod, Massachusetts where he was appointed Vice President of Operations and AM Drive Host, with multiple levels of on-air production responsibility.
His career in the northeastern United States soon came to an end, as he packed up and headed for another new beginning, on the Gulf Coast of Florida. While living in the Bay Area of Tampa, Florida JC frequently recorded commercials and appeared in numerous local spots.
His time in Florida was brief. On February 24, 1987, on a trip returning to Rhode Island, JC was killed in a car crash on I-95 in Greensville County, Virginia.
In 1991…Radio and television newsman/Vice President of ABC during the 1950s/TV quiz show host (What's My Line?, Who Said That?) John Daly died of cardiac arrest at 77.
In 2000...First Mike & Mike in the Morning on ESPN Radio
In 2004..."Bubba The Love Sponge" was fired by Clear Channel Communications/Tampa.
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| Bubba Clem |
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) issued a Notice of Apparent Liability of $755,000 against four stations owned by Clear Channel Communications (including its flagship station, WXTB) on January 27, 2004 for objectionable segments of "Bubba the Love Sponge" . The fine consisted of the maximum of $27,500 for each of 26 airings of a segment plus $40,000 for record-keeping violations. The segments included graphic discussions about sex and drugs and according to the FCC were "designed to pander to, titillate and shock listeners". One segment featured the cartoon characters Alvin and the Chipmunks, George Jetson and Scooby-Doo discussing sexual activities.
Today, Bubba's morning show airs on Cox Media's WHPT 102.5 FM The Bone and on radioioio.com.
February 23 In Radio History
In 1927...the Federal Radio Commission was created by President Calvin Coolidge. The FRC began assigning frequencies, hours of operation and power allocations for America's radio stations. In 1934 the name of the regulating agency was changed to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC)
In 1970...Jay Reynolds does first show at WABC 770 AM NYC. Jay arrived at WABC after generating huge ratings as the afternoon drive time personality on WIFE-AM, the market leader at that time in Indianapolis. Jay did the all-night show for six years - not only the longest consecutive tenure during the station's 21 and a half years with a music format, but nine months longer than the combined time that Charlie Greer spent on the all-night show during his two stints. However, Jay arrived at WABC from Indiana and returned to the Hooiser State after his last show at WABC he worked at stations there over the next 20 years. He died in March, 1996
In 1998...the Howard Stern Radio program debuted on WAVF-FM in Charleston, South Carolina.
In 2010...A week after EMI Records announced that the iconic Abbey Road Studios was for sale, the British culture ministry stepped in to declare the recording facility a historic site. The building "acts as a modern day monument to the history of recorded sound and music," English Heritage chief executive Simon Thurley said in a statement.
With its new designation, changes can still be made to the villa's interior, but the government said "care must be taken to ensure that any alterations with respect to its character and interest are fully considered."
In 2010...Businessman (Drake-Chenault Enterprises) Gene Chenault, co-founder with disc jockey Bill Drake of a radio syndication company that specialized in automation on FM radio stations, died of non-Hodgkins lymphoma at age 90.
In 1970...Jay Reynolds does first show at WABC 770 AM NYC. Jay arrived at WABC after generating huge ratings as the afternoon drive time personality on WIFE-AM, the market leader at that time in Indianapolis. Jay did the all-night show for six years - not only the longest consecutive tenure during the station's 21 and a half years with a music format, but nine months longer than the combined time that Charlie Greer spent on the all-night show during his two stints. However, Jay arrived at WABC from Indiana and returned to the Hooiser State after his last show at WABC he worked at stations there over the next 20 years. He died in March, 1996
In 1998...the Howard Stern Radio program debuted on WAVF-FM in Charleston, South Carolina.
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| Abbey Road Studios 2005 |
With its new designation, changes can still be made to the villa's interior, but the government said "care must be taken to ensure that any alterations with respect to its character and interest are fully considered."
In 2010...Businessman (Drake-Chenault Enterprises) Gene Chenault, co-founder with disc jockey Bill Drake of a radio syndication company that specialized in automation on FM radio stations, died of non-Hodgkins lymphoma at age 90.
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