Thursday, February 20, 2014

Report: Gender Diversity Stagnant In Newsrooms

According to Women's Media Center,  Gender Diversity remains stagnant in newsrooms and horrendous in sports journalism.

Those are just some of the conclucsions in “Status of Women in the U.S. Media 2014,” the annual report released by the Women’s Media Center, which tracks the depiction, participation and representation of women across various areas of journalism and entertainment.

Released on Wednesday and comprising statistics from numerous news outlets and advocacy groups, the 67-page report is an amalgam of stubbornly persistent statistics coupled with occasional hints of progress. Where women media professionals have made inroads in some disciplines, their representation has flat-lined or even regressed in other areas.

Of women in radio news departments....
Among the findings:
  • The number of women in radio news jumped 8 percent from 2012 to 2013, narrowing one of the historically widest gender gaps in the new industry. Elsewhere in broadcast news, there were losses in female on-air talent and broadcast maanagers.
  • Two women, 1.09 percent, were among the 183 sports radio hosts on Talkers magazine 'Heavy Hundred' List.  The Top Ten among Talker's news talk show 'Heavy Hundred' included no women.
Those making the list:
  • No. 24 Andrea Tantaros
  • No. 42 Dr. Joy Browne
  • No. 49 Randi Rhodes
  • No. 50 Kim Komando
  • No. 53 Dr. Laura Schlessinger
  • No. 61 Rose Tennent (of The War Room With Quinn & Rose)
  • No. 64 Terry Gross (NPR)
  • No. 80 Heidi Harris (of Heidi Harris, Brian Whitman and Gelnn Shapiro)
  • No. 81 Leslie Marshall
  • No. 83 Dana Loesch
  • No. 99 Amy Iverson (of Amy Iverson & Jay McFarland)
Female general managers in radio now comprise 14 percent of all general managers down from 2012's 19.3 percent.

Tucson Radio: Rick Hunter Wins Golden Mic Award

Rick Hunter
In the radio world, there are folks whose names you know, and others whose voices you know, writes John Schuster at tucsonweekly.com.  The latter belong to the voiceover people, and one of those familiar voiceover talents nabbed this year's AAF Tucson Golden Mic Award, presently annually by the Tucson chapter of the American Advertising Federation.

Rick Hunter has been the longtime voice of commercials for Tucson's Clear Channel radio operation, in addition to a number of other local assignments that have come his way.

Others who have won Golden Mic awards include Bobby Rich, Guy Atchley, Brian Jeffries, Chuck George, Ed Alexander, Bill Buckmaster, Allen Kath and John C. Scott. This year's award ceremony was held Saturday, Feb. 15.

R.I.P.: NC Radio Personality Sam Paul Combs

Sam Paul Combs
Former Marion, NC radio announcer and singer Sam Paul Combs passed away last week after a period of declining health.

He was 79, according to mcdowellnews.com.

For two decades, Combs was the morning host on WBRM  1250 AM, starting in 1980.

“He was the voice of WBRM for all those years,” said Annette Bryant, the station’s owner. “He was larger than life. He was talented in so many areas.”

“He was a great employee, a great friend,” said Bryant.

Combs had a long career in broadcasting in Kentucky before arriving in North Carolina in 1980.

From 1988 to 1992, Combs took a break from his work with WBRM. He was the general manager at radio station WTOE in Spruce Pine, NC for two years.

R.I.P.: Baltimore Broadcaster Mike Roberts

Mike Roberts
Radio One/Baltimore has announced the death of Mike Roberts.

He was 54.

Roberts has been part of the Radio One family for nearly 30 years. He was most recently the Station Coordinator for WOLB 1010 AM and Spirit 1400. He could also be heard on-air on weekends on WWIN 95.9 FM Magic.

Radio One Baltimore’s General Manager Howard Mazer had this to say about Mike Roberts –

“We will miss Mike’s smiling face and great stories from his radio career. Please keep Mike and his family in your thoughts and prayers.”

R.I.P.: Longtime CenPA Personality Ben Barber

Ben Barber
Longtime Carlisle-area radio personality Ben Barber died Tuesday following a two-year battle with bladder cancer.

Barber was 70, according to The Patriot-News.

Barber  spent 50 years in radio, retired from WHYL 960 AM in September.

“It will really be something,” Donna said of the event she is putting together for the regional radio icon. “He was a pioneer [in radio]. He is the reason there are so many DJs from Cumberland County.”

Barber, whose hosted the “Breakfast with Ben” radio show at WHYL, was predeceased by a son.

He started his radio career after attending Elkins Institute of Radio and Electronics in Chicago in 1963.

He landed his first radio job at WEZN in Elizabethtown. He wasn’t there long, though, and left to join Wormleysburg station WCMB 1460 AM in Wormleysburg/Harrisburg from 1963 to 1966.

He arrived at WHYL just outside Carlisle in 1966, where he stayed until 1979, before leaving to join its competitor W100. But he came back to WHYL in 2004 and stayed there until retirement.

February 20 In Radio History

In 1900...Radio pionner, Graham Spry, was born in St. Thomas, Ontario, Canada.

In 1922...WGY-AM, Schenectady, NY went on the air. As early as 1912, General Electric company in Schenectady began experimenting with radio transmissions, being granted a class 2-Experimental license for 2XI on August 13, 1912 by the Commerce Department.

WGY signed on on February 20, 1922 at 7:47pm at 360 meters wavelength (about 833 kHz), with Kolin Hager at the mike, or as he was known on the air, as KH. Hager signed on with the stations call letters, explaining the W is for wireless, G for General Electric, and Y, the last letter in Schenectady.


The first broadcast lasted for about one hour and consisted of live music and announcements of song titles and other information. The early broadcasts originated from building 36 at the General Electric Plant in Schenectady. The original transmitter produced an antenna power of 1,500 watts into a T top wire antenna, located about 1/2 mile away, also at the GE plant.

WGY led the way in radio drama. In 1922 Edward H. Smith, director of a community-theater group called the Masque in nearby Troy, suggested weekly forty-minute adaptations of plays to WGY station manager Kolin Hager. Hager took him up on it and the troupe performed on the weekly WGY Players, radio’s first dramatic series.

Kolin Hagar
During their initial broadcast—of Eugene Walter’s The Wolf on August 3, 1922—Smith became the electronic media’s first Foley artist when he slapped a couple of two-by-fours together to simulate the slamming of a door, and radio sound effects were born. While the invisible audience could not see that the actors wore costumes and makeup—which were expected to enhance performance but didn’t and were soon discarded—they could hear the WGY Orchestra providing music between acts.

By May 15, 1923 the station was operating on 790 kHz with a frequency/time share agreement with RPI's WHAZ. Later, WHAZ moved to 1300 kHz allowing WGY to operate full-time on 790 kHz.

In 1924, the transmitter site was moved to its current location in the Town of Rotterdam known as South Schenectady. From this site, the station's power levels were increased first to 5,000 watts, then 10,000 watts and finally to 50,000 watts on July 18, 1925. Temporary broadcasts were carried out at the 100 KW (August 4, 1926) and 200 KW (March 9, 1930) power levels. From those broadcasts, the station received reception letters and telegrams from as far away as New Zealand. Plans were to make those power increases permanent, but were never carried out.

WGY also used the first Condenser microphone, developed by General Electric for radio studio applications, on February 7, 1923.

Amelia Earhart
In 1923, WGY formed the first radio network with WJZ and WRC, however the station also broadcast programs from rival station WEAF. Later in 1925, the New York State radio network was formed with WMAK, WHAM, WFBL, and WGY. In 1926, WGY affiliated with the WEAF-based NBC Red Network, and after the split of the sister NBC Blue network into today's ABC Radio, WGY remained with NBC Radio until it folded in 1989.

To add to their laurels, six years later the Players performed an old spy melodrama titled The Queen’s Messenger in the world’s first dramatic program to be broadcast simultaneously over both radio and the new medium called television.

“Radio station WGY had cornered the market on talk and music by 1928,” the Daily Gazette recalled. “Scientists from the General Electric Co. could have winked to their audience and said, ‘You ain't seen nothing yet.’ The smart guys who developed amplifiers, transmitters and bright lights were working on that next step—sound and pictures. On Tuesday, Sept. 11, 1928, they succeeded. WGY became the first radio station in the world to televise a drama on separate radio channels.”


In 1941, WGY changed frequency from 790 kHz to 810 kHz to comply with the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement also known as NARBA. In 1942, during World War II, a concrete wall was built around the base of the tower to prevent saboteurs from shooting out the base insulator on the tower and taking the station off the air.

WGY was the flagship station of General Electric's broadcasting group until 1983 when it was sold to Empire Radio Partners, Inc. General Electric also owned pioneering sister stations in television (WRGB-TV, signed on as WGY-TV in 1928) and FM radio (W2XOY, later WGFM, then WGY-FM, and today WRVE, signed on 1940).

As the golden age of radio ended, WGY evolved into a full service middle of the road format, slowly evolving as programming tastes changed. The station changed from full service to news/talk on Memorial Day Weekend, 1994.

Dame Media, Inc acquired WGY and WGY-FM the during proceedings in the Philadelphia bankruptcy court, late 1993. Dame moved the studios to One Washington Square at the end of Washington Avenue Extension, in the west end of Albany, New York late 1994, where they remained until 2005.

In 1999, Dame Media sold its entire radio group to Clear Channel, whose ownership remains to this day. Clear Channel combined all of its radio station studio operations into the former CHP (Community Health Plan) building on Route 7 (Troy-Schenectady Road) in Latham August, 2005.

On September 20, 2010, WGY began simulcasting its programming on 103.1 FM (the former WHRL, which took the calls WGY-FM, previously on 99.5 FM). WGY 103.1 FM broadcasts at 5,600 watts power.

In 1949...future teen singing idol, Ricky Nelson, began performing on his parents' Radio show. (Ozzie and Harriet Nelson).

In 1950...WOL-AM in Washington DC swaps calls with WWDC


In 1971...Natl Emergency Center erroneously orders US radio & TV stations to go off the air. Mistake wasn't resolved for 30 minutes



In 2006...Sportscaster Curt Gowdy, who spent 15 years with the Boston Red Sox, 13 years at NBC, had brief stays at CBS and ABC, and is enshrined in 22 sports Halls of Fame, died of leukemia at age 86.


In 2012...Longtime Seattle radio personality (KOL, KBSG) Danny Holiday died at the age of 68. Always filled with tenacity, vim and vigor, Dan began his career sweeping floors at KRKO at 8 and the rest is history. Dan's career was marked with lasting friendships and encounters with the greats of R&R. He knew the history first hand. Dan was an inductee into the NW Music Hall of Fame in 1990, creator of the Danny Holiday Rock and Roll Time Machine

Wednesday, February 19, 2014

Report: FCC To Intro New Rules On Net Neutrality

The Federal Communications Commission said Wednesday that it will craft new rules to prevent Internet service providers from charging companies like Netflix Inc. or Google Inc. a toll to reach consumers at the highest speeds, according to The Wall Steet Journal.

The guidelines are expected to ban broadband providers from blocking or slowing down access to any websites. Supporters say the concept, known as "net neutrality," is crucial to keeping the Internet open and allowing smaller companies to compete with the biggest content providers. But the courts have ruled against the FCC's last two attempts to enforce net neutrality on companies like Comcast Corp. and Verizon Communications Inc. that provide Internet connections to households and businesses.

Last month, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit threw out FCC rules barring broadband providers from blocking or slowing down websites, but the court acknowledged the commission has some authority regulate broadband company practices. The FCC on Wednesday said it won't appeal the D.C. Circuit's ruling and will instead attempt to reintroduce rules under legal authority outlined by the court's ruling.

Read More Now.

Philly Radio: CBS Radio Gets OK For New WPHT Aux Tower

CBS Radio can move forward with plans for an auxiliary tower along the border between Cinnaminson and Moorestown, the Moorestown NJ Zoning Board of Adjustment ruled Tuesday night, according Cinnaminson Patch.

The board voted 7-0 to allow the company to install the tower at 1267 North Church Street in Moorestown. The tower would technically be located in an industrial area in Moorestown, but it would be up against a residential area in Cinnaminson.

The board approved the company’s requests for use variances to install the tower with the understanding the auxiliary tower and the original tower located 350 feet from the auxiliary tower would never be in use simultaneously, and with the understanding CBS wouldn’t allow any other company to use the tower.

CBS needed the use variances to construct the tower in a Specially Restricted zone (SRI) and to exceed the 45-foot height restriction imposed on buildings in the SRI zone.

The auxiliary tower is to be used as a backup for WPHT 1210 AM radio, but none of the other stations CBS operates in the area.

The auxiliary tower is smaller than the existing tower, and won’t reach the same coverage area as the existing tower, which predates the residential area in Cinnaminson. The tower was constructed in 1940.


Residents from both Cinnaminson and Moorestown raised concerns over health issues during the nearly four-hour meeting Tuesday night.

Dr. Kenneth Foster, a professor in bioengineering at the University of Pennsylvania, was called upon as an independent witness for the zoning board to analyze and discuss health risks related to AM towers.

He testified there is no definite connection between AM radio towers and illness caused by radioactivity, classifying some studies that have shown a connection as weak and discredited among the scientific community.

Read More Now

DC Radio: Tough Winter Helps WTOP Pull Away From WAMU

In our Nation’s Capital, All Newser WTOP 103.5 FM regained the top spot 6+ moving 7.5—9.2 to get the best of American University's N/T WAMU, which bounced back 6.2—7.6 to place #2.

The January figures from Nielsen show CCM+E Top 40 WIHT 99.5 FM Hot scored its best numbers since last summer 6.1--6.4 to move from #4 to #3 to tie Howard University's Urban AC WHUR, which moved up from fifth place with a 5.2—6.4 showing. . Radio One Urban AC WMMJ 102.3 FM Majic remained at #5 5.2--5.0.

Holiday winner CCM+E AC WASH dropped 10.6-4.6 to fall from #1 to #6.

25-54: WHUR...WIHT tied WTOP...WAMU...WMMJ

18-34: WIHT...WPGC...WLZL...WKYS...WWDC

18-49: WIHT...WHUR...WTOP...WPGC...WKYS

Cume: WTOP-FM 1,191,700...WIHT-FM 1,190,500...WASH-FM 1,120,800...WPGC-FM 829,300...WIAD-FM 772,000


Nielsen Tuesday released January PPM results for the following markets:
  • Washington DC
  • Boston MA
  • Miami-Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood
  • Detroit
  • Seattle-Tacoma
  • Phoenix
  • Minneapolis-St. Paul
  • San Diego
  • Tampa-St. Peteresburg-Sarasota
  • Denver-Boulder
  • Baltimore
  • St. Louis
To see the Topline results for Nielsen subscribers, Click Here.

Houston-Galveston Radio: KODA Loses 5+ Shares, But Still #1

CCM+E AC KODA 99.1 FM Sunny dropped like a rock 12.2—7.0, but losing the glow of the Holiday Book did not affect its 6+ #1 ranking.

Nielsen's January PPM shows Cox Radio's Country KKBQ 92.9 FM 93Q gainining 1.2 share moving 5.4—6.6 to move up from #4 to #2. 

Radio One's Urban AC KMJQ 102.1 FM Majic lost 6.0—5.4, to remain steady at #3 and tied with cluster mate Top 40 KBXX which 92.9 FM dropped 7.7—5.4.

Classic Rock KGLK 1075. FM The Eagle benefited from KKRW flipping and soared from a tie at #10 to #5 moving 3.3--5.2.

25-54: KKBQ...KODA...KGLK tied KLTN...KTBZ

18-34: KBXX...KKBQ...KQBT...KLTN...KTBZ

18-49: KKBQ...KBXX...KODA...KLTN...KTBZ

Cume: KODA-FM 1,962,800...KRBE-FM 1,324,600...KBXX-FM 1,248,600...KHMX-FM 1,228,400...KKBQ-FM 1,192,800

Also of note: CCM+E's Urban AC KQBT (formerly KKRW)  The Beat rose #19 into a tie at #10 gaining 2.2-3.9.


Nielsen Tuesday released January PPM results for the following markets:
  • Washington DC
  • Boston MA
  • Miami-Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood
  • Detroit
  • Seattle-Tacoma
  • Phoenix
  • Minneapolis-St. Paul
  • San Diego
  • Tampa-St. Peteresburg-Sarasota
  • Denver-Boulder
  • Baltimore
  • St. Louis
To see the Topline results for Nielsen subscribers, Click Here.

Philly Radio: WBEB Remains In Top Spot

WEAZ-FM Radio's AC WBEB 101.1 FM was rebranded from B101 to MoreFM, but to listener it didn't seem to matter. Although WBEB lost many shares from its Holiday Book 17.2 to January's 8.8, it is still #1.

Lousy winter weather propelled CBS Radio's Newser KYW 1060 AM 5.6--7.6 to move up two spots 6+ from #4 to #2.

Greater Media's WMMR rocked 4.5-5.8 to climb from #7 to #3. CBS Radio's Classic Hits WOGL 98.1 FM was off slightly 6.0--5.6 dropped from #2 to #4. CCM+E Urban AC WDAS remains at #5 with a 4.8—5.4 showing. A

25-54: WMMR...WBEB...WMGK...WXTU... WRFF

18-34: WBEB...WRFF...WXTU...WMMR...WUSL

18-34: WMMR...WBEB...WXTU...WRFF...WIOQ

Cume: WBEB-FM 1,628,500...WIOQ-FM 1,112,400...KYW-AM 1,064,100...WOGL-FM 987,100...WMGK-FM 935,900.


Nielsen Tuesday released January PPM results for the following markets:
  • Washington DC
  • Boston MA
  • Miami-Ft. Lauderdale-Hollywood
  • Detroit
  • Seattle-Tacoma
  • Phoenix
  • Minneapolis-St. Paul
  • San Diego
  • Tampa-St. Peteresburg-Sarasota
  • Denver-Boulder
  • Baltimore
  • St. Louis
To see the Topline results for Nielsen subscribers, Click Here.

Cumulus Shares Rise 9 Percent on Quarterly Results

Shares of Cumulus Media surged 9 percent on Tuesday after the nation's second-largest owner-operator of radio stations said quarterly net revenue rose 5 percent to $275.5 million.

According to THR, stripping out acquisitions of Townsquare and Westwood One, which Cumulus did not own a year ago, revenue increased 1 percent.

The company said pro forma earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization rose 6 percent to $96 million despite tough comparisons due to political advertising a year ago.

The earnings results were disclosed Tuesday prior to the opening bell on Wall Street and shares of Cumulus were up 59 cents to $7.33.


Cumulus stock has been on the rise lately as observers speculate it would make a nice acquisition for a larger media company.

Read More Now

Lew Dickey
In a conference call Tuesday with financial analysts, co-CEO Lew Dickey said, "The fourth quarter capped off a strong year of performance by our team in the face of very tough political comps. Additionally in the quarter, we closed two significant transactions, completed the first equity offering our industry has been in nine years, and refinanced our credit facilities leaving us with a simplified capital structure consisting of first lien bank debt and senior subordinated notes, again while significantly reducing our borrowing costs.

Finally, we invested an Rdio, an already exciting online music service that holds tremendous potential upside for Cumulus and serve as a worldwide distribution platform for our newly acquired content engine, WestwoodOne. Now, our sale of 68 radio stations to Townsquare Media closed on November 14. That provided us with the capital to purchase WestwoodOne, which we closed on December 12.

Dickey also commented on certain company initiatives:

  • CBS Sports Radio as well as Right Now Traffic, are all hitting their stride as national content brands. Both sports and traffic are currently exceeding expectations for 2014 and are taking share in their respective markets. "And we will be again substantial growth drivers as we expected them to be. We are very encouraged by the level of interest by both the advertisers and affiliates in these products, which is a testament to the high-quality nature of the content and again the efficacy of broadcast radio advertising on sports and traffic sponsorships respectively."
  • For SweetJack, "we have evolved the business model over the past year to in essence transform it into a sustainable EBITDA accretive strategy providing mobile activation for national advertisers, while again continuing to utilize the platform to supply local daily deal opportunities throughout our owned and operated markets. And as we mentioned, these have really been shifted more to weekly deals from daily deals to get enough traction behind them."
  • "While our earlier three growth initiatives are hitting their stride, it’s our more nascent NASH country music brand that is really beginning to unfold in 2014 and holds tremendous potential as a growth initiative for the company. Within the next three years, it has the potential to actually eclipse the other three initiatives combined in both revenue and EBITDA contribution. NASH was launched just a year ago on FM station that we bought in New York City and its nationwide rollout is accelerating nicely and right on schedule. As it enters its second year, NASH 94.7 FM in New York is one of the most listened to country music stations in the United States, with over 1 million people tuning in weekly and has been responsible for driving country music sales in the New York area at record levels."

Also concerning the Nash Brand, Dickey said, "We’ve now rolled out a morning show in 21 markets. We expect that to be in 50 markets by the end of the year and the goal is to have that in 100 markets by the end of next year or NASH nights programs which of course outside of prime time – midnight, we are not getting the highest rates, but that is already now in the 100 markets, same thing with our – in our overnight shows and more than that and our countdown shows in more than that."