Monday, November 2, 2020

First Six Sessions Announced For Virtual CRS


Country Radio Broadcasters, Inc. has revealed details surrounding six sessions scheduled at CRS 2021: The Virtual Experience, set for Tuesday, Feb. 16, through Friday, Feb. 19. The six panels are ‘Til The Wellness Runs Dry: How to Handle the Anxiety of the Music Business, PPP: Post-Pandemic Playbook, 21 Promotions in ’21, Talk Data To Me, Your 24/7 Brand, and TLC: Talent Loving Coaching.

More details surrounding the sessions are below:

  • 'Til The Wellness Runs Dry: How to Handle the Anxiety of the Music Business: Elizabeth Porter, Founder and President of Entertainment Health Services, explains how anxiety affects us, offering clues to identify workplace triggers while providing tips on how to be the best you for yourself, and others.
  • PPP: Post-Pandemic Playbook: An examination of how COVID-19 has affected operations, programming, labels, marketing, and sales, which now requires advanced best-practices for working remotely, revenue strategies, organizational structures, and more.
  • 21 Promotions in '21: Attendees will receive 21 immediately executable promotions they can utilize to accomplish ratings and revenue goals in the face of reduced personnel, social-distancing, and fewer events.
  • Talk Data to Me: The authenticity and application of multiple radio callout, consumer research, and streaming data points will be probed, with a tutorial on the merits of each and how to apply all types of data to programming decisions.
  • Your 24/7 Brand: Radio in 2021 goes far beyond the dial. This session will discuss digital strategies for stations and talent in all market sizes to capitalize on branding, distribution, and content ROI.
  • TLC: Talent Loving Coaching: How do PDs and management coach on-air talent in a way that fosters creative freedom, with structure for growth and improvement? Successful PD/Talent combos discuss working relationships and how to accomplish mutual goals.

The six panels are the first of many agenda announcements leading up to the first-ever virtually executed Country Radio Seminar. 

Already announced agenda items include Country music superstar Luke Bryan, the featured artist scheduled to appear at the annual “CRS Artist Interview,” sponsored by BMI. Bryan will sit down for a rare and exclusive Q&A session discussing his continuous success at Country radio and the expansion of his recording, touring, and entrepreneurial ventures. Also announced, a new-for-2021 Streaming Summit, to be held on Tuesday, Feb. 16. The streaming summit will feature industry professionals and platform experts providing insights on trends, strategies, and best practices to optimize digital assets and streaming platforms.

CRS 2020-2021 Agenda Committee Chair, Brent Michaels, commented “The CRS Agenda Committee has been working hard to create educational, timely content for CRS attendees regardless of their section of the industry, market size, or employment status. Since the last CRS, our world and industry has changed, and we hope to provide anyone who makes the investment in the 2021 seminar, tools to face the consistent challenges of our industry, and to provide content that will lead to success with what we face on the horizon."

The expanded, four-day CRS 2021: The Virtual Experience agenda will offer attendees more than 14 educational sessions, four morning networking events, three lunchtime performances, four interactive workshops, all-day networking, Bob Kingsley’s Acoustic Alley, and, for the first time in CRS history, a New Faces of Country Music® ticket with every registration. More details surrounding the virtual agenda, including the newly launched Streaming Summit, will be released in the coming weeks and months leading up to CRS 2021: The Virtual Experience.

Early Bird Registration for CRS 2021: The Virtual Experience is now open at $149 per person and will be offered through Nov. 4. The registration rate will increase to $199 on Nov. 5. All registrations include access to the 2021 New Faces of Country Music®­­ Show. Registrations are available for purchase at www.CountryRadioSeminar.com.

For more information, visit www.CountryRadioSeminar.com and follow CRS on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram. Additional information can be obtained by calling 615-327-4487.

Johnny Depp Loses 'Wife Beater' Case Against British Tabloid


A British judge ruled Monday that a tabloid did not defame 57-year-old Johnny Depp by calling him a “wife beater,” a decision likely to have consequences for the Oscar-nominated actor’s career, reports The L-A Times.

In his decision, Justice Andrew Nicol said Depp had “not succeeded in his action for libel.” He added that the defendants had shown what they published was “substantially true.”

Nicol delivered his written judgment Monday morning, three months after the end of a trial that exposed stark details of Depp’s tempestuous marriage to 34-year-old actress Amber Heard. There was no in-person hearing because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

The Sun tabloid called the decision a “stunning victory for press freedom” and said it had stood up and campaigned for victims of domestic abuse for more than 20 years.

Depp had sued News Group Newspapers, publisher of the Sun, and the newspaper’s executive editor, Dan Wootton, at London’s High Court over an April 2018 article that accused him of assaulting Heard, an actress whose films include “Justice League” and “Aquaman.”

Both Depp and Heard spent several days in the witness box during the three-week trial in July, giving contradictory accounts of their stormy relationship. The couple had met on the set of the 2011 comedy “The Rum Diary” and married in Los Angeles in 2015. They separated the following year and divorced in 2017.

The Sun graphic 11/02/20

Heard, 34, testified as the main witness for the defense, saying Depp turned into a violent alter-ego he dubbed the “Monster” when under the influence of alcohol and drugs. She alleged 14 separate incidents between 2013 and 2016 in which he hit, slapped and shoved her, pulled her hair and threw bottles at her. The alleged assaults took place in glamorous settings including the couple’s luxury penthouse, Depp’s private island in the Bahamas and an executive jet.

The AM Rundown: Trump, Biden Hitting Battleground States


➤LAST DAY OF PRESIDENTIAL CAMPAIGN:
As the the presidential campaign finally draws to its close, President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden will be running through the tape as they make their final appearances in battleground states today on the last day of the campaign before Election Day tomorrow. Trump will be doing five rallies in North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin, while Biden will be appearing in Pennsylvania and Ohio. The two candidates will be trying to turn out their voters on Election Day, after more than 93 million people have already cast their ballots in early or absentee voting, much more than usual amid the coronavirus pandemic. Polls continue to show Biden with a national lead over Trump in the upper single digits, but are closer in the battleground states that are likely to decide the election. Widely viewed as most pivotal of them is Pennsylvania, and Trump yesterday threatened legal battles over votes there, saying that as soon as the polls close in the state tomorrow, quote, "we're going in with our lawyers."

➤TRUMP SUGGESTS HE WILL FIRE FAUCI AFTER ELECTION: President Trump suggested Sunday that he will fire Dr. Anthony Fauci, the nation's top infectious disease expert and a member of the coronavirus task force, after tomorrow's election, even as the country is experiencing a fall surge of the virus. As Trump complained during a campaign rally in Florida yesterday about the pandemic continuing to be prominently covered in the news, the crowd began chanting, "Fire Fauci!" The president responded by saying, "Don’t tell anybody, but let me wait until a little bit after the election." 


Trump's comments came after Fauci made his strongest criticism to date of the White House response to the coronavirus and expressed concerns about the months ahead if more isn't done to slow its spread in a Washington Post interview this weekend. Fauci said the U.S., quote, "could not possibly be positioned more poorly" to tackle rising cases as more people gather indoors during the colder fall and winter months, saying the country will have to deal with, quote, "a whole lot of hurt" ahead and saying there needs to be what he called an "abrupt change" in public health precautions. Fauci also said he believed Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden is, quote, "taking it seriously from a public health perspective," while Trump is, in his words, "looking at it from a different perspective" that emphasizes the economy. White House spokesman Judd Deere charged that Fauci had decided, quote, "to play politics" right before the election. 

The Wall Street Journal 11/2/20

➤JUDGE ORDERS POSTAL SERVICE TO TAKE 'EXTRAORDINARY MEASURES' AS BALLOT PROCESSING SLOWS DOWN: A federal judge yesterday ordered the U.S. Postal Service to mandate some of the "extraordinary measures" it announced earlier in the week to address the slow down of ballot processing in key election battleground states. Judge Emmet Sullivan's order, issued two days before Election Day, requires the Postal Service to use the Express Mail network, which guarantees delivery in one to two days, for all ballots that are traveling longer distances, even after Election Day. Ballots traveling locally are required to be processed and delivered to local post offices on the same day they arrive, or the next morning at the latest. Sullivan's order came as new court filings showed that, for the third day in a row, the Postal Service moved fewer ballots on-time in critical battleground states than it did the previous day.

➤MAN ARRESTED AFTER KILLING TWO WITH SWORD IN QUEBEC CITY: A 24-year-old man was arrested Sunday on suspicion of killing two people and wounding five others, one day after a man dressed in medieval clothing and wielding a Japanese sword attacked random victims near the Chateau Frontenac hotel in Quebec City, Canada. The attack lasted for nearly two-and-a-half hours as police chased the man through the city's downtown on foot. Carl Girouard, who is from the Montreal area, is facing two counts of first-degree murder and five counts of attempted murder. Police said Girouard didn't have a criminal record, but had shared his intention to carry out this type of attack over five years ago, quote, "in a medical context."


🏈NFL SCORES -- WEEK 8: Here are the results of this weekend's NFL games:
  • Buffalo Bills 24, New England Patriots 21
  • Cincinnati Bengals 31, Tennessee Titans 20
  • Las Vegas Raiders 16, Cleveland Browns 6
  • Indianapolis Colts 41, Detroit Lions 21
  • Minnesota Vikings 28, Green Bay Packers 22
  • Kansas City Chiefs 35, New York Jets 9
  • Miami Dolphins 28, Los Angeles Rams 17
  • Pittsburgh Steelers 28, Baltimore Ravens 24
  • Denver Broncos 31, Los Angeles Chargers 30
  • Seattle Seahawks 37, San Francisco 49ers 27
  • New Orleans Saints 26, Chicago Bears 23 (OT)
  • Philadelphia Eagles 23, Dallas Cowboys 9
Tonight's Monday Night Football game on ESPN:
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers at New York Giants (8:15 pm ET)

🏈STEELERS REMAIN UNBEATEN, LAST TEAM WITH NO LOSSES: The Pittsburgh Steelers remained unbeaten with their 28-24 win over the Baltimore Ravens on Sunday, the last NFL team that has yet to lose a game this season. The Steelers are currently 7-0, matching their best start in franchise history from 1978.

🎌ELLIOTT WINS AT MARTINSVILLE, HARVICK OUT OF CHAMPIONSHIP RACE: Chase Elliott won the last NASCAR Cup Series race before the finale yesterday at Martinsville Speedway in Virginia, earning himself a spot in the four-driver championship race next week at Phoenix. But Kevin Harvick, who won a Cup series-high nine races and the regular-season title was stunningly eliminated from the playoffs with a 17th-place finish. Brad Keselowksi and Denny Hamlin will join Elliott and Joey Logano -- who'd already clinched his spot -- in next week's finale. Eliminated in addition to Harvick were Alex Bowman, Kurt Busch and Martin Truex Jr.

🏈49ERS QB GAROPPOLO, TIGHT END KITTLE OUT IN FOURTH WITH INJURIES, UNCERTAIN FOR THURSDAY: San Francisco 49ers quarterback Jimmy Garoppolo and tight end George Kittle both left with injuries in the fourth quarter of the team's 37-27 loss to the Seattle Seahawks yesterday. Garoppolo left with an ankle injury after seeming to tweak it earlier in the game, and Kittle injured his foot on a play. Head coach Kyle Shanahan said the status of both players for Thursday's game against the Green Bay Packers is uncertain until they undergo more testing today.

🏈DOLPHINS QB TAGOVAILOA WINS FIRST NFL START: Miami Dolphins rookie quarterback Tua Tagovailoa won his first NFL start yesterday 28-17 against the Los Angeles Rams. He went 12 of 22 for 93 yards and one touchdown, with no interceptions. Tagovailoa was taken by the Dolphins with the fifth overall pick in April's NFL draft, after his career at Alabama had ended prematurely the previous November because of a hip injury. 



🏈PATRIOTS QB NEWTON CALLS LATE FUMBLE 'UNACCEPTABLE': New England Patriots quarterback Cam Newton called his fumble late in the fourth quarter of yesterday's 24-21 loss to the Buffalo Bills "unacceptable." The fumble cost the Patriots a chance at a game-tying field goal and possibly a chance to win. Newton had the ball stripped away by the Bills at Buffalo's 14-yard line with 31 seconds left. He said after the loss: "I am still jeopardizing this team's success because of my lackluster performance of protecting the football. Coach trusts me with the ball in his hand and I wouldn't want it any other way. I just have to do a better job protecting it."

Nielsen Raises Guidance Targets


  • Revenues of $1,563 million decreased 3.3% on a reported basis and decreased 3.0% on a constant currency basis- Optimization plan contributing meaningfully to profit growth
  • Raising adjusted EBITDA and adjusted EBITDA margin and Free Cash Flow guidance ranges
  • Diluted net earnings per share of $0.02 and adjusted earnings per share of $0.43
  • Announced agreement to sell Nielsen Global Connect business to Advent International, in partnership with Jim Peck, former CEO of TransUnion, for $2.7 billion; proceeds to be used primarily for debt reduction as well as for general corporate purposes, strengthening the balance sheet
Today, Nielsen Holdings plc announced its results for the quarter ended September 30, 2020. 

David Kenny
David Kenny, Chief Executive Officer, commented, "We delivered strong results in the third quarter, building on our track record of successful execution. All key metrics for both Media and Connect were in-line or ahead of expectations. Our teams moved swiftly to enact our optimization plan, driving operational efficiencies and permanent cost savings. This, in addition to actions taken earlier in the year in response to COVID-19 related revenue pressure, enabled us to drive strong adjusted EBITDA growth and higher free cash flow. We have confidence in our ability to deliver on our objectives and guidance for the full year 2020. We also announced the sale of the Nielsen Global Connect business yesterday, which we believe will deliver substantial value to our shareholders sooner than was anticipated through the planned spin-off and create more certainty for all stakeholders.

Kenny continued, "We made strong progress on key initiatives in the quarter, particularly cross-media measurement with expansion of our Connected TV footprint to now include YouTube and YouTubeTV. We continue to focus on expanding our role in the ecosystem, enabling content and measuring outcomes across key advertising categories. As we look forward, we remain focused on executing on our growth strategies that will enable us to better serve our clients."

Third Quarter 2020 Results
  • 3rd quarter revenues were $1,563 million, down 3.3% on a reported basis, or down 3.0% on a constant currency basis, compared to the prior year.
  • Nielsen Global Media revenues decreased 3.9% to $836 million on a reported basis, or a decrease of 4.2% on a constant currency basis, compared to the prior year.
  • Audience Measurement revenues decreased 1.3% on a reported basis, or a decrease of 1.6% on a constant currency basis, reflecting the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sports and non-contracted revenue and ongoing pressure in local television.
  • Plan/Optimize revenues decreased 10.4% on a reported basis, or a decrease of 10.8% on a constant currency basis, primarily reflecting the continued impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on sports, Gracenote auto and short-cycle revenue.
  • Nielsen Global Connect revenues decreased 2.5% to $727 million on a reported basis, or a decrease of 1.6% on a constant currency basis.
  • Measure revenues decreased 1.9% on a reported basis, or a decrease of 0.6% on a constant currency basis, reflecting some continued but lessening impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • Predict/Activate revenues decreased 4.2% on a reported and constant currency basis, reflecting the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly in custom insights, partially offset by the January 2020 acquisition of Precima.
  • Net income for the third quarter was $7 million on a reported basis, compared to a net loss of $472 million in the third quarter of 2019. Net income per share on a diluted basis was $0.02 per share, compared to a net loss per share on a diluted basis of $(1.33) per share for the third quarter of 2019. Net income increased compared to the prior year as the third quarter of 2019 included an impairment charge of $1,004 million, related to the writedown of goodwill in our Connect segment. This was partially offset by higher restructuring charges and higher depreciation and amortization expense compared to the prior year.
  • Adjusted earnings per share was $0.43 per share, compared to $0.51 per share in the prior year, due to higher taxes and higher depreciation and amortization expense, partially offset by higher adjusted EBITDA.
  • Adjusted EBITDA for the third quarter increased 5.3% to $501 million on a reported basis, or an increase of 6.1% on a constant currency basis, compared to the prior year. Adjusted EBITDA margin increased 259 basis points to 32.1% on a reported basis, or 277 basis points on a constant currency basis compared to the prior year, reflecting temporary actions taken in response to the COVID-19 pandemic and the benefit of permanent cost actions from the optimization plan, partially offset by revenue pressures in both segments from the COVID-19 pandemic.
Yesterday, Nielsen announced a definitive agreement under which Advent International, one of the largest and most experienced global private equity investors, in partnership with James "Jim" Peck, former Chief Executive Officer of TransUnion, will acquire the Nielsen Global Connect business for $2.7B.

Nielsen Announces Sale of Global Connect Business


Nielsen Holdings plc announced Sunday that it has signed a definitive agreement under which affiliates of Advent International, one of the largest and most experienced global private equity investors, in partnership with James "Jim" Peck, former Chief Executive Officer of TransUnion, will acquire the Nielsen Global Connect business for $2.7 billion (subject to working capital, cash, debt-like items and other customary adjustments). 

Nielsen will also receive warrants in the new company exercisable in certain circumstances. Upon completion of the transaction, Nielsen Global Connect will be a private company with the flexibility to continue investing in the development and deployment of leading-edge measurement products and solutions. The transaction was unanimously approved by Nielsen's Board of Directors.

"This is a win for both Nielsen Global Connect and for Nielsen (RemainCo), as well as for our shareholders," said David Kenny, Chief Executive Officer, Nielsen. "The sale of this business to Advent will deliver substantial value sooner than was anticipated through the planned spin-off and creates certainty for all stakeholders. The proceeds from the sale will allow Nielsen to significantly reduce debt, which will provide greater financial flexibility to execute our growth strategy and expand our role in the global media marketplace. At the same time, we are excited about this opportunity for Nielsen Global Connect and believe that moving forward as a private company will better position the business to accelerate its transformation and strengthen its market-leading position. With the support of Advent's resources and expertise, we believe the new company will create and define the next century of consumer and market measurement. We thank the entire Nielsen Global Connect team for their invaluable partnership and look forward to continuing a strong working relationship with them in the future."

"Nielsen Global Connect is the gold standard in retail measurement, with exceptional insights and unrivaled scale and coverage of the global CPG and retail markets," said Peck. "As customers face a rapidly evolving marketplace, we recognize that they have high expectations for Nielsen Global Connect to help them meet these new demands and to build on its existing core platform and other retail measurement capabilities. We intend to work with David Rawlinson and the talented management team to accelerate the delivery of new capabilities and to continue the transformation underway to build an innovative, high-performing culture acutely focused on delivering value to customers around the world."

David Rawlinson will remain CEO of Nielsen Global Connect through the close of the transaction and is expected to be part of the leadership team for the go-forward company. Upon close, Peck will be involved in the day-to-day strategic and operational activities of the company, which will be headquartered in Chicago, IL. In early 2021, the Global Connect business will be renamed NielsenIQ.

Nielsen will grant Nielsen Global Connect a license to brand its products and services with the "Nielsen" name and other Nielsen trademarks for 20 years following closing. Additionally, Nielsen and Advent will enter into agreements pursuant to which, among other things, Nielsen and Advent will provide certain transitional services to each other for periods of up to 24 months following closing, grant each other reciprocal licenses for certain data and corresponding services relating to that data for periods of up to five years following closing and grant each other licenses to use certain patents.    

100 Years Later: KDKA Pittsburgh Celebrates

Courtesy of KDKA100.org

On Nov. 2 a century ago, engineer Frank Conrad, a little bit the maverick, went where no man had gone before — into a little shed atop the tallest building in Westinghouse’s East Pittsburgh plant to broadcast history’s first radio news event, Warren G. Harding’s presidential victory over fellow Ohioan James M. Cox.

According to The Pittsburg Post-Gazette, the shed was equipped with an antenna, a 100-watt transmitter, a candlestick telephone “microphone” buffered in a cardboard box and several chairs.

Conrad had tinkered and innovated for years to bring KDKA radio into being. Its commercial license had been issued just six days before the election, and only a few thousand people had receivers to hear the results.

But the event went viral for its day.

Two years later, the U.S. Department of Commerce had licensed 500 radio stations broadcasting to mass audiences.

KDKA’s 100th anniversary is being commemorated today and Tuesday in a replica of that little shed. Duquesne University and the National Museum of Broadcasting have collaborated on several events that will be live streamed on YouTube, with a link here.

Duquesne University President Ken Gormley will narrate an almost hour-long documentary about KDKA’s pioneering legacy at 7 p.m. Monday. 2. A live celebration will follow.

On election night, Tuesday, starting at 8 p.m., KDKA personalities and Duquesne University officials will discuss parallels between the 1920 and 2020 elections and the importance of KDKA and its role in the original broadcast.

That broadcast will be re-enacted with help from radio historians.

In 1920, the Pittsburgh Post, predecessor of the Post-Gazette, supplied periodic election returns to the broadcasters in the shed, then they announced the results to listening parties around Pittsburgh and across the Midwest.



CLICK HERE FOR MORE ON KDKA & THE BEGINNING OF COMMERCIAL AM RADIO

NYC Radio: WFAN, WEPN Sports Wars To Heat-Up


WFAN 101.9 FM / 660 AM  morning host Boomer Esiason made a bold on air-prediction Friday morning:

"They’re going to win that time slot," he said of his former partner, Craig Carton, and Evan Roberts, Carton's new afternoon drive-time partner. "They’re going to crush the other guys. I guarantee it.

"The other guys" are ESPN New York’s Michael Kay and friends, who have a new challenge now after out-rating Mike Francesa for the first time in last autumn’s book and handily beating Roberts and Joe Benigno this year, writes Neil Best at Newsday.

Carton and Roberts start Nov. 9, and the fact that the stations’ old afternoon ratings wars are about to heat up again is one example of why WFAN quickly brought back Carton after he spent a year in federal prison for fraud.

ESPN declined to comment on what Esiason said, but Carton echoed him, albeit more cautiously.

"I love having that support," Carton told Newsday on Friday. "And yeah, listen, that’s my plan, for sure."

Carton frequently finished No. 1 among men ages 25-54 with Esiason from 2007-17. But that was against national programming. Kay will be difficult to dislodge.

Chris Oliviero, the market manager for Entercom New York, WFAN’s parent company, considers the executives at ESPN friends but acknowledged the battle to come.

"’Crush’ might be too extreme of a word, but I would say this: Craig Carton has never not been No. 1 wherever he’s worked.

It has been a challenging business year for most media companies, and even though Oliviero said WFAN is faring better month by month, having a jolt of publicity and energy from Carton should help.

Roberts joined Carton for part of the hour-plus. Carton, Oliviero and Entercom senior VP Mark Chernoff all said they were pleased with the byplay and expect the pairing will work.

Nuvoodoo Research: Here's When To Start Playing Holiday Hits


Every Halloween morning for over fifty years the folks at NuVoodoo Research have been pulling their Christmas moose, Medford Mike, out of his enclosure to forecast when stations should start All Christmas programming. According to a new blog posting, the legend goes that if Mike sees his shadow, stations should begin Christmas programming before Thanksgiving. If he doesn’t see his shadow, they should wait until at least Thanksgiving.

With Thanksgiving Day kicking off the last Nielsen survey week in Diary Markets and the last week of the December month in PPM, NuVoodoo was hoping for a sunny morning on Saturday. Not wanting to risk million-dollar programming decisions entirely on a moose, they gathered guidance from a thousand interviews with adults 18-64 nationwide a couple weeks ago.

Slightly over half their respondents are at least looking forward to hearing Christmas music – with fully 20% saying they can’t wait for it. There’s another 30% who say they tolerate Christmas music. Eleven percent admit they hate it.

As showed last week, majorities of the P1 groups for CHR, AC and Country in our sample are looking forward to hearing Christmas music.

Asking respondents to stand in for Mike the moose, here’s where NuVoodoo asked them to make the impossible judgment of when they’d use an all-Christmas-music station. People are notoriously terrible at predicting their behavior, which is why they’re tempted to rely on the moose. Among those who are looking forward to hearing Christmas music, nearly 3 in 4 are primed for Santa taking over the airwaves around Thanksgiving and half of that group – fully 3 in 8 of those looking forward to Christmas music – will be ready after the election.

Report: Joe Rogan Podcast Troubles Some At Spotify


Spotify Technology $100 million bet on Joe Rogan has put the audiostreaming company in business with one of podcasting’s most popular—and polarizing—voices. Amid controversy, executives are standing by that voice, reports The Wall Street Journal.

The deal to bring Rogan to Spotify is already showing signs of success. His millions of loyal fans have made “The Joe Rogan Experience” podcast Spotify’s No. 1 show since arriving on the platform in September, “outperforming our audience expectations,” the company said when reporting its earnings Thursday. The company’s stock has run up more than 50% since the deal was announced in May.

Rogan’s show, which also tops Apple Podcast charts and other rankings, has troubled some company employees, who in a town-hall meeting in September expressed concern over material they felt was anti-transgender, according to people familiar with the matter.

Recent appearances on the show from two guests—first Abigail Shrier, an author critical of transgender issues; then Alex Jones, a radio host and the publisher of InfoWars, whose content has been removed from Facebook, Apple, YouTube and Spotify—have sparked outrage from listeners inside and outside the company who have posted on social media to express their disagreement.

A recent thread in the company’s #ethics-club channel centered on Rogan’s episode with Jones. Employees circulated information on how to flag content for review by Spotify’s trust-and-safety team, according to people familiar with the matter. That team is responsible for determining whether shows or music on the platform violate company policies barring content that incites violence or hatred, and can remove content if it crosses those lines.

Rogan’s episodes so far have passed muster with the company’s content policies, according to people familiar with the matter. Chief Executive Daniel Ek reiterated Thursday his desire to make Spotify the “largest audio platform in the world”—and said that ambition involves embracing diverse voices and differing opinions as the company chases scale in podcasting.

Rogan’s show will begin appearing exclusively on Spotify later this year; the exact length of his multiyear deal hasn’t been made public. Spotify has spent more than $500 million in the past two years acquiring podcasting companies, including Gimlet Media and Bill Simmons’s Ringer, to cement itself as a publisher in news, sports and storytelling.

The deal with Mr. Rogan, a comedian and former mixed-martial-arts commentator who last year said his show had 190 million monthly downloads, brings the Stockholm-based Spotify into more edgy territory. The reaction to his arrival suggests that listeners and employees are increasingly trying to hold the company responsible for the content it hosts.

Value of Song Catalogs Rising Thanks To Streaming


Investors backing musical heavy hitters such as Adele, Bon Jovi and Journey are profiting this year as homebound listeners tune in to music-streaming services, boosting the value of song catalogs and the royalty payments they generate, according to The Wall Street Journal.

Streaming figures have bounced back after a pandemic-induced blip earlier in the year. Third-quarter results from music-streaming market bellwether Spotify Technology showed the company added more users than expected and users spent more time listening. Shares of Spotify are up 60% this year, and have more than doubled since the start of 2019. New York-listed shares of Chinese streaming company Tencent Music Entertainment Group have risen more than 26% this year.

The resilience of recorded-music revenue has benefited rights holders who earn money when songs are streamed, bought or performed. Now one New-York based publisher is pursuing an initial public offering in a bid to cash in on the market’s strength.

Music royalties have grown more popular with investors as the growth of streaming services has helped reinvigorate the market for recorded music.

WSJ Graphic


Streaming revenue rose to $11.4 billion last year from $9.2 billion in 2018, according to the International Federation of the Phonographic Industry, accounting for more than half of global recorded-music revenue for the first time. Recorded-music revenue topped $20 billion in 2019 for the first time since 2004. Goldman Sachs estimates the market could hit $45 billion by 2030.

“There’s a clear structural growth trend underway,” said Solomon Nevins, portfolio manager for alternatives at CCLA Investment Management, which holds a position in the Hipgnosis Songs Fund worth about £51 million, equivalent to roughly $66 million.

Spotify said it added about six million premium subscribers in the three months to September, bringing its total to 144 million, and expects to end the year with as many as 154 million.

Radio Vet Jacent Jackson Joins 'Sound That Brands'

Jacent Jackson
Sound That BRANDS, the Los Angeles-based podcasting studio specializing in branded audio content for national advertisers, has announced the addition of veteran radio strategist Jacent Jackson to the team as senior producer.

Jacent’s work as a radio programmer and brand manager includes the former Live 105 and KFOG/San Francisco, WLUM/Milwaukee and Q101/Chicago. His voice work has appeared on social and in digital media for clients such as Netflix and YouTube pop culture channel Looper, with his work streamed billions of times across digital platforms.

He has most recently been a contributing writer and producer at Sound That BRANDS working with clients in the fields of entertainment, food and wine, and education among others.

“Jacent is smart and creative and has helped us get notable results for our clients. Sound That BRANDS is growing quickly, so we’re going to need more talented, experienced producers like Jacent,” said Dave Beasing, Founder/CEO of Sound That BRANDS.

“Nothing beats a good story, and I’m thrilled to be helping tell stories that connect people and brands. Special thanks to Dave Beasing, Rick Cummings, and the entire team for adding an exciting new chapter to my own story,” Jackson said.

Among other projects, Jacent is now the lead producer and voiceover talent for a new podcast called “Voices of Victors” presented by the Alumni Association of the University of Michigan.

Nov 2 Radio History




➦In 1920...KDKA in Pittsburgh went on the air as the first commercial radio station, a distinction that has also been challenged by other stations (see below), although it has claimed to be the "world's first commercially licensed radio station": WWJ in Detroit, Michigan, lists its "First Air Date" as August 20, 1920.

Listen to announcer Leo Rosenberg, radio's first announcer:


Frank Conrad's experimental 75-watt transmitter
Frank Conrad
KDKA's roots began with the efforts of Westinghouse employee Frank Conrad who operated KDKA's predecessor 75 watt 8XK from the Pittsburgh suburb of Wilkinsburg from 1916. Conrad, who had supervised the manufacturing of military receivers during WWI, broadcast phonograph music and communicated with other amateur radio operators via 8YK. On September 29, 1920, the Joseph Horne department store in Pittsburgh began advertising amateur wireless sets for $10, which could be used to listen to Conrad’s broadcasts.

Westinghouse vice president and Conrad’s supervisor, Harry P. Davis, saw the advertisement and recognized the economic potential of radio. Instead of it being limited as a hobby to scientific experimenters, radio could be marketed to a mainstream audience. Consequently, Davis asked Conrad to build a 100-watt transmitter, which would air programming intended to create widespread demand for Westinghouse receivers.

KDKA 11/2/20, Coverage of Harding-Cox 
The KDKA callsign was assigned sequentially from a list maintained for the use of US-registry maritime stations, and on November 2, 1920, KDKA broadcast the US presidential election returns from a shack on the roof of the K Building of the Westinghouse Electric Company "East Pittsburgh Works" in Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania.  Four men basically manned that first broadcast: Engineer William Thomas; telephone line operator John Frazier; R.S. McClelland, a standby and Leo Rosenberg, radio’s first announcer.

The election results were relayed to about 1,000 listeners, who learned that Warren Harding beat James Cox in the race for the Oval Office.

The original broadcast was said to be heard as far away as Canada. KDKA continued to broadcast from the Westinghouse building for many months.

Soon after its successful election coverage, KDKA upgraded to a 100-watt transmitter.

Early programming often featured live musical performances from a Westinghouse band. KDKA provided its first remote broadcast by airing a choir, live, from the Pittsburg Calvary Baptist Church in January 1921.  On January 15, 1921, at 8 p.m., KDKA broadcast a speech on European relief by Herbert Hoover from the Duquesne Club in Pittsburgh that was transmitted ten miles down a telephone line to Westinghouse's East Pittsburgh Works.

On July 2, 1921, the station featured the first national broadcast with live commentary of the Jack Dempsey - Georges Carpentier fight via teletype from New Jersey.  Also in 1921 the station had the first broadcasts of major league professional baseball games and the first broadcast college football game.


KDKA hosted political comedian Will Rogers in his very first radio appearance in 1922. KDKA played popular music and advertisers began sponsoring special radio programs like The Philco Hour, The Maxwell House Hour and The Wrigley Party.

In 1923, KDKA began simulcasting its AM medium-wave broadcasts on shortwave.


Along with RCA and General Electric, Westinghouse was a co-founder of NBC in 1926, and thus KDKA was affiliated with the new network. When NBC decided to split its network up into two networks (NBC Red Network and NBC Blue Network), KDKA affiliated with the NBC Blue Network.


In reality, It is difficult to answer the question, "Who was the first broadcaster?" Much depends on what is defined as broadcasting . As far as AM radio is concerned, the grandfather of the broadcast industry, there were five stations that exhibited a rich tradition of being first in broadcasting:
  • KDKA, Pittsburgh: Dr. Frank Conrad conducted the experimental work that led to the establishment of KDKA, which made its formal debut on November 2, 1920. Conrad was apparently the first to use the term "broadcast" to describe a radio service.
  • WWJ, Detroit: The birthplace of broadcasting at WWJ was the Detroit News. The station signed on the air August 20, 1920. It was the first station to be operated by a newspaper, and the first commercial station to broadcast regularly scheduled daily programs.
  • KCBS, San Jose:Doc Herrold's station at San Jose (which eventually became KCBS, San Francisco) began as an experimental operation with the first documented transmissions occurring in 1909. It is said of Herrold that he conceived the idea of broadcasting information and entertainment programs to the public.
  • WHA, the University of Wisconsin: 9XM-WHA achieved its first successful transmission of voice and music in 1917 from the University of Wisconsin campus in Madison. Pioneers in the establishment of the station were Malcolm Hansen and Professor Earle Terry.
  • WGY, Schnectady, NY: Operated by the General Electric Company, WGY served as the test bed for many experiments in AM radio. Later efforts at the facility were directed toward perfecting FM and television transmission.
Each of these stations was first in its own way, and each played a significant role in establishing the foundation for broadcasting. Contributions included both equipment and technology.


The Baltimore News-1925
➦In 1925...WBAL began broadcasting as a subsidiary of the Consolidated Gas Electric Light and Power Company, a predecessor of Constellation Energy.

WBAL's initial broadcasting studio was located at the utility's offices on Lexington Street, and it operated as part of the Blue Network of the National Broadcasting Company.  On January 12, 1935, with radio becoming more commercialized, there was little justification for public service company ownership of a radio station, and WBAL was sold to the Hearst-controlled American Radio News Corporation, who operated it alongside the Baltimore News-Post and Baltimore American (later merged as the Baltimore News-American).

During the 1960s, WBAL had a full service Middle Of The Road music format heavily emphasizing personality. The station played a mix of soft rock and roll and non rock songs/standards.

By the early 1970s, the station had a full-service adult contemporary music format with the exception of weekday evenings, where the station employed talk programming. Among its personalities during that period were program host Jay Grayson, Harley Brinsfield (who had a long-running Saturday night jazz music program, The Harley Show), and White House-accredited newsman Galen Fromme.

In the early 1980s, WBAL began running talk shows overnights as well as evenings and continued to play some music during the day. Music gradually decreased and in the fall of 1985, WBAL had transitioned to its current news-talk format, winning 19 national Edward R. Murrow Awards since then – the most of any local U.S. radio station.

In addition to its analog 1090 kHz signal, WBAL is repeated on WIYY 979.9 FM HD2.


The Dixie Spiritual Singers performed on the first broadcast of WRVA
➦In 1925...Although three-letter call signs were still available when the station was started, "WRVA" was chosen since RVA was short for Richmond, VA. WRVA 1140 kHz was launched at 9:00 p.m. on November 2, 1925. Known initially as "Edgeworth Radio", it was owned by Larus and Brother, a tobacco company known as the House of Edgeworth. The radio station was originally operated as a public service 2 nights per week.

The early WRVA facilities were a small studio in a corner of a warehouse on Richmond's Tobacco Row and a tower mounted on the roof of the building. It soon became a vital and profitable business enterprise.

By 1930, WRVA was on-the-air 7 days a week, 24 hours daily, with broadcasting power increased to 50,000 watts.

In the late 1940s, WRVA's facilities extended beyond Richmond; an ad in a 1947 issue of the trade magazine Broadcasting proclaimed "Studios in Richmond and Norfolk, Virginia." The same ad noted that WRVA was "Virginia's only 50,000 watt radio station."




➦In 1931...the 15-minute daily drama “Myrt and Marge” was heard for the first time — at 7 pm on CBS radio. The program centered on two chorus girls who competed for the same parts and the same men. The creator and writer of the series, Myrtle Vail, also played the role of Myrt; and the original Marge was performed by Vail’s daughter, Donna Fick. Three other performers played the part when Donna died giving birth.


Myrt and Marge continued for 11 years, most of the time as part of the daytime soap opera block.


➦In 1936...The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation replaced the Canadian Radio Broadcasting Commission and is the country's oldest existing broadcasting network. The service aired commercials until 1974. Since then, like the BBC, CBC Radio has been commercial-free.
NY Times Ad appeared November 1, 1946


➦In 1946...WEAF, New York changed its call letters to WNBC.

N Y Times story
WNBC signed on for the first time on March 2, 1922, as WEAF, owned by AT&T Western Electric. It was the first radio station in New York City.

The call are popularly thought to have stood for Western Electric AT&T Fone or Water, Earth, Air, and Fire (the 4 classical elements).  However, records suggest that the call letters were assigned from an alphabetical sequence. The first assigned call was actually WDAM; it was quickly dropped, but presumably came from the same alphabetical sequence.


In 1926, WEAF was purchased by the Radio Corporation of America, making it a sister station to WJZ. RCA then formed the National Broadcasting Company, which operated two radio chains.

WEAF became the flagship station of the NBC Red Network. The other chain was the NBC Blue Network, whose programming originated at WJZ (now WABC), also owned by RCA. As a result of the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement of 1941, WEAF became a clear channel station, and could be heard across most of the eastern half of North America at night.


➦In 1946...WABC, New York became WCBS.


NY Times Ad 11/02/46
The station's history traces back to 1924, when Alfred H. Grebe started WAHG at 920 AM. WAHG was a pioneering station in New York, and was one of the first commercial radio stations to broadcast from remote locations including horse races and yachting events. Two years later, in 1926, Alfred Grebe changed the station's call sign to WABC (for his Atlantic Broadcasting Company) after concluding a business arrangement with the Ashland Battery Company (which had owned the call sign for a station in Asheville, North Carolina) and moved his studios to West 57th Street, which would not be the last time the station would operate from 57th Street.

In 1928, General Order 40 moved the station's frequency to 970 AM, and the station became a part-time affiliate of the Columbia Broadcasting System, which was looking for a full-time radio presence in New York City (CBS's first flagship was WOR). After a short time broadcasting CBS programming three days a week, CBS president William S. Paley purchased WABC and it became a subsidiary of CBS.

Soon after this purchase the station moved to a new frequency, this time to 860 AM, and would eventually increase its transmitting power from 5,000 to its present 50,000 watts. The station also moved its studios into the CBS headquarters at 485 Madison Avenue (on the corner of 52nd Street). The station, still operating as WABC, featured a mix of local interest programming, ethnic content and music programs from CBS's national feed. As time went by, WABC turned more and more to the national programming provided by CBS and its affiliates, and its broadcast day was influenced by CBS's growing interest in news programming.

In 1939, the broadcasting operations were moved across 52nd Street from the headquarters to the new CBS Studio Building.

In 1941, WABC moved to the frequency it currently occupies, 880 AM, and changed its call letters to WCBS on November 2, 1946, to identify more closely with its parent network, the Columbia Broadcasting System or CBS, and avoid possible confusion with the rival network of the American Broadcasting Company (ABC), which had begun operation in 1943. As a result, this station has no relation to the longtime ABC radio flagship station on 770 AM that began in 1921 as WJZ, and has operated as WABC since 1953.



➦In 1958...Billboard magazine introduced a new chart. It ranked the top singles in order, from number 1 to 100. Previously, only 30 records had been on the weekly hit list. It would take Casey Kasem to count ‘em down backwards from #40 to #1 years later.


➦In 1964...Columbia Broadcasting System bought 80% share in the New York Yankees Baseball Club for $11.2 million; later purchases club outright.


➦In 1995...Spanish Broadcasting System bought NYC radio station WPAT-FM for $83.5M.

Salty Brine - 1943
➦In 2004... Providence, Rhode Island radio personality Walter Leslie "Salty" Brine, Jr., the morning host on WPRO 630 AM for 51 years, died at age 86.

"Salty" Brine was born on August 8, 1918 in Boston, MA, the last of four children. His parents were from Nova Scotia; his father was a carpenter. For over 50 years the morning host on popular AM-radio station WPRO, and for 13 years (1955-1968) the host of Salty's Shack, a live children's television broadcast, Mr. Brine has become somewhat of a cultural icon to thousands of Rhode Island residents.

Salty Brine
His first jobs in radio were all in Massachusetts, at WNAC, WESX in Salem, and WCOP in Boston. Brine became a staff announcer at WPRO in September of 1942.

In 1943, Brine began his 50-year run as WPRO's morning announcer on a news show called the TNT Revue, short for "Time, News and Temperature". His radio name derived from the nickname his friends gave him, "Walt the Salt.  Brine was as popular with advertisers as he was with regular listeners, as sales tended to increase in response to his presentation of product advertisements.

Breaking into television in 1955, WPRO broadcast a nautically-themed children's program called Salty Brine's Shack, produced live, which Mr. Brine hosted with a collie named Jeff. Both Salty and Jeff evolved into local celebrities. The show ran until 1968.  Salty Brine retired from WPRO in 1993.

Brine became a member of the Rhode Island Heritage Hall of Fame in 1979.

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Singer Jay Black (Jay and the Americans) is 82. 
  • Actor Stefanie Powers is 78. 
  • Singer-actor J.D. Souther (“Nashville”) is 75. 
  • Actor Kate Linder (“The Young and the Restless”) is 73. 
  • Drummer Carter Beauford of the Dave Matthews Band is 62. 
  • Actor Peter Mullan (“Trainspotting”) is 61. 
  • Singer k.d. lang is 59. 
  • Bassist Bobby Dall of Poison is 57. 
  • Actor Jenny Robertson (film’s “Bull Durham,” TV’s “Reno 911!”) is 57. 
  • Jenny Robertson is 57
    Actor Lauren Velez (“Dexter”) is 56. 
  • Actor David Schwimmer (“Friends”) is 54. 
  • Singer Alvin Chea of Take 6 is 53. 
  • Jazz singer Kurt Elling is 53. 
  • Bassist Fieldy of Korn is 51. 
  • Actor Meta Golding (“The Hunger Games: Catching Fire”) is 49. 
  • Singer-guitarist John Hampson of Nine Days is 49. 
  • Actor Marisol Nichols (“Riverdale”) is 49. 
  • Singer Timothy Christian Riley of Tony! Toni! Tone! is 46. 
  • Rapper Nelly is 46. 
  • Actor Danny Cooksey (“Diff’rent Strokes”) is 45. 
  • Guitarist Chris Walla of Death Cab For Cutie is 45. 
  • TV personality Karamo Brown (“Queer Eye”) is 40. 
  • Actor-singer Kendall Schmidt (“Big Time Rush”) is 30.