Monday, March 27, 2017

America's Trust In Advertising Grows


Three years ago, in March, 2014, a YouGov survey found that 56% of US adults who came across at least one advertisement per month felt that the ads they saw, read, or heard were generally honest. Today, that number has risen 16 points — meaning that, at present, nearly three-quarters of the American public considers advertisements honest.


A similar lift appeared when people were answered if they trust the ads they see, read, or hear. In 2014, 50% of US adults said they trust advertisements. In 2017, however, this number increased to 61%.


As people's overall trust in advertising has grown, so has their interest in more regulation. In 2014, for instance, 58% of US adults agreed that there should be stronger requirements for proving claims in advertising. Currently, this number sits at 64%.

Report: Alexa, Siri Battle It Out In Hotel Rooms

Amazon.com’s battle with Apple over digital assistants is moving to a new venue: hotel rooms, where Alexa and Siri are both vying to be the voice-controlled service of choice for travelers.

The Houston Chronicle reports Marriott International, the world’s biggest lodging company, is testing devices from the two tech giants at its Aloft hotel in Boston’s Seaport district to determine which is best to let guests turn on lights, close drapes, control room temperature and change television channels via voice command.

In December, Wynn Resorts became the first hotel company to install Alexa-powered Echo devices, starting with suites at its flagship Wynn Las Vegas property.  The Vegas property is expanding the range of functions controlled by Alexa. It recently gave guests the option to listen to music on most radio stations, and is about to add a station of songs chosen by CEO Steve Wynn personally, Weaver said. Also in the works is an audio guest directory to replace the printed version.

Technology companies use hotel rooms as showrooms for new services and devices that can also control smart homes. Amazon and Apple are competing for dominance in the market, which promises to let consumers access and manage household systems such as heating, cooling, lighting and entertainment by speaking a request at home or using a smartphone from afar.

Hotel rooms are an ideal place for Amazon and Apple to showcase their devices and let guests see how they can be used to make their lives more convenient, said Carolina Milanesi, an analyst at San Jose research firm Creative Strategies. She likened it to hotel rooms installing iPhone docking stations years ago so people could enjoy their own music.

A key question is whether the interaction will be personalized, allowing guests familiar with the devices to log into their own accounts, or instead use a standard set of skills relevant to a hotel stay, like getting news reports, checking weather forecasts or calling for an Uber — commands more appropriate for those unfamiliar with the technology.

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NJ Radio: 107.1 The Boss Debuts Talent LineUp

Press Communications has announced its new lineup for Classic Rock WWZY 107.1 FM and WBHX 99.7 FM The Boss, launches today.

"The Morning Kickstart" airs starting at 5:30 with Rob Acampora and Wendy McClure.

Acampora, who previously worked through most of the '90s at WHTG-FM, is a born and bred Jersey boy, whose stops include WSTW in Delaware, B104 in the Lehigh Valley, and local entities B98.5 and (most recently) Thunder 106. He is joined by seasoned broadcaster McClure, who has an extensive radio resume that includes The Wall Street Journal Radio Network, WPST, B98.5 and Q102 in Philadelphia.

"I have waited a long time for this opportunity, and I am partnered with someone who has the same drive as I do," says Acampora. "I'm inviting everyone at the Jersey Shore to tune in from 5:30 a.m. to 10 a.m. weekdays. I promise you will not be disappointed."

"I am so excited to be back at the Jersey Shore," says McClure. "Rob and I want you to want us every morning!"

WWZY 107.1 FM (5 Kw) Red=Local Coverage Area
Taking on mid-day duties is Michele Amabile, formerly of WHTG-FM. Amabile's previous stops around the dial include morning duties at G106.3 and Digital 102.7 in Atlantic City, shifts at 94.1 WYSP, 95.9 The Rat, and (most recently) 94.3 The Point.

"I missed being on the air every day, and I am beyond thrilled to be back with my old friend, Rob Acampora, who shares the same passion and love of music that I do," Amabile says. "Rob and I go way back, and coming back to Press Communications feels like home to me. We are going to have a good time."

Rounding out the lineup in afternoon drive is Vice President of Programming, Jeff Rafter, celebrating his 40th year in New Jersey radio. Rafter's career also began at WHTG-AM/FM, continuing with a winning streak that included stints at WJLK, WOBM, WJRZ, Seaview 107.1, and (most recently) WMGQ.

WBHX 99.7 FM (2.2 Kw)
“We are live and local!  This is the next step in the evolution of the new 107.1 The BOSS. I am thrilled to be back on the radio where I grew up. I thank Press Communications for the opportunity to let us live out our passion and play this awesome music. More surprises to come!” - See more at: http://www.fmqb.com/article.asp?id=3027196#sthash.R8l3PGaY.gfpig2Ev.dpuf

Apple Claims Biggest Radio Station In The World

Apple has claimed its Beats 1 streaming radio station on Apple Music is the biggest radio station in the world.

In an interview with The Verge, Apple Music executives said that new and exclusive content released by musicians was driving bigger numbers than ever for Beats 1 and Apple Music.

“There’s no way you’re going to find another station that has as many concurrent listeners and audience-wise as Beats 1, period,” said Apple Music head of content Larry Jackson. Apple did not disclose specific data to support its claims.

According to ChannelNews, songs and albums released by Canadian musician Drake on his Beats 1 radio show were bringing in “TV numbers” according to Apple’s Jimmy Iovine, who said that collaborating directly with musicians was a key part of how Apple Music tries to distinguish itself from competitors like Spotify.

“We’re always searching for ideas and new ways to do things… These [streaming] services cannot be utilities, it’s not enough. They have to be — they almost have to make music a verb — it has to just move. And that’s what we’re trying to do,” said Jimmy Iovine.

Last week, Drake’s latest album was streamed 89.9 million times on Apple Music during the first 24 hours of release, a new record for all music streaming services. The figure was significantly ahead of the 61.3 million streams on Spotify, which has five times more users than Apple Music’s 20 million.

SMI: Ad Market Slowed During February

Standard Media Index (SMI) has unveiled updated figures for February 2017. SMI total market closed the month flat with no change on a year-on-year basis. The market also registered the lowest growth rate to digital advertising spend since it started monitoring ad expenditures in 2009. While growth rates across the board in February 2017 were low, it must also be noted that February 2016 was a leap year, giving the month one extra day, or approximately 3.5 percent more time, to accumulate spend over that of February 2017.

2017 is Shaping Up to Be Digital’s Toughest Year Yet

For the first two months of 2017, digital has seen growth rates usually akin to television, or other traditional ad platforms. In February 2017, spend on all digital platforms rose just +3.7 percent. Pure-play video and pure-play social platforms continue to be digital’s engine growing +26.6 percent and + 9.9 percent respectively. digital – print platforms also saw a small rise with +3.8 percent growth. Nearly all other digital platform sub types saw declines, contributing to the slower overall growth rate.

Google remained essentially flat seeing little growth from the same month in 2016. Facebook didn’t seem affected by the loss of a day, with a remarkable double digit growth of +23.1 percent on the year. Snapchat, who has seen an extensive uptick in last six months, continued that trend with +194.0 percent growth in February 2017.

National Television Sees Low Key February

Overall, the February 2017 national television market was flat, with a +0.4 percent increase, showing the first sign of slowing down in recent months, mirroring the overall market. The cable industry grew slightly with a +1.4 percent increase year-over-year. The broadcast industry saw a decrease of -0.6 percent, thanks to hefty spend declines from big category spenders like Automotive, -11.6 percent, and Pharma Prescription -10 percent.

When you look at just sports programming, the National TV market grew +4.8 percent. Cable saw a bulk of the growth with +19.0 percent while broadcast saw a decline of -1.9 percent.

Looking at other individual program genres, we see broadcast entertainment decreased -6.4% across all dayparts, while spend on broadcast news increased +15.1%. When highlighting just the top four networks (NBC, ABC, CBS and FOX) in broadcast entertainment prime time the market fell -2.3 percent. NBC saw the biggest increase with +11.3 percent on the year thanks to its breakout hit This Is Us. The show garnered the highest average :30 second unit price for any hour-long drama on broadcast television in February. CBS’s The Big Bang Theory took the prize in comedy with an average spot going for $248,077, though that’s around -10 percent less than its price in February 2016.


Taking a step back, of the big four broadcast networks across all dayparts and genres, FOX increased +341 percent thanks to the Super Bowl, while CBS lost some share -57.6 percent after airing the Super Bowl in 2016. NBC grew across all dayparts, while ABC continues to see a decline in ad revenue, with -11.1% YoY.

Within cable, news had its lowest increase since the election to +7.0 percent and entertainment saw just +2.4 percent. Interestingly when you look at just prime time cable news you see +30.9 percent, showing that the interest is still very high, advertisers are just getting more targeted with their dollars.

Drilling further into cable networks, we see Turner’s TNT and TBS both saw increases in spend with +11.3 percent and +2.0 percent, respectively. USA Network saw a -16.5 percent decline while HGTV continued to see steady growth with +5.5 percent. Viacom’s MTV and Comedy Central declined by double digits after a few months of growth.

“After explosive digital growth over the past three years, the past six months have shown that a sizeable number of brands went too far and have started reassessing based on quality issues and falling sales. We expect this trend to accelerate in the coming months as the issues with YouTube are certain to have an impact on spend on non-premium platforms.” Said James Fennessy, CEO of Standard Media Index. “Our February data reinforces the need for advertisers to properly balance between traditional and digital and the importance we see brands putting on safety, environment and context.”

Radio, Print, Out-Of-Home and Newspaper All See Double Digital Declines

Beyond TV and digital, the advertising market did not fair wall in February 2017. After a strong increase in January 2017, the industry saw a -10.6 percent decline in spend on the medium. Similarly, magazines saw -12.0 percent, Newspapers saw -15.0 percent and radio so a -31.3 percent.

DOJ Reaches Deal On SportsNet LA Lawsuit

The Justice Department said it has reached a settlement agreement with AT&T over a federal lawsuit alleging DirecTV colluded with rival pay-TV operators to freeze out a Time Warner Cable-owned regional sports network.

According to FierceCable, no monetary payment was announced, but the DOJ said AT&T agreed it will not share program licensing information with competitors in the future and will also self-monitor.

The agreement does not, however, stipulate that DirecTV, the No. 2 pay-TV operator in the Southern California region, carry SportsNet LA, the exclusive local TV home of the Major League Baseball’s L.A. Dodgers.

“When competitors email, text, or otherwise share confidential and strategically sensitive information with each other to avoid competing, consumers lose,” said Acting Assistant Attorney General Brent Snyder of the Justice Department’s Antitrust Division, in a statement. “Today’s settlement promotes competition among pay-television providers and prevents AT&T and DirecTV from engaging in illegal conduct that thwarts the competitive process.”    

TWC signed a 25-year, $8.5 billion program licensing deal with the Dodgers in January 2013 and launched TWC SportsNet LA in March 2014. Today, Charter Communications—the company that bought TWC in 2015—is the only major pay-TV operator in the SoCal region to carry the channel.

The RSN is entering its fourth MLB season distributed in less than half of Los Angeles-area homes.

Koppel Slams Hannity, Talk Shows

Ted Koppel
​Veteran ​network ​news​man Ted Koppel called out Fox News’ Sean Hannity and other talk show hosts as “bad for America” because they attract viewers who “are determined that ideology is more important than facts​,​” in an interview that aired on Sunday.

The NY Post reports Koppel interviewed Han​​nity for a segment on the deepening political divide in America on “CBS Sunday Morning” when the discussion turned to conservative talk radio and the spoon-feeding of information to viewers.

“We have to give some credit to the American people that they are somewhat intelligent and that they know the difference between an opinion show and a news show. You’re cynical,” Hannity ​told Koppel.

“I am cynical,” said Koppel. the​ former ​longtime host of ABC News’ “Nightline.”

“Do you think we’re bad for America? You think I’m bad for America?” Hannity asked.



Later, in an interview with White House spokesman Sean Spicer, Koppel asked whether Americans should take President Trump literally in light of criticism that he spreads falsehoods.

“No, I think you should take him literally. The president’s very authoritative when he speaks. He wants to be taken literally. And also you have to understand that when you have 140 characters, that somebody trying to look at that and say, ‘This means the following’ is a little bit too much,​”​ Spicer said.​

“That’s one good reason for not using Twitter to communicate serious issues,” said Koppel.

Hannity fired back on Twitter:


 The CBS Sunday Morning segment examined the polarization of the country and the phenomenon of “fake news” and how conservative pundits like Hannity may be contributing to broad societal confusion and the inability to distinguish between ideology and fact.

Report: Alex Jones Apologizes For Pizzagate Hoax

Syndicated Radio talk host Alex Jones has apologized for helping to spread and promote the hoax known as Pizzagate.  In a story, the NY Times called Jones a prominent conspiracy theorist and the host of a popular right-wing radio show

In addition to promoting the Pizzagate conspiracy theory, he has contended that the Sept. 11 attacks were inside jobs carried out by the United States government and that the 2012 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., was a hoax concocted by those hostile to the Second Amendment.

The Pizzagate theory, which posited with no evidence that top Democratic officials were involved with a satanic child pornography ring centered around Comet Ping Pong, a pizza restaurant in Washington, D.C., grew in online forums before making its way to more visible venues, including Jones’s show. And its prominence after the election drew attention to the proliferation of false and misleading news, much of it politically charged, that circulated on platforms like Facebook, Twitter and YouTube.

Jones made the apology to the owner of Comet Ping Pong, James Alefantis, on video, reading from a carefully worded statement that emphasized how widely the theory had spread before he weighed in on it. He said that Infowars had “disassociated” itself from the story in December and had taken down the majority of broadcasts and videos that mentioned it. Mr. Jones also said that two reporters the show had worked with “are no longer with us,” although he did not identify them or discuss the exact nature of their work with Infowars.

The hoax has had real-world consequences. The pizzeria, Mr. Alefantis and his employees have been besieged by threats. Nearby businesses have also been affected. And the hoax has even spread to several other pizzerias around the country.

Report: Lahren OUT At The Blaze


Tomi Lahren won’t be appearing on Glenn Beck’s multiplatform network, TheBlaze, anymore.

Sources tell Page Six at The NY Post that Lahren — who was suspended last week after flip-flopping on abortion and declaring herself pro-choice — has been banned permanently.

Tomi Lahren
“Glenn is reminding the world of his conservative principles by sidelining Tomi after she insulted conservatives by calling them hypocrites,” one Beck insider told me.

Fans think Beck — once a big Ted Cruz backer — has lost his conservative bona fides. He went on Samantha Bee’s TBS show in December and apologized for being divisive in the past.

“He’s trying to balance being a leading conservative thinker and also someone who can unify the country,” the Beck associate told me. “He just couldn’t sit by and watch as Tomi Lahren said there’s no way for conservatives to justify anything other than being pro-choice.”

“Beck’s trying to reinvent himself,” a former insider told me. “But he’s burned too many bridges.”

TheBlaze, founded seven years ago in Dallas, once had offices in New York and 300 employees. Now, the New York office is closed and the staff is half that size.

While the number of paying subscribers (once said to be 300,000) is kept secret, TheBlaze.com attracted 29 million unique visitors per month in 2014, and only 8.8 million uniques in February 2017, for a loss of more than two-thirds of its traffic.

Fox News' Jeanine Pirro Calls for Paul Ryan to Step Down

Jeanine Pirro
A Fox News personality — whom President Trump had urged his supporters to watch Saturday night — called on House Speaker Paul D. Ryan (R-Wis.) to step down, saying he had done a disservice to Trump by failing to pass a high-profile health-care bill last week, according to The Washington Post.

At the top of her show, Jeanine Pirro, host of “Justice With Judge Jeanine,” delivered a scathing commentary on Ryan’s performance in the days leading up to the decision to pull the House Republican bill to overhaul the Affordable Care Act.

“It failed within the first 70 days of President Donald Trump’s administration, a president who made the replacement of Obamacare the hallmark of his campaign and then used valuable political capital to accomplish it,” said Pirro, placing the blame squarely on Ryan.

Earlier Saturday, Trump took to Twitter to urge his followers to tune into Pirro’s show, saying:


In public statements since the bill’s collapse, both Trump and Vice President Pence have continued to support Ryan as speaker.


On Sunday, during an appearance on “Fox News Sunday,” White House chief of staff Reince Priebus called Trump's tweet and Pirro's call for Ryan to step down “coincidental.”

“There is no preplanning here,” Priebus said, adding that Trump promoted Pirro's show on Twitter “because he loves Judge Jeanine” and wanted to do her a favor.

Report: Epshteyn To Leave TWH Press Office

Boris Epshteyn
Boris Epshteyn, an official in the White House press office who had a contentious relationship with television producers and was once a frequent presence on TV himself, is leaving his job, according to The NYTimes.

The departure was treated with some mystery. Sean Spicer, the White House press secretary, would not comment on the reason Mr. Epshteyn, an old friend of President Trump’s son Eric, was expected to depart the post.

A senior administration official, speaking on the condition of anonymity, said only that officials were exploring other opportunities in the administration for Mr. Epshteyn, who at one point was on cable news as many as seven times a day promoting Mr. Trump during the presidential campaign.

Two people familiar with Mr. Epshteyn’s tenure said he had become combative with the networks on which he was assigned to book surrogates defending the administration, a junior position for someone who has other news media experience, which he does.

A recent report by Politico detailed a blowup that Mr. Epshteyn had with Fox News, the cable network that most consistently defends the president’s agenda.

Mr. Epshteyn, known for his argumentative, badgering style on TV, was a spokesman for the presidential inaugural committee.

March 27 Radio History




In 1899...inventor Marconi demonstrated the first international radio transmission between Wimereux, France to South Foreland Lighthouse, England.


In 1921...announcer Fred Foy was born in Detroit.  Although best remembered as the iconic narrator on The Lone Ranger on both radio & TV (1948-54), he also had high profile gigs as the announcer on ABC Radio’s Theatre Five, and ABC-TV’s Dick Cavett Show.  He died Dec 22 2010 at age 88.
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In 1928...KGB-AM, San Diego, California began broadcasting.

KGB is the oldest continuing radio station in the San Diego Market. The station was granted a license in July 1922 to W.K. Azbill under the call letters of KFBC operating at 10 watts on 1210 kilocycles. This license was assigned to Dr. Arthur Wells Yale in 1927. Pickwick Broadcasting Corporation bought the station in 1928 and installed George Bowles as Vice President and Manager of the station. The call letters were changed to reflect his name as KGB. Under the Pickwick ownership, the station began operating at 1330 kilocycles. Stations used a variety of slogans to promote their identity. Among those KGB uses during this time were "The Sunshine State of California" and "Music for the Sick".

Don Lee, Incorporated bought KGB in 1931. Don Lee died in 1934 and the license was assigned to station manager Marion Harris. Art Linkletter got his professional start at KGB during this time serving as an announcer and program director. The station began operating at 1360 kilocycles in 1942. By 1949, KGB was operating at 1000 watts when Don Lee, Inc was merged with Mutual Broadcasting Company. The station was sold to Marion Harris in 1954 who increased the output to 5000 watts-days, 1000 watts-night.

On the Johnny Mann Singers web site Ron Jacobs said, "Willet Brown of Brown Broadcasting Company purchased the station in 1961 and operated it with his son Mike. Willet co-founded Mutual Broadcasting System, was pals with Howard Hughes, owned a cadillac dealership, a yacht, and his own Greyhound bus.

He expected winners from his assets. By 1963, the station's middle-of-the road (MOR) program format was going nowhere and they began the search for a strong proven programmer. They initially sought out the programmer of KMEN in San Bernardino, but didn't find who they were looking for. (Ron Jacobs had already moved on to make history at KMAK Fresno). His rival, Gene Chenault of KYNO Fresno, was trying to branch out in his new radio consulting business. Chenault became the station programmer after meeting with the Browns. Chenault brought in his partner Bill Drake and several DJs from Fresno that eventually led to KGB leading the San Diego market. They experimented and developed a new format called Boss Radio".


By the end of 1963, a more stylized bi-fold Silver Dollar Survey was being published introducing photos of the DJs as the Station of the Stars. The play list featured artists having more appeal to a younger audience.


In 1974, KGB-FM gave the world a piece of pop culture Americana. The "KGB Chicken," an advertising mascot played by Ted Giannoulas, was hatched that year when employees of KGB-FM hired Giannoulas (then a student at San Diego State University) from off the street to wear a chicken outfit for a promotion to distribute AM and FM Easter eggs to children at the San Diego Wild Animal Park. The Chicken, whose antics entertained steadily larger crowds, moved on to features at concerts and sporting events (appearing at more than 520 San Diego Padres games in a row). Conflict emerged between KGB Radio and Giannoulas, and the latter was fired in 1977.

Another unnamed employee was hired to don a chicken outfit at a Padres game.

Today, 1360 AM is KLSD and airs a sport talk format.


In 1930...the first U.S. ship-to-shore broadcast took place.


In 1942…The CBS radio serial "Myrt & Marge" ended its 11-year run.


In 1943..."Blue Ribbon Town" with Groucho Marx was first broadcast on the CBS Radio Network.


In 1958...CBS Records announces its sound lab's latest invention, stereophonic sound, which when played on a compatible phonograph will send sound through two channels instead of one.


In 1960...Representative Emanuel Celler (D-NY) introduces two bills designed to halt the practice of "payola" -- that is, DJs receiving cash or gifts to promote certain records. Celler, echoing the sentiments of his era, declares that "the cacophonous music called Rock and Roll" could not possibly have risen up the charts without the practice of payola.


In 1964...the original "Pirate Radio" station signed on, Radio Caroline.

Radio Caroline was founded by Ronan O'Rahilly to circumvent the record companies' control of popular music broadcasting in the United Kingdom and the BBC's radio broadcasting monopoly. Unlicensed by any government for most of its early life, it was a pirate radio station which only became formally illegal in 1967.

On a fund-raising trip to the US, O'Rahilly reportedly saw a Life Magazine photograph of Kennedy and his children in the Oval Office that served as the inspiration for the name "Caroline Radio". In the photo, Caroline Kennedy and her brother, John F. Kennedy Jr., are apparently dancing in the oval office as their father looks on, an activity which O'Rahilly reportedly interpreted as a playful disruption of government.

The Radio Caroline name was used to broadcast from five different ships owned by three different owners from 1964 -1989.


In 1977...Don Gardiner, ABC Radio died. He was one of the talented 27 staff announcers at ABC in the 1960s a group that included Milton Cross, the voice of the radio broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera; Fred Foy, who had been the radio and television announcer for The Lone Ranger: and Joel Crager who was the voice for Ivory Soap, Tylenol and E.F. Hutton for many years.

In 1963, Gardiner voiced the first bulletin on the shooting of U.S. President John F. Kennedy aired by a nationwide broadcast network.



This report was broadcast out of the New York headquarters of the ABC Radio Network on Friday, November 22, 1963 at 1:36:50 PM EST, approximately 6 1/2 minutes following the Kennedy shooting in Dallas, Texas.


In 1994...Radio talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, married his third wife, Marta Fitzgerald.

Milton Berle
In 2002...comedian & TV pioneer Milton Berle died at age 93.  Known as Uncle Miltie and Mr. Television, Berle rose to TV stardom as the host of NBC’s Texaco Star Theater beginning in 1948.

From 1934–36, Berle was heard regularly on The Rudy Vallee Hour, and he attracted publicity as a regular on The Gillette Original Community Sing, a Sunday night comedy-variety program broadcast on CBS from September 6, 1936 to August 29, 1937. In 1939, he was the host of Stop Me If You've Heard This One with panelists spontaneously finishing jokes sent in by listeners


In 2009…NBC News reporter Irving R. Levine died of complications from prostate cancer at 86.


In 2015…Retired basketball announcer/former Los Angeles Lakers guard "Hot Rod" Hundley, who was the voice of the Utah Jazz for 35 years, died of complications from Alzheimer's disease at the age of 80.


In 2016…Former "radio psychologist" (ABC TalkRadio, Mutual Broadcasting System, KFI and KABC-Los Angeles) Dr. Toni Grant died of complications from dementia at the age of 73.