Thursday, June 18, 2015

Fox Sports Radio Covers The U-S Open

FOX Sports Radio will offer comprehensive coverage of the 2015 U.S. Open at Chambers Bay in University Place, Wash. From June 17-19, Jay Mohr Sports, Steve Gorman SPORTS! and JT "The Brick" will broadcast live from the 115th U.S. Open Championship, providing fans with live programming and updates, interviews, along with listener interaction and expert commentary.

Coverage will continue on June 20 and 21 as national anchor Dan Beyer provides live updates during play.

In addition, several FOX Sports analysts and personalities, including Joe Buck and World Golf Hall of Fame member Greg Norman, will join the network to provide updates, breaking news and insight as the tournament unfolds.

2015 marks the first year of FOX Sports' 12-year, multi-media partnership with the United States Golf Association (USGA), which includes more than 38 hours of live U.S. Open coverage across FOX Sports and FOX Sports 1, in addition to continuous live streaming available throughout the championship on FOX Sports Go.

"It's an honor and a privilege to host our show from the U.S. Open at Chambers Bay," shared JT "The Brick." "The U.S. Open has always been about American pride and the ultimate test in golf. As a major fan of the sport, I couldn't be more excited to experience this global event as FOX Sports and FOX Sports 1 launch their golf coverage, which will quickly become the industry leader."

Report: James Taylor Headed For First #1 Album

Forty-five years after debuting on the Billboard 200 chart, James Taylor is set for his first No. 1 album.

Billboard reports industry forecasters as saying the singer/songwriter’s new studio effort, Before This World, could earn around 75,000 equivalent album units in the week ending June 21. The album is his first studio set since 2002’s October Road.

The Billboard 200 chart ranks the most popular albums of the week based on multi-metric consumption, which includes traditional album sales, track equivalent albums (TEA) and streaming equivalent albums (SEA). The new Billboard 200’s top 10 will be revealed on Wednesday, June 24.

Taylor has previously logged 11 top 10 albums, including seven top five efforts. His highest charting set thus far is 1971’s Mud Slide Slim and the Blue Horizon, which four weeks at No. 2 behind Carole King’s Tapestry album. (Taylor and King would later collaborate for the 2010 set Live at the Troubadour, which reached No. 4.)

Chris and Emilee To Launch USA Net Radio Show

Chris and Emilee
Comedians Chris and Emilee Danielson are the latest to join USA Radio Networks’ syndicated programming. The Cris and Emilee Show begins July 20, 2015 on USA Radio Networks and will air weekdays from 6pm to 8pm Eastern Time.

Along with their radio show, Chris is a 30-year comedy veteran, a seminary trained teacher, and public speaker. Emilee has been an accomplished speaker and presenter for more than fifteen years. They’ve even spent several years as missionaries in rural western Alaska and Chris has pastored several churches.

“We really feel like USA Radio Networks is the right place for us,” said Chris Danielson. “We don’t take ourselves too seriously, we know who we are, and we try to honor Christ in all that we do but we do have a really good time.”

The duo maintains they are not “radio hosts” but real people who bring a different vibe to their Christian-based variety talk show. Chris and Emiliee have been on the air for over a decade and tremendously grown their audience in the various markets they’ve worked.

“Everyone needs to laugh,” adds Emilee Danielson. “Because the news of the day is so heavy. The things we talk about on the air are usually things we’ve been talking about at the dinner table. We bring that every-day conversation into the public realm.”

Married at 19, Chris and Emilee were both raised in Minnesota, Chris in the city and Emilee in rural farm country.

For show info, contact USA Radio Networks Affiliate Relations department at 844-500-0812 or info@usaradionetworks.com.

Most recently the duo were heard on WJQK 99.3 FM in Zeeland, Michigan.

KY Radio: WBVR's Scooter Davis Needs Prayers

Longtime Bowling Green, KY radio personality, Scooter Davis, has terminal cancer.

Scooter has been with WBVR 96.7 FM The Beaver radio for 34 years. He been paired with PD Myla Thomas for 30 on the WBVR CountryMorning Show.

Davis fought off esophageal cancer two years ago and shared the news on-air and on social media on Monday.

"It is what it is," says Scooter. "I'm still the luckiest guy in the world, and I mean that sincerely. Y'know we've all been through things. We see people we work with, all of our St. Jude families that I know you all are still involved with, military men and women. Y'know somethin' happens to. People that got up this morning, never had a chance to do anything. And never had a chance, to y'know, somethin' that happened to 'em. And I think 'Man, I am just so blessed.'"

Scooter is currently undergoing chemotherapy to arrest the metastatic carcinoma that has invaded his body.

June 18 Radio History


 


In 1939…The radio detective series "The Adventures of Ellery Queen," starring Hugh Marlowe, began its nine-year run, with two stints on both CBS and NBC before its final season on ABC.


In 1948…In New York City, Columbia Records publicly unveiled its new long-playing phonograph record that turned at 33 1/3-RPM rather than the standard 78. Unlike 78-RPM discs, which held only three minutes of music on each side, the LP could hold a full 23 minutes per side.



Dave Garroway
In 1955...NBC’s Monitor program expands to 8 AM Saturday to Midnight Sunday.  According to the Monitor tribute site,  it had everything -- news, sports, comedy, interviews, remote pick-ups from around the world, music -- a true magazine of the air. Listeners could tune in or out at any time during the weekend, wherever they were -- at home or in their cars. During any "Monitor" hour, dozens of different people, places and things were presented -- all presided over, live, by hosts Weaver called "communicators" in mammoth New York studios NBC named "Radio Central."

If "Monitor" had failed, NBC Radio would have disappeared decades before it did. But it worked -- indeed, it was a smash hit with listeners, advertisers and critics. It quickly became NBC Radio's biggest moneymaker and almost single-handedly kept NBC in the radio business. Simply put, "Monitor" became the biggest thing in radio.


In 1961…CBS Radio aired the final episode of "Gunsmoke," starring William Conrad as the voice of Marshal Matt Dillon, after a nine-year run. The supporting cast included Howard McNear as Doc Charles Adams, Georgia Ellis as Kitty Russell, and Parley Baer as Dillon's assistant Chester Proudfoot.


In 1965...The call letters of KYW-AM, Cleveland, Ohio returned to Philadelphia.

In June, 1955, Westinghouse agreed to trade KYW and WPTZ to NBC in exchange for the network's Cleveland properties, WNBK-TV and WTAM-AM/FM, as well as $3 million in cash. After clearing regulatory hurdles, the swap went into effect on February 13, 1956. According to
phillyradioarchives.com, NBC changed the 1060 call letters to WRCV and Westinghouse moved the KYW call letters to Cleveland.

NBC had been interested in acquiring a VHF TV station in Philadelphia for years, the largest market in which it did not own one.  After being rebuffed more than once, NBC (according to Westinghouse) threatened to drop its network affiliation (and programming) from WPTZ and Westinghouse's Boston TV station unless they agreed to the trade.

Not long after the station swap in 1955, the government started an investigation into the transfer that ultimately led to a bitter and complex 10 year skirmish for control of the stations. The battle involved a large list of government and corporate players including the FCC, Congress, Department of Justice, RCA, Philco, Westinghouse and RKO-General. Ultimately, the swap was reversed, and Westinghouse regained control of the stations, renaming them KYW TV and KYW AM.

 In September 1965, KYW 1060 AM became an all-news station.





In 1974...Will Lewis - General Manager of Pacifica’s KPFK in Los Angeles is jailed for contempt of court after he failed to turn over to a federal grand jury the original tape-recorded message the station received from fugitive newspaper heiress Patty Hearst. The tape was received by the station last week from Miss Hearst and Emily and William Harris - and contained references to the May 17 South Central Los Angeles shootout in which six SLA members were killed.


In 1975...WNBC FM becomes WNWS


In 1975...NBC News & Information Service debuts.

NBC launched the NBC News and Information Service (also referred to as "NIS"), which provided up to 55 minutes of news per hour around the clock to local stations that wanted to adopt an all-news format. Not surprisingly, NIS achieved clearances on NBC's FM stations in New York (WNBC-FM, which became WNWS), Chicago (WJOI, the former WMAQ-FM which was renamed WNIS) and San Francisco (KNAI, the former KNBR-FM). WRC in Washington also picked it up, migrating their Top 40 format onto FM sister station WKYS (which would be blown up weeks later in favor of disco music). Other major affiliates for the NIS service included WBAL-FM in Baltimore, KHVH in Honolulu, and KQV in Pittsburgh.

The NIS service attracted several dozen subscribers, but not enough to allow NBC to project that it would ever become profitable, and it was discontinued after two years.   After the demise of NIS, NBC installed a talk radio format at WRC and went with music on the FMs in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco, respectively renaming them as WYNY, WKQX, and KYUU.


In 1984...KHJ AM Los Angeles is gearing to go what it calls “Car Radio.” Look for a lot of traffic along with music.


In 1984...Alan Berg, a combative radio talk show host at KOA radio in Denver dies of multiple gunshot wounds after being ambushed outside his condominium. Berg (50) had reported death threats to police several times.

Alan Berg once worked at a shoe store and later opened a clothing store in Denver where he met KGMC-AM talk show host Laurence Gross. Impressed with Berg, Gross made him a guest on several occasions. When Gross left KGMC to take a job in San Diego, California, he requested that Alan Berg be named his successor.

From KGMC, which changed its call sign to KWBZ, Berg moved to KHOW, also in Denver. After being fired from KHOW, Berg went back to KWBZ before it changed to an all-music format and he again lost his job. The unemployed Berg was courted by both KTOK in Oklahoma City, Oklahoma and Detroit, Michigan. He was lastly hired by KOA and debuted on February 23, 1981. He worked at KOA until his death.

At about 9:30 p.m. on June 18, 1984, Alan Berg returned to his Adams Street townhouse after dinner. Berg stepped out of his black Volkswagen Beetle and gunfire erupted. He was struck twelve times. The murder weapon, a semi-automatic Ingram MAC-10, which had been illegally converted to an automatic weapon, was later traced to the home of one of The Order's members by the FBI.

Berg was on a death list according to a former producer because he was Jewish and he challenged on the air the beliefs of an author who wrote that Jews were from the family line of the devil.

Four members of The Order were ultimately indicted on federal charges: Jean Craig, David Lane, Bruce Pierce, and Richard Scutari. However, only Lane and Pierce were convicted, though neither of homicide (which is a state crime).  Rather, they were convicted of racketeering, conspiracy, and violating Alan Berg's civil rights (which are federal crimes). Both were sentenced to what were, for all practical purposes, life terms; Lane's sentence was 190 years; Pierce's was 252 years. 


In 1988...WWKB 1520 AM, Buffalo, New York switched to a satelllite oldies format, finishing 30 years of Top 40 and oldies.

WKBW was founded in 1922 as a religious station, operating at the frequency of 1380 kHz. As the story goes, founder Clinton Churchill applied to the Department of Commerce for a license to operate under the call signs WAY. That call sign, however, was being used for a ship at sea, so instead, Churchill chose the letters "WKBW," which were next in the random assignment pool. Churchill proclaimed the call letters to stand for "Well Known Bible Witness"; later usage referred to the middle letters "KB" standing for King of Buffalo (alluding to its 50,000 watt broadcast power).

On July 4, 1958, WKBW radio abandoned its adult approach and was converted into a personality-driven full service Top 40 music radio station, featuring foreground personalities, a tight playlist of current hits and an aggressive local news department, which it continued to program with great success for over 20 years. It was one of the first stations to present traffic reports in cooperation with police and state and local authorities. Capital Cities Communications, then known as Capital Cities Broadcasting, purchased the WKBW stations from Clinton Churchill in 1961.


During the late 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, WKBW became a major force in pop radio over the East Coast. KB had a 50,000 watt transmitter at their transmitter site in Hamburg. This high power with a direction signal caused WKBW to blanket the entire eastern U.S. with top 40 music every night, and the station actually had a better signal at night in the western Boston suburbs than Boston's own top 40 station, WMEX, located at 1510, right next door to WKBW.

From 1970...



Disk jockeys included future Price is Right announcer Rod Roddy, Dick Biondi, Danny Neaverth, Jack Armstrong, Joey Reynolds, Steve Mitchell, Bud Ballou, Norm Marshall, Tom Shannon, and the Amazin' Jim Quinn. Irv Weinstein, later Buffalo's most popular television news anchor, served as news director.


In 2002…Sportscaster (CBS-TV, CBS Radio Network, KMOX-St. Louis) Jack Buck, longtime voice of baseball's St. Louis Cardinals and father of sportscaster Joe Buck, died of multiple illnesses including lung cancer and Parkinson's disease at age 77.


In 2014…Composer/arranger/musical director (The Joey Bishop Show, Alvin and the Chipmunks)/TV host (Stand Up and Cheer)/radio station jingle producer Johnny Mann died at age 85.

In Media Confidential one year ago...

NYC Radio: Angie Martinez To Join WWPR: Click Here

Wednesday, June 17, 2015

FCC Fines ATT $100M For "Throttling"


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - The U.S. Federal Communications Commission on Wednesday proposed a $100 million fine against AT&T Inc, accusing the second-largest U.S. wireless carrier of misleading unlimited-data customers about possible slowdowns in download speeds.

In announcing the decision, which AT&T says it will "vigorously dispute," the FCC said the carrier offered what it called unlimited data plans without sufficiently informing its customers that their Internet speeds could be slower than normal in some cases, a practice known as "throttling."

"The FCC will not stand idly by while consumers are deceived by misleading marketing materials and insufficient disclosure," FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a statement.

According to The Wall Street Journal, The FCC alleges that AT&T sold consumers data plans advertised as unlimited, then capped data speeds for those customers after they used a set amount of data within a billing cycle. The FCC says those capped speeds were much slower than the normal network speeds advertised by AT&T, and that they impaired consumers’ ability to access the Internet or use applications for the rest of their billing cycle.

The FCC says AT&T violated the transparency rule passed as part of its 2010 Open Internet rules by labeling the plans as unlimited. Most of those rules were struck down by a federal court last January, but the transparency rule was upheld.

“Consumers deserve to get what they pay for,” FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler said in a statement. “Broadband providers must be up front and transparent about the services they provide. The FCC will not stand idly by while consumers are deceived by misleading marketing materials and insufficient disclosure.”

Travis LeBlanc
The notice of apparent liability issued against AT&T was the first time the FCC has brought any enforcement action under the 2010 open Internet transparency rule. “As today’s action demonstrates, the commission is committed to holding accountable those broadband providers who fail to be fully transparent about data limits,” Travis LeBlanc, the FCC’s enforcement bureau chief said.

Katy On The Hill blog reports Republican commissioners Ajit Pai and Mike O’Rielly, who lambasted the enforcement bureau’s direction in a speech last week, dissented. Ajit Pai called the FCC action “Kafkaesque” for applying an “opaque” transparency rule to slap down the company, while ignoring the disclosures AT&T made.

“Because the commission simply ignores many of the disclosures AT&T made; because it refuses to grapple with the few disclosures it does acknowledge; because it essentially rewrites the transparency rule ex post by imposing specific requirements found nowhere in the 2010 net Neutrality order; because it disregards specific language in that order and related precedents that condone AT&T’s conduct; because the penalty assessed is drawn out of thin air; in short, because the justice dispensed here condemns a private actor not only in innocence but also in ignorance, I dissent,” Pai wrote.

AT&T has 30 days to respond to the FCC’s notice of apparent liability. Once the FCC receives AT&T’s response, the commission will make a final decision and issue a final forfeiture order.

NBA Finals A Ratings Winner for ABC

The Golden State Warriors' sealing of an NBA title over the Cleveland Cavaliers last night wrapped a best-rated NBA Finals for ABC, which has been airing the championship series since the 2002 season.

The sixth and final game of this year's series drew a 15.9 overnight rating last night, ABC's best-rated game six as well.

The series overall has averaged a 13.9 overnight rating, 31% better than the 10.6 of last year's Finals. Three games last week were the top three programs for adults 18-49 and helped make ABC the dominant prime-time network in key demos.

The game also set a high for ESPN's Watch ESPN streaming platform, with 939K unique viewers.


Report: Roger Ailes Demoted At FOX

Roger Ailes
Roger Ailes, the longtime boss of Fox News who has built it into a hugely profitable channel, has been dealt a massive blow by the bosses at 21st Century Fox, Business Insider reports.

There has been lots of change at the top at 21st Century Fox: Rupert Murdoch recently announced plans to step down July 1 as CEO, handing the company over to his son James. Rupert's other son, Lachlan, will join his dad as executive cochairman. And Chase Carey, the company's deputy chairman, president, and COO, will become executive co-chairman.

In an emailed news release sent out Tuesday confirming its executive changes, Fox makes no mention of Ailes.

As news emerged last week that Rupert Murdoch was stepping down as CEO, New York Magazine's Daily Intelligencer blog reported that Ailes released "what now appears to be a rogue statement" to the Fox Business Channel, saying he would continue to run the news network, reporting directly to Rupert Murdoch.

But a 21st Century Fox representative told The Hollywood Reporter, "Roger will report to Lachlan and James."

BI says that's a huge slap in the face for 75-year-old Ailes, who has long counted Rupert Murdoch as a close ally. Ailes built Fox News from scratch into a huge cash cow contributing to 18% of 21st Century Fox's profits in 2014.

Despite his huge contribution to the company, Ailes does not get along with the Murdoch brothers, sources have previously told Business Insider.

Judging by Ailes' history with the Murdoch brothers, and his apparent confusion around whom he will be reporting to, it's unlikely Ailes will be happy with the arrangements at the top of the company. His contract is up in 2016 anyway, and Ailes told The Hollywood Reporter back in April that nobody had been in touch to talk about a renewal.

S-F Radio: KSAN Rebrands To Celebrate NBA Championship

It’s been 40 years since the last championship for the Golden State Warriors. In celebration of their 2015 NBA title, so Rock KSAN 107.7 FM The Bone has changed its name to honor the team and its star, NBA MVP Stephen Curry.

In addition to the rebranding of 1-0-Stephen-Stephen The Bone, we’re playing “three-point shots of rock” (three in a row from the same artist) all day Wednesday through Friday.

Jim Richards, Program Director of The Bone said, “It’s been an exciting time to be in the Bay Area. We’re proud to add our unique twist to these celebrations. It was either renaming the station after Curry or playing Scandal’s ‘The Warrior’ non-stop. I’m glad we chose the former.”

NYC Radio: Artist Sues WSKQ's El Pacha For $5M For Defamation

A Dominican musician claims a WSKQ Mega 97.9 FM radio host defamed him, and demands $5 million for it in court.

According to Courthouse News, Anthony Santos sued radio and TV host Luis Federico Crespo Martinez a.k.a. El Pacha, in New York County Supreme Court.

He claims El Pacha, who hosts a Latin music show on New York City's "Mega 97.9," defamed him by telling listeners that Santos threatened him.

Santos, credits himself in his lawsuit with popularizing and redefining the often-racy bachata, a genre once known in his home country as amargue (Spanish for "bitterness").

"He adopted a soft romantic lyrical style that became more socially accepted than the bawdy style common to bachata before him, and he has quickly become the genre's leading artist, helping to move bachata into the mainstream," the complaint states.

El Pacha
He claims that the trouble started over rival bachatero Raulin Rodriguez's May 23 concert at the United Palace Theatre.

El Pacha, who produced the concert, said three days before the show that Santos would perform there to make amends with him, according to the complaint. Santos says that was false, and that he and his managers told fans so in a press release.

El Pacha responded on his television platform, desafine.net, by falsely claiming that "he had been threatened," according to the complaint.

Santos seeks at least $5 million for slander and libel, interference with business relations, negligence and emotional distress.

Austin Radio: IMG, ARN Ink New U-T Sports Deal


Texas Athletics and IMG-College/Longhorn Sports Marketing announced Tuesday that the Austin Radio Network will become the new radio home for Texas Athletics.

The multi-year partnership between ARN and IMG will bring fans more live Longhorns athletics events and shoulder programming while adding a Spanish-language football broadcast flagship, beginning with the 2015 football season.

IMG, a global sports and media leader which manages Texas Athletics’ multi-media rights, negotiated the deal on behalf of the university.

ARN will simulcast across its platform of four FM radio stations and two AM stations live Longhorns sports events including football, men’s and women’s basketball, baseball, softball, and Longhorn Weekly coaches’ shows. ARN’s KTXX 104.9 FM “The Horn” will become the new flagship station.

KTXX 104.9 FM (3.2 Kw) Red=Local Coverage Area
The new broadcast rights partnership includes promotion across all of ARN’s six Austin stations and will bring fans more live game broadcasts, including the addition of softball, and new Longhorns news and talk programs.

Through a co-venture with Fiesta 97.1 FM and KXNZ 1530 AM, ARN will broadcast all Longhorns football games in Spanish.

“Our new partnership with ARN will bring more Longhorn events and coverage to fans in Austin,” said Scott Willingham, General Manager of Longhorns IMG Sports Marketing.  “We’re particularly excited about an abundance of programming in addition to football, including more exposure for Longhorns’ Olympic sports. The university’s student-athletes, teams, fans, and corporate supporters will all benefit.”

No changes are anticipated for the Longhorn IMG Radio Network talent or crew for the 2015 football season.

“I want to thank IMG for their hard work and commitment in bringing a valuable broadcast partner into the Longhorns family. I’m impressed with ARN’s commitment to aggressively promoting all Longhorns sports in new and innovative ways,” said Steve Patterson, Texas Men’s Athletics Director. “Games will be heard by more fans, in more places, than ever before. ARN is a creative, home-grown commodity that has a genuine passion for The University of Texas and our community.”

Longhorn IMG Radio Network broadcasts for football, men’s basketball and coaches shows are available statewide on more than 30 radio stations. Texas games also will be streamed live world-wide (without cost) to Longhorns fans on TexasSports.com and on a separate digital streaming platform that is being developed in collaboration with ARN. The platform will feature live and archived content.

Bob Cole
“Since 1893, The University of Texas Longhorns Athletics programs have been the absolute definition of hometown sports in Austin, Texas,” said Bob Cole, ARN’s Chief Executive Officer. “In 2012, we formed the Austin Radio Network, dedicated to the return of ‘hometown radio’ – both in ownership and programming. ARN is founded on the basic principle of being ‘hyper-local.’ We don’t hesitate or apologize for going over-the-top in exhibiting any and all of the unique assets that embody the heart and soul of Austin’s proud culture. Being locally owned is just the beginning. Being entrusted with the responsibility of broadcasting from UT’s biggest stage is truly prime-time! We are abundantly grateful for the confidence placed in us by IMG. Our staff is as enthused, as we are humbled.”

Texas and IMG College officials announced Tuesday that Austin Radio Network, a group of six Austin area stations stitched together by Bob Cole and a group of investors, has won a seven-year contract to broadcast University of Texas sports.

Brian Davis at the Statesman writes to understand the magnitude of the deal, think of ARN as David and iHeart Media, formally known as Clear Channel, as Goliath. Twenty years ago, KVET-AM carried the slingshot and won the radio rights away from powerhouse KLBJ.

“No one — and I mean no one — believed back then in 1994 and ’95 that you could separate politically the LBJ family and the university,” Cole said. “We worked hard to prove that we could do things that couldn’t be done, and we got it.”

It’s not going to be easy, though. “The cost to us, our real cost, is about $1 million per year,” Cole said.

An undisclosed amount goes to IMG, the on-air talent and costs associated with the broadcast. Cole said he’ll have to recoup his annual investment through local ads on the broadcast. IMG is responsible for selling ads that air statewide.

Louisville Radio: Kobi Relocates To PD WNRW, WLGX

Kobi
iHeartMedia/Louisville has announced names Kobi as the new Program Director at Top40 WNRW 98.9 FM Radio Now and HotAC WLGX 100.5 MyFM.

"We conducted a nationwide search for our next great Program Director, and were blown away by Kobi’s energy, enthusiasm, and fresh ideas," said Kelly Carls, Regional SVP/Programming, iHeartMedia Louisville. "We’re thrilled he’ll be bringing his talents to Louisville."

"I would like to thank Rod Phillips, Devin Steel, and Morgan Bohannon for teaching me so much throughout my career in Memphis," said Kobi.  "Thank you to Kelly Carls, Bill Gentry and Carl Anderson for entrusting me with the 98.9 Radio Now and 100.5 MYfm brands. I can’t wait to get started."

WNRW 98.9 FM (43 Kw) Red=Local Coverage Area
Kobi has been Program Director for iHM’s KWNW 101.9 KISS-FM in Memphis.