Monday, November 9, 2015

Houston Radio: Mix 96.5 FM To Host Not-So-Silent Holiday Concert

Twas the week before Christmas and Houston was set, to deck the halls, drink egg nog and look out for Santa’s sled. Mix 96.5 has announce the lineup for Not So Silent Night, December 16th, 2015 at Revention Music Center.

KHMX Mix 96.5 FM will celebrate the holiday season with the most anticipated holiday concert in Houston with the biggest selling acts in American music!

Confirmed to take the stage; Grammy Award winning Matchbox Twenty artist Rob Thomas, American Rock Band and Grammy nominated artist Fall Out Boy, British singer-songwriter Jamie Lawson, Sin City Rockers Offset Season and a surprise guest performance. Come one, come all, this show will be live and it’s all thanks to your friends at Mix 96.5.

"It’s really cool to be part of Mix 96.5’s Not So Silent Night with such an incredible lineup of talent,” said Rob Thomas. “I’m always excited to play for the awesome fans in Houston"

“How cool is this?” said Jamie Lawson, “I was here in September opening for Ed Sheeran and to be invited back to perform again is a dream come true, especially with superstars like Rob Thomas and Fall Out Boy.”

The show will sell out fast. Fans of these artists will be able to purchase tickets for Not So Silent Night go on Friday, November 13th through livenation.com. All month long leading up to the show Mix 96.5 will be giving tickets away on air. Tune in each day for your chance to win.

SNL With Trump Earns Best Ratings In Years

(Reuters) -- Donald Trump's appearance as guest host of "Saturday Night Live" helped the TV comedy sketch show earn its highest viewership ratings since 2012, the NBC television network said on Sunday.

The show, which came under fire from Latino groups for inviting the blunt-spoken Republican presidential frontrunner to host, garnered a 6.6 rating in the 56 U.S. markets measured by Nielsen Media Research, NBC said in a statement.

The Trump show was the highest rating for SNL since Jan. 7, 2012, when an episode hosted by retired basketball star Charles Barkley pulled in a 7.0 rating, said the Comcast Corp.-owned network.

Saturday's rating was about 50 percent higher than the season premiere on Oct. 3 when Democratic presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton made a cameo appearance, according to CNNMoney.com.

Larry David
Ratings are a measure of the audience as a percentage of all television households, whether their sets were turned on or not during the show's time slot.

Trump's appearance received an avalanche of advance publicity when Hispanic groups objected to NBC's decision to invite the billionaire developer, saying it was legitimizing his "racist" views on immigration.

The former star of reality TV show "The Apprentice" outraged many Americans in June when he described Mexican immigrants as rapists and drug smugglers. While he made a crackdown on illegal immigration a main campaign theme, Trump has also said many of his employees are Hispanics and that they love him.

The show made reference to that controversy when comedian Larry David, in an obvious send-up, called out "Donald Trump is a racist!" to an apparently unfazed Trump. David then told the host that he was seeking a $5,000 bounty that a website called DeportRacism.com promised to pay for on-air heckling.

Trump told CNN on Sunday that he vetoed some of the more risque skits, and earlier in the week he told Fox News it was because he didn't want to alienate voters in Iowa, home of the first event in the 2016 presidential nominating contest.

(Additional reporting by Steve Gorman in Los Angeles; Editing by Frank McGurty and Mary Milliken)

Donald Trump Gets Limited Time On SNL

When Donald Trump hosted “Saturday Night Live” in 2004, he held forth in multiple sketches, like a spoof of “Regis and Kathie Lee” and a fake ad for “Donald Trump’s House of Wings.” In 2015, the show was considerably more stingy with his time.

Trump, the leading Republican candidate for U.S. President, was spotted on screen for just about 12 minutes, according to Variety‘s measurement of the episode, and possibly a little less. In contrast, Amy Schumer was on screen for between 25 minutes and 26 minutes when she hosted the October 10th broadcast of the program and Miley Cyrus was on camera for between 21 minutes and 22 minutes when she hosted the venerable late-night series’ 41st season opener on October 3.

Though Trump carried the opening monologue (with some help from Larry David and impressions by Taran Killam and Darrell Hammond) and appeared in the entirety of the show’s second sketch of the evening, he was not allowed to carry any segment of the program on his own. His minimal appearance on the show would suggest NBC was extremely cognizant of TV’s so-called “equal time” rule, which mandates that U.S. broadcast and radio stations that grant appearances to political candidates must provide an equal amount of time to other candidates who request it.


How Nielsen Measures Viewership on New-Media Platforms

Ibrahim and Hasker
Canaan Partners general partner Maha Ibrahim and Nielsen global president Steve Hasker discuss Nielsen’s new-media metrics with Emily Chang on “Bloomberg West.”


Sales of Vinyl Records Hit 25-Year High

Despite an explosion in digital and streaming music — including Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora and Tidal — consumers are spending more money on vinyl records, and more vinyl buyers are millennials, according to CNBC.

In 2014, more than 13 million vinyl long-playing albums, or LPs for short, were sold in America. And the first half of 2015 is showing similar sales strength with more than 9 million LPs sold, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.

The association says the last time it has seen such high LP sales was a quarter century ago, in 1989. At that time, nearly 35 million LPs were sold. Then in 1990, compact disc sales took off, and vinyl sales fell by the wayside.

The current surge in LP sales is partly being driven by younger consumers. Industry researcher MusicWatch reports half of vinyl record buyers are under 25, and men are more likely to buy LPs than are women.

LP shipments increased 52 percent to $222 million for the first half of 2015, according to the association. But that's still only 7 percent of the overall market by value in a music industry dominated by digital and streaming sales.


Read More Now

Trends: Where Are the Teen Mall Rats?

Many of them were inside the Apple store at Cherry Hill Mall on a recent Friday, according to a story at philly.com.

Isaiah Etienne
Consider 19-year-old Isaiah Etienne. He used to hit the shoe and clothing stores at the mall weekly. But that changed after he turned 18.

"I've definitely slowed down on the clothes and sneaker shopping," Etienne said. Instead, a chunk of his cash now goes toward electronics. He was at the Apple store to replace his new iPhone6S, which he recently cracked by dropping it.

The scene that day helps explain why once dominant teen retailers - such as Aéropostale, American Eagle Outfitters, and Abercrombie & Fitch - are closing stores.

A 2015 Retail Real Estate Report by consultant DTZ stressed that the trio was getting hit hard by online shopping. The report projects Aéropostale closing 175 stores through 2017; American Eagle, 150; and Abercrombie, 170.

"Teen retailers are in a high-risk, high-reward business - a trendy fashion appeal with a fickle customer base," said New York retail consultant Howard Davidowitz. "The decline is a long-term trend."

Industry experts cited four reasons:
  • Competition. "Fast-fashion" retailers (those with quick turnaround that buy in bulk and sell cheaply) now dominate. Examples include Forever 21 and H&M.
  • Disposable income. Teens' priorities have shifted from clothing to gadgets and eating out. Gadgets and electronics now account for a much higher percentage of teen expenditures than ever before, a recent Piper Jaffray report found. And for the first time in 13 years, teens last year spent more money on eating out than on clothes.
  • Brands have become less important to teens. Abercrombie, for example, is taking its logo off merchandise. Teens say they no longer want it.
  • No longer the teen hangout. Teen mall traffic has fallen by 30 percent over the last decade, a trend that has quickened since 2007, the Piper Jaffray report says.
James Cook, Americas director of research and retail at Jones Lang LaSalle, said, "Teen shoppers are an especially fickle bunch.  The fashion retailers that are struggling at the moment have had trouble offering the right blend of price and style."

Read More Now

NewsOn Launches Mobile Local News App


NewsON, a venture dedicated to providing local news nationwide, has announced the launch of the NewsON app, a groundbreaking new service that provides consumers access to live and on-demand local newscasts and local news clips.

The free, ad-supported app features flexible navigation that encourages discovery, offering instant access to broadcast quality video. It also enables users to search by market via an interactive map and for curated content linking coverage of breaking news events from multiple stations. NewsON is available for Apple iPhone and iPad, Android phone and tablet, and on the Roku platform across Roku players and Roku TVs.

NewsON features video content from 118 stations in 90 markets, covering approximately 75% of the United States. At launch, participating stations include those owned by members of NewsON’s owner group as well as stations from Graham Media Group and TEGNA. As announced in June, NewsON founding members are the ABC Owned Television Station Group, Cox Media Group, Hearst Television, Media General and Raycom Media. In addition, Hubbard Broadcasting has joined the NewsON founding members as an investor, effective immediately.

A recent study underscores local TV’s leading role as a news source. According to the March 2015 report “Local News in a Digital Age” by the Pew Research Center, local TV stations remain the dominant source of news for Americans in markets both large and small. The appetite for local and neighborhood news, the staple of TV station newscast coverage, is up to twice the demand for national and international news, the study found.  In addition, nearly nine-in-ten residents follow local news closely—and about half do so very closely and about two-thirds of the residents in each city from the study discuss local news in person a few times a week or more.

Going forward, in addition to the stations available initially, NewsON will welcome new ones from existing and additional markets in the US. At launch, multiple stations will be available through NewsON in some markets, giving viewers the opportunity to “change channels” as they wish.

NewsON users will enjoy broadcast-quality video instantly accessible on mobile devices, at the touch of a button. Stations can be found via an interactive map which locates stations most relevant to users – from home markets to business destinations to communities where family members live. While watching, the viewer can use a timeline viewing tool to pinpoint the precise moments he or she wants to watch – from business and sports to weather and traffic. In addition, viewers can access and contribute to real-time tweets about local news, adding their perspective to the community of viewers and increasing the spread of local information.

Note: These play buttons not active

 “NewsON expands the reach and relevance of local broadcast news, and delivers a uniquely valuable experience for viewers,” said Louis Gump, CEO of NewsON. “NewsON offers the most comprehensive collection of local news video available today for mobile and connected TV viewers, and we expect the number of participating stations to grow between now and the end of the year. The vast collection of news content, coupled with a powerful interface, gives NewsON the potential to be an iconic app that quickly becomes a consumer favorite.”

Download NewsON from iTunes, Google Play and Roku Channel Store.

John Lennon Guitar Auctioned For Record Amount

John Lennon
(Reuters) -- A guitar stolen from the late John Lennon in the 1960s sold for $2.41 million on Saturday at an auction in Beverly Hills, California, and a Beatles drum head went for $2.1 million, fetching some of the highest prices ever for items of rock and roll memorabilia.

The 1962 J-160E Gibson acoustic guitar had for decades been in the possession of John McCaw, a novice musician who bought it in the late 1960s without knowing it had been stolen from the legendary Beatle several years before, said auctioneer Darren Julien.

Half of the proceeds from the sale of the guitar, which was stolen from Lennon at a December 1963 Christmas concert, will go toward the Spirit Foundation, a charitable organization that he and his widow, Yoko Ono, created, Julien said.

The instrument's authenticity was determined by its matching serial number and wood grain, among other things, Julien said.

The buyer, who paid $2.41 million at a Julien's Auctions event, has asked to remain anonymous, Julien said.

Though only in Lennon's possession for just over a year, the guitar had an illustrious history.

Lennon bought it at a Liverpool music shop in 1962 and used it on recordings of a number of Beatles songs, including "P.S. I Love You" and "Love Me Do," according to Julien's Auctions. He also is said to have strummed it while writing several Beatles hits with Paul McCartney, such as "I Want To Hold Your Hand" and "All My Loving."

"It's such an important part of Lennon's career and Beatles history," Julien said. "I knew it would go over $1 million; I had no idea it would go over $2 million."

The price far surpasses the $965,000 paid at a 2013 Christie's auction for the electric guitar Bob Dylan played at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival, where he shocked folk traditionalists with a set of rock songs.


On Saturday, another big seller at the Julien's Auctions event was a Beatles drum head, which is the membrane stretched over a drum.

The drum head, which was used by The Beatles when they made their historic appearances on "The Ed Sullivan Show" in 1964, sold for $2.1 million, Julien said.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Lisa Von Ahn)

Indy Radio: Only Bob's Wife Knew Of Retirement Announcement

Morning radio personalityBob Kevoian says his wife, Becky, was the only other person who knew he planned to announce his retirement during last Thursday night's induction into the National Radio Hall of Fame.

But, reports the Indy Star,  he also suspected Tom Griswold, his 32-year partner on "The Bob & Tom Show" and newly minted co-Hall of Famer, expected the news.

"I think Tom kind of felt it was coming, with me taking the extended vacation times," Kevoian said Friday during a phone call from Chicago, where the Museum of Broadcast Communications hosted the Hall of Fame event. "I don't think he was surprised at all."

Listeners of the morning radio show, syndicated to stations in more than 100 cities and a fixture of WFBQ 94.7 FM since March 7, 1983, have noticed that on-air days for Kevoian decreased in recent years.



Kevoian said the breaks served as rehearsal, of sorts, for retirement that will arrive a few weeks after his 65th birthday on Dec. 2.

While saying he's in good health, Kevoian also mentioned that his father died at 67.

"You never know when you're going to wake up that one day and say, 'Oh, my God. I don't feel good,' " he said. "I don't want to do that and not be able to go do anything."

So the icon of Indianapolis radio announced his exit on his own terms, with an eye on lengthy road trips with his aluminum Airstream trailer.

Read More Now

Gala Night Honors National Radio HoF Inductees



Congratulations to the Class of 2015 inducted last week into the National Radio Hall of Fame in Chicago.


The 2015 Inductess to the National Radio Hoall of Fame were:
  • Big Boy (Kurt Alexander), Morning Host KRRL Los Angeles
  • Elvis Duran, Syndicated and Morning Host WHTZ NYC
  • Clark Howard, Syndicated Talk Host based at WSB Atlanta
  • Bob Kevoian & Tom Griswold, Syndicated Morning Hosts, WFBQ Indianapolis
  • Dan Mason, Former President CBS Radio
  • Scott Muni, Posthumously NYC Radio Host
  • Ronn Owens, Host KGO San Francisco
  • Dave Ramsey, Syndicated Financial Talk Host based In Nashville 
Elvis Duran and Big Boy in front of the 2015 inductee display





Former CBS Radio President/CEO Dan Mason with his son and award presenter, Dan Mason Jr.




National Radio Hall of Fame Chairman Kraig Kitchin on stage welcoming guests















Inductees Elvis Duran and Ronn Owens

Inductees Bob and Tom, Bob’s announced is retirement at the end of the year







Award presenter Neal Boortz, his wife  and 2015 Inductee Clark Howard


R.I.P.: Indy Radio Host, Activist Amos Brown

Before beginning his first song, "Love's in Need of Love Today," Stevie Wonder dedicated his Saturday night concert in Indianapolis to longtime radio host and local icon Amos C. Brown III.

Brown, 64, a media presence and a leader in the African-American community in Indianapolis for 40 years, died Friday at his family home in Chicago.

The Indy Star reports he collapsed from what is believed to be a heart attack in his parents' home late Friday afternoon, Maryland-based broadcaster Radio One said.

Amos Brown
He was known throughout Indianapolis and Central Indiana for his passionate advocacy on behalf of the African-American community and his fearless commitment to good journalism.

Brown's popular show, "Afternoons with Amos," running from 1-3 p.m. weekdays on WTLC 1310 AM, debuted on Radio One in 2004 and is one of the city's most popular radio shows. He was inducted into the Indiana Broadcasters Hall of Fame in 2007 and was a finalist for National Association of Broadcasters  Marconi Awards.

Brown moved to Indianapolis in 1975 from his native Chicago. After working in radio and TV for more than a decade, he launched Indianapolis' first daily African-American-oriented television news show, "The Noon Show" in 1992.

His broadcasts reached hundreds of thousands of people, Chuck Williams, Radio One Indianapolis VP/GM, said in a statement.

"A city is identified and driven by the depth and passion of our leaders’ civic commitment," Williams said. "Amos Brown was large among them."

November 9 Radio History


George D. Hay
In 1895...George D. Hay, the founder of the “Grand Ole Opry,” was born in Attica, Indiana.

While he was an announcer at WLS in Chicago, Hay helped begin the “National Barn Dance” program. He then moved to WSM in Nashville, where he started a similar barn dance program in 1925. The “WSM Barn Dance” officially became known as the “Grand Ole Opry” two years later. Hay so named the program because it followed a broadcast by the NBC Symphony. He was largely responsible for developing the Opry into country music’s premiere showcase.

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 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 1965...At dusk on November 9, the biggest power failure in U.S. history occurred as all of New York state, portions of seven neighboring states, and parts of eastern Canada are plunged into darkness. The Great Northeast Blackout began at the height of rush hour, delaying millions of commuters, trapping 800,000 people in New York's subways, and stranding thousands more in office buildings, elevators, and trains. Ten thousand National Guardsmen and 5,000 off-duty policemen were called into service to prevent looting.


Here's how it sounded on 77 WABC with Dan Ingram.  The audio also includes Ingram on November 10...



The blackout was caused by the tripping of a 230-kilovolt transmission line near Ontario, Canada, at 5:16 p.m., which caused several other heavily loaded lines also to fail. This precipitated a surge of power that overwhelmed the transmission lines in western New York, causing a "cascading" tripping of additional lines, resulting in the eventual breakup of the entire Northeastern transmission network.

All together, 30 million people in eight U.S. states and the Canadian provinces of Ontario and Quebec were affected by the blackout. During the night, power was gradually restored to the blacked-out areas, and by morning power had been restored throughout the Northeast.


In 1968...big-voiced actor Gerald Mohr suffered a fatal heart attack at age 54. He had logged 4,000 radio appearances, including the title role in 119 episodes of The Adventures of Phillip Marlowe.  He also had more than 100 TV acting credits of all stripes.


In 1999...The Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) announces the century's big winners, sales-wise: The Beatles have sold the most albums (106 million), with Garth Brooks and Barbra Streisand the most successful male and female solo artists. Elvis Presley leads the pack on gold and platinum certifications with 77 (singles) and 80 (albums), while Elton John's "Candle In The Wind '97" (rewritten as a tribute to the recently-deceased Princess Diana) is the best-selling single of the century. The best-selling album, suprisingly, is the Eagles' Greatest Hits 1971-1975, which has just overtaken Michael Jackson's Thriller.


In 2003...TV/radio/film great Art Carney died in his sleep at 85 years of age.

He had been enormously popular as Jackie Gleason’s sewer-worker pal Ed Norton in the TV classic The Honeymooners. He began as a radio actor, appearing regularly on Gangbusters and The March of Time, among many others. Carney also won the Best-Actor Oscar for the film Harry and Tonto (1974).

In 2013…Longtime Chicago radio personality for WDRV-FM, WLUP-FM, Carla Leonardo died of acute myeloid leukemia at 63.