Friday, October 30, 2020

October 30 Radio History


➦In 1745...Invention of the Leyden jar (the first capacitor) by Dean Ewald Jurgen von Kleist of the Cathedral of Cammin.


➦In 1907...Actor and songwriter Renzo Cesana was born in Rome Italy.  He is best remembered as The Continental, the suave debonair “latin lover” host of his own early TV series. He is also credited with creating the radio programs “Art Linkletter’s House Party”, “Stop That Villain”, and the “Radio Hall of Fame.” Cesana succumbed to lung cancer November 8 1970 at age 63.

Fred W. Friendly with Edward R. Murrow
➦In 1915...Broadcaster Fred W. Friendly was born Ferdinand Friendly Wachenheimer in NYC (Died from a series of strokes at age 82 – March 3, 1998). He was a president of CBS News and the creator, along with Edward R. Murrow, of the documentary television program 'See It Now'.  He originated the concept of public-access television cable TV channels.

He entered radio broadcasting in 1937 at WEAN in Providence, Rhode Island, where he reversed the order of his middle and last names, and began using Friendly as his last name. In World War II, he served as an instructor in the Army Signal Corps and reported for an Army newspaper in the Pacific Theater (The CBI Roundup) before mustering out as a master sergeant in 1945.

By the late 1940s, Friendly was an experienced radio producer. It was in this role that Friendly first worked with Murrow on the Columbia Records historical albums, I Can Hear It Now. The first entry in the series, released on Thanksgiving Day 1948, covered the crisis and war years 1933–1945. It was a ground-breaker in that it used clips of radio news coverage and speeches of the major events from that twelve-year time span. Friendly created the concept after noticing the new use of audiotape in regular radio news coverage, as opposed to wire or disc recordings that had been an industry standard. Periodically, Friendly created recordings of news events when such recordings didn't exist or, recreated ones that were considered too chaotic to use on an album.

Although Murrow was an established CBS name and at the time Columbia Records was owned by CBS, Friendly's next full-time work came as a news producer at NBC. It was there that Friendly originated the idea for the news-oriented quiz show Who Said That?, first hosted by NBC newsman Robert Trout, followed by Walter Kiernan, and John Charles Daly. The program, which Friendly edited, ran irregularly on NBC and then ABC between 1948 and 1955.

Friendly later wrote, directed, and produced the NBC Radio series The Quick and the Dead during the Summer of 1950. It was about the development of the atomic bomb. It featured Trout, Bob Hope, and New York Times writer Bill Laurence, who had won a Pulitzer Prize for his coverage of the Manhattan Project.


➦In 1925...KUT-AM in Austin Texas began broadcasting.

The actual beginning date of radio broadcasting on the UT-Austin campus has never been fully substantiated. There is an unofficial reference to an on-campus radio operation as early as 1912. But the most reliable information indicates that the first broadcast license — bearing the call letters 5XY — was issued to the University on March 22, 1921.

A year later, a new license was issued, bearing new call letters WCM, which the station used to identify itself until 1925.

In these first years, the station was used for a number of purposes, beginning as a demonstration project in the Physics Department, whose Professor Simpson L. Brown had persuaded the administration to let him build the station in the first place.

Beginning in 1923, though, funding concerns prompted a transfer of operational control to the University's Extension Division for extension teaching. One of the stipulations of the transfer agreement was that funds would be provided for operations and maintenance to put the station in a "first-class" condition. The funds, however, did not materialize and broadcasting suffered until a state agriculture official needed a means to broadcast daily crop and weather reports.

A deal between the official and UT's Extension Division allowed agriculture broadcasts for one hour per day in exchange for equipment maintenance. At other times of the day, the University would broadcast items of interest from the campus, including a number of faculty lecture series.

But by the end of 1924, the Physics Department decided it wanted the station back, and with the approval of the Board of Regents, the Physics Department regained control in the summer of 1925. They had a new license granted on October 30 and it bore, for the first time, the call letters KUT.

KUT's early years were ambitious but, by 1927, ambition had outrun the funding. The expense of operating and maintaining the station had simply become too great for the Physics Department to sustain. University President Harry Benedict appointed a committee to study the matter, and the committee recommended that the project be discontinued. The station was dismantled and the equipment returned to the Physics labs for experimentation.

KUT would not re-emerge for 30 years.


➦In 1931...NBC began installing a TV transmitter on top of New York’s Empire State Building. The first experimental TV broadcast from the building was on December 22, 1931.


➦In 1938...Orson Welles's radio adaptation of HG Wells's War Of The Worlds caused panic in the US by convincing many listeners that Martians had really landed in New Jersey.

During the '30s, Welles worked extensively in radio as an actor, writer, director and producer, often without credit.  Between 1935 and 1937 he was earning as much as $2,000 a week, shuttling between radio studios at such a pace that he would arrive barely in time for a quick scan of his lines before he was on the air.

Welles reflected in February 1983:
"Radio is what I love most of all. The wonderful excitement of what could happen in live radio, when everything that could go wrong did go wrong. I was making a couple of thousand a week, scampering in ambulances from studio to studio, and committing much of what I made to support the Mercury. I wouldn't want to return to those frenetic 20-hour working day years, but I miss them because they are so irredeemably gone."
In addition to continuing as a repertory player on The March of Time, in the fall of 1936 Welles adapted and performed Hamlet in an early two-part episode of CBS Radio's Columbia Workshop. His performance as the announcer in the series' April 1937 presentation of Archibald MacLeish's verse drama The Fall of the City was an important development in his radio career and made the 21-year-old Welles an overnight star.

In July 1937, the Mutual Network gave Welles a seven-week series to adapt Les Misérables, which he did with great success. Welles developed the idea of telling stories with first-person narration on the series, which was his first job as a writer-director for radio.  Les Misérables was one of Welles's earliest and finest achievements on radio, and marked the radio debut of the Mercury Theatre.

That September, Mutual chose Welles to play Lamont Cranston, also known as The Shadow. He performed the role anonymously through mid-September 1938.

After the theatrical successes of the Mercury Theatre, CBS Radio invited the 23-year-old Orson Welles to create a summer show for 13 weeks. The series began July 11, 1938, initially titled First Person Singular, with the formula that Welles would play the lead in each show. Some months later the show was called The Mercury Theatre on the Air. The weekly hour-long show presented radio plays based on classic literary works, with original music composed and conducted by Bernard Herrmann.

The Mercury Theatre's radio adaptation of The War of the Worlds by H. G. Wells October 30, 1938, brought Welles instant fame.

When the show began at 8 p.m., a voice announced, “The Columbia Broadcasting System and its affiliated stations present Orson Welles and the Mercury Theater on the air in ‘War of the Worlds’ by H.G. Wells."  In 1938, Sunday evenings were prime time in the golden age of radio and millions of Americans had their radios turned on.

On Sunday nights in 1938, most Americans were listening to ventriloquist Edgar Bergen and his dummy “Charlie McCarthy” on NBC and only turned to CBS at 8:12 p.m. after the comedy sketch ended and a little-known singer went on. By then, the audience had missed the introduction and the story of the Martian invasion was well underway.

Welles introduced his radio play with a spoken introduction, followed by an announcer reading a weather report. Then, seemingly abandoning the story-line, the announcer took listeners to “the Meridian Room in the Hotel Park Plaza in downtown New York, where you will be entertained by the music of Amon Raquello and his orchestra.” Dance music played for some time, and then the scare began.

An announcer broke in to report that “Professor Farrell of the Mount Jenning Observatory” had detected explosions on the planet Mars. Then the dance music came back on, followed by another interruption in which listeners were informed that a large meteor had crashed into a farmer’s field in Grover’s Mills, New Jersey.

The combination of the news bulletin form of the performance with the between-breaks dial spinning habits of listeners was later reported to have created widespread confusion among listeners who failed to hear the introduction, although the extent of this confusion has come into question.  Panic was reportedly spread among listeners who believed the fictional news reports of a Martian invasion.

When news of the real-life panic leaked into the CBS studio, Welles went on the air as himself to remind listeners that it was just fiction. There were rumors that the show caused suicides, but none were ever confirmed.

The Federal Communications Commission investigated the program but found no law was broken. Networks did agree to be more cautious in their programming in the future.



Welles's growing fame drew Hollywood offers, lures that the independent-minded Welles resisted at first. The Mercury Theatre on the Air, which had been a sustaining show (without sponsorship) was picked up by Campbell Soup and renamed The Campbell Playhouse.


➦In 1943...WINS switched to 1010 AM.

The station began broadcasting first during 1924 on 950 kHz as WGBS, named after and broadcasting from its owner, Gimbel's department store. It moved to 860 kHz sometime around 1927, and to 600 around 1930, settling on 1180 around 1931. The station was bought by William Randolph Hearst in 1932, and it adopted its present callsign (named after Hearst's International News Service) the same year, effective January 15.

WINS relocated from the Hotel Lincoln to the WINS Building, 114 East 58th Street, June 19, 1932.

It changed its frequency from 1180 to 1000 on March 29, 1941 as part of the North American Radio Broadcasting Agreement and then eventually to 1010 on October 30, 1943. The Cincinnati-based Crosley Broadcasting Corporation announced its purchase of the station from Hearst in 1945, though it would be over a year before Crosley would take control of WINS, in July 1946



➦In 1967...WNEW-FM adopted a 'progressive rock' radio format, one that it became famous for and that influenced the rock listenership as well as the rock industry.

The original disc jockeys were Bill "Rosko" Mercer, who started on October 30, 1967; Jonathan Schwartz, who made his debut on November 16, 1967; and "the Professor" Scott Muni, who first appeared on November 18, 1967. Alison Steele would stay on from the female staff and eventually take over the overnight shift on January 1, 1968.

Disc jockeys would broadcast in ways that bore out their personalities:
  • morning fixture Dave Herman was not afraid to mix Erik Satie or Donna Summer into the playlist;
  • noontime stalwart Pete Fornatale promoted the Beach Boys when it was not fashionable and later started his eclectic weekend Mixed Bag program;
  • afternoon legend Muni would use his gravelly voice to introduce largely unknown British artists on his "Things from England" segments;
  • nighttime host Schwartz was a raconteur who would sneak in the Sinatra pop standards that he not-so-secretly liked better than rock;
  • overnight presence Steele would play space rock groups in between readings of her equally spacey poems;
  • weekend personality Vin Scelsa started his idiosyncratic Idiots' Delight program, which soon gained a devoted following.
Other well-known disc jockeys who worked at the station included Dennis Elsas, Pete Larkin, brothers Dan Neer and Richard Neer, Jim Monaghan, Pam Merly, Thom Morrera, Meg Griffin, and John Zacherle.

WNEW-FM was among the first stations to give Bruce Springsteen significant airplay, and conducted live broadcasts of key Springsteen concerts in 1975 and 1978; Springsteen would sometimes call up the DJs during records. Later, Dave Herman featured a "Bruce Juice" segment each morning. John Lennon once stopped by to guest-DJ along with Dennis Elsas and appeared on-air several other times during his friend Scott Muni's afternoon slot. Members of the Grateful Dead and other groups would hang out in the studio; Emerson, Lake & Palmer's visit to Muni's show is often credited for popularizing the group in America.


➦In 1996...Leon Lewis, a radio talk show host for WMCA-AM, New York, died at age 81.

Lewis was the nighttime voice of WMCA from 1970 to 1980. On ''The Leon Lewis Talk Show,'' he took calls from listeners, debated public issues, offered advice to the troubled or merely provided a sympathetic ear, greeting each caller with a soothing ''Hello, my friend.''

Before he joined WMCA, Mr. Lewis was the moderator of ''Community Opinion,'' a call-in show on WLIB in Harlem. In 1967, the station won a George Foster Peabody award for the show, which was credited with helping to defuse racial tension.

Lewis, who was born in Bloomington, Ind., began his radio career at WABY in Albany. After working as a disk jockey and in advertising sales, he moved to New York City in 1954 and became circulation manager for The Amsterdam News. He left the paper in 1957 and joined radio station WWRL as news director before moving to WLIB.


➦In 2000...Radio/TV personality Steve Allen died of a heart attack resulting from a minor automobile accident earlier in the day. Autopsy results concluded that the accident had caused a blood vessel in his chest to rupture, causing blood to leak into the sac surrounding his heart. He was 78.

Allen's first radio job was on station KOY in Phoenix, Arizona, after he left Arizona State Teachers College (now Arizona State University) in Tempe, while still a sophomore. He enlisted in the U.S. Army during World War II and was trained as an infantryman. He spent his service time at Camp Roberts, California, and did not serve overseas.

Steve Allen 1977
Allen became an announcer for KFAC in Los Angeles and then moved to the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1946, talking the station into airing a five-nights-a-week comedy show, Smile Time, co-starring Wendell Noble. After Allen moved to CBS Radio's KNX in Los Angeles, his music-and-talk half-hour format gradually changed to include more talk on a full-hour, late-night show, boosting his popularity and creating standing-room-only studio audiences. During one episode of the show reserved primarily for an interview with Doris Day, his guest star failed to appear, so Allen picked up a microphone and went into the audience to ad lib for the first time.  His radio show attracted a huge local following, and in 1950 it replaced Our Miss Brooks, exposing Allen to a national audience for the first time.

Allen's first television experience had come in 1949 when he answered an ad for a TV announcer for professional wrestling. He knew nothing about wrestling, so he watched some shows and discovered that the announcers did not have well-defined names for the holds. When he got the job, he created names for many of the holds, some of which are still used today.

After CBS radio gave Allen a weekly prime time show, CBS television believed it could groom him for national small-screen stardom and gave Allen his first network television show. The Steve Allen Show premiered at 11 am on Christmas Day, 1950, and was later moved into a thirty-minute, early evening slot. This new show required him to uproot his family and move from LA to New York, since at that time a coast to coast program could not originate from LA. The show was canceled in 1952, after which CBS tried several shows to showcase Allen's talent.

Allen achieved national attention when he was pressed into service at the last minute to host Arthur Godfrey's Talent Scouts because Godfrey was unable to appear. Allen turned one of Godfrey's live Lipton commercials upside down, preparing tea and instant soup on camera and then pouring both into Godfrey's ukulele. With the audience (including Godfrey, watching from Miami) uproariously and thoroughly entertained, Allen gained major recognition as a comedian and host.



Leaving CBS, he created a late-night New York talk-variety TV program in 1953 for what is now WNBC-TV. The following year, on September 27, 1954, the show went on the full NBC network as The Tonight Show, with fellow radio personality Gene Rayburn (who later went on to host hit game shows such as Match Game, 1962–1982) as the original announcer. The show ran from 11:15 pm to 1:00 am on the East Coast.

While Today developer Sylvester "Pat" Weaver is often credited as the Tonight creator, Allen often pointed out that he had previously created it as a local New York show. Allen told his nationwide audience that first evening: "This is Tonight, and I can't think of too much to tell you about it except I want to give you the bad news first: this program is going to go on forever... you think you're tired now. Wait until you see one o'clock roll around!"

It was as host of The Tonight Show that Allen pioneered the "man on the street" interviews and audience-participation comedy breaks that have become commonplace on late-night TV.


➦In 2007...Alberta-raised singer and actor Robert Goulet, while awaiting a lung transplant, died at age 73. His career began as an announcer at Edmonton radio station CKUA; he went on to sing frequently on CBC-TV.

His Broadway debut in Camelot launched an award-winning stage and recording career (If Ever I Would Leave You, My Love Forgive Me).  As well as starring in numerous televised musicals (Carousel, Brigadoon, Kiss Me Kate) he appeared 16 times on Ed Sullivan, and starred in a short-lived ABC WW2 series, Blue Light.

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Songwriter Eddie Holland of Holland-Dozier-Holland is 81. 
  • Singer Grace Slick is 81. 
  • Singer Otis Williams of The Temptations is 79. 
  • Actor Henry Winkler is 75. 
  • TV journalist Andrea Mitchell is 74. 
  • Bassist Timothy B. Schmit of The Eagles (and Poco) is 73. 
  • Kassidy Osborn is 44
    Actor Harry Hamlin is 69. 
  • Actor Charles Martin Smith (“American Graffiti”) is 67. 
  • Country singer T. Graham Brown is 66. 
  • Actor Kevin Pollak is 63. 
  • Singer-guitarist Jerry De Borg of Jesus Jones is 60. 
  • Actor Michael Beach (“Soul Food,” ″Third Watch”) is 57. 
  • Singer-guitarist Gavin Rossdale of Bush is 55. 
  • Actor Jack Plotnick (“Reno 911!”) is 52. 
  • “Cash Cab” host Ben Bailey is 50. 
  • Actor Billy Brown (“How To Get Away With Murder,” “Dexter”) is 50. 
  • Actor Nia Long is 50. 
  • Country singer Kassidy Osborn of SHeDAISY is 44. 
  • Actor Gael Garcia Bernal (“Babel,” ″The Motorcycle Diaries”) is 42. 
  • Actor Matthew Morrison (“Glee”) is 42. 
  • Actor Fiona Dourif (“When We Rise,” ″True Blood”) is 39. 
  • Actor Shaun Sipos (“Melrose Place”) is 39. 
  • Actor Tasso Feldman (“The Resident”) is 37. 
  • Actor Janel Parrish (“Pretty Little Liars”) is 32. 
  • Actor Tequan Richmond (“Everybody Hates Chris”) is 28. 
  • Actor Kennedy McMann (TV’s “Nancy Drew”) is 24.

Thursday, October 29, 2020

Entercom, FanDuel Enter Landmark Strategic Partnership



Entercom Communications Corp. and FanDuel have announced a six-year partnership designating FanDuel, the leading online sports and entertainment company, as the official sportsbook partner of Entercom across its best-in-class sports broadcast stations and RADIO.COM, the fastest growing digital audio platform in America. 

The partnership brings together America’s #1 Sportsbook with the #1 sports audio company in the United States.

Matthew King
This ground-breaking deal unites two industry titans in a shared mission to entertain, engage, and inform sports fans around all aspects of the game and represents a new model between a sports gaming operator and sports media platform. As part of the deal, Entercom listeners will have unique access to FanDuel odds, insight, and promotion via Entercom on-air stations and personalities. Entercom and FanDuel will also collaborate on in-depth integrations and co-produce content that will pioneer the industry with all-new formats.

Under the agreement, FanDuel will be the official sportsbook of Entercom, and receive preferred and increased category access to all Entercom talent in every market where Entercom and FanDuel both operate. The partnership brings FanDuel’s sports betting content, industry-leading products, and risk and trading expertise to the fingertips of Entercom sports fans via a comprehensive integration across the largest sports audio platform in the country.

David Field
“Entercom has revolutionized the audio and entertainment industries and we’re beyond excited to be their preferred partner in the sports betting and fantasy categories,” said Matthew King, Chief Executive Officer, FanDuel. “In the two years we have been doing business with Entercom, it is abundantly clear to us that their authentic connection to sports fans is one of the best ways for us to engage FanDuel customers. We will work together to offer sports fans access to information wherever, whenever, and however they consume content, providing them with the tools to learn and win.”

“We believe this is the largest advertising commitment ever made within the radio industry. We are focused on delivering the best sports betting experience for our audiences in markets where legalized sports betting will be pervasive,” said David Field, President and Chief Executive Officer, Entercom. “The marketplace is growing exponentially and FanDuel is an ideal partner to take full advantage of the influence and reach of Entercom’s robust sports platforms to deliver an even better, audio sports experience to our listeners.”

NYC Radio: Carton Returns To WFAN November 9


Entercom welcomes the return of on-air host Craig Carton as afternoon show co-host for WFAN 101.9 FM / 660 AM. Carton will rejoin the station November 9 and be heard alongside co-host Evan Roberts, weekdays from 2:00 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. ET.

“Craig Carton was part of the fabric of WFAN for a decade, both on and off the air, engaging and entertaining audiences with his one of a kind personality and talent,” said Chris Oliviero, Senior Vice President and Market Manager, Entercom New York. “We all hope that this next step on his road back will not only be beneficial to Craig, but also for his audience as he shares his story and looks to make an impact through the power of his voice. WFAN welcomes him back and is excited to have him join Evan Roberts in afternoon drive.”

“I am grateful to Entercom for the chance to return home to WFAN,” said Carton. “I have dreamt about this moment every minute of every day for the last three years. I know I have work to do to regain the trust of my colleagues, listeners and advertisers and am committed to doing just that. I can't wait to get started with Evan Roberts on November 9th.”

Carton rejoins WFAN after previously serving as co-host of the station’s morning show “Boomer & Carton” from 2007 to 2017. Carton began his broadcasting career in 1991 with a brief tenure at WGR Radio in Buffalo, NY, before moving to WWWE in Cleveland in 1992, and later to Philadelphia’s Sports Radio 94WIP (then WIP-AM, now Entercom sister station) in 1993. Carton’s program soared in the ratings during his four-plus years at WIP, earning him a place on Philadelphia Magazine’s Top 30 Under 30 list. He also served as a reporter covering the Philadelphia Eagles. In 1997, Carton was heard nationally on 40 stations throughout the country as he hosted a syndicated sports talk show on the Sports Fan Network. He later joined KKFN-FM in Denver as morning show host, where in his first year his show became the highest rated show in KKFN’s history. His success continued for cross-town rival KBPI-FM, and within one ratings period had the highest rated local morning show in Denver. Following a stint at WNEW-FM (now Entercom sister station New 102.7 FM) in New York, Carton joined WKXW-FM to host “The Jersey Guys” afternoon show.

Career accolades include: nominated and finalist for multiple Marconi Awards; multiple Cynopsis Sports Media Award winner; ranked as the second most important and influential sports talk show hosts in the country by Talkers Magazine’s “Top 100 Most Important and Influential Talk Show Hosts in the Country” multiple times; 9th most politically influential personality in New Jersey by PoliticsNJ.com (2007); and Radio and Records’ “Talk Show Host of The Year” nominee (2006). A strong advocate for children, Carton founded the TicTocStop Foundation, which donated hundreds of thousands of dollars towards research and the funding of a camp for children with Tourette syndrome. 



Carton succeeds longtime WFAN host Joe Benigno, who announced his retirement Wednesday.

The move did not come as a surprise, reports Newsday. Carton, 51, is personally and professionally close to Chris Oliviero, who is the New York market manager for Entercom and oversees WFAN.

In June, shortly before Carton was released after serving about 12 months of a 42-month sentence, Oliviero told Newsday, "If a time in the future came where Craig had gotten his life back on track, fulfilled all that was asked of him and was in a position to resume his career, of course we’d talk and discuss."

Evan Roberts
By pairing Carton with Roberts, 37, the station is counting on him bringing out another side of Roberts, who with Benigno mostly stuck to sports and showed relatively little range outside the area. That proved to be a particular problem in the spring, when the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the sports world, writes Neil Best at Newsday.

Carton, too, presumably will seek to adapt to the different vibe of afternoons, which tend to be less freewheeling than morning.

He also will have to navigate a world in which some listeners and callers will be skeptical that they can trust him – and in which gambling ads are a critical driver of sports radio revenues.

It was Carton’s admitted addiction to gambling that led him down the path to personal and professional ruin in 2017, when he was arrested for misusing funds intended for a ticket brokerage to repay gambling debts.

Spotify Reports Longer In-Car TSL


Spotify Technology moved past a slump that hit early in the pandemic, as customers collectively spent more time listening to the service than before Covid-19 shutdowns.

The Wall Street Journal reports the music-streaming giant added more users than expected in the most recent quarter and said consumption habits have normalized, with in-car listening hours—which had fallen with time spent commuting—exceeding their pre-pandemic peak. Listening on home devices, which exploded during lockdowns, also remained high.

At the close of the quarter ended Sept. 30, Spotify had 320 million monthly active users, higher than its guidance. Paying subscribers, its most lucrative type of customer, grew to 144 million, at the high end of the company’s forecast.

During the quarter, average revenue per user for the subscription business slipped 10% to 4.19 euros, equivalent to $4.92, as Spotify brought in new subscribers via discounted plans and charged lower prices in new markets such as India and Russia. The company said it had raised the price of its family plan in seven markets this month.

Revenue from subscriptions was up 15% from a year earlier in the quarter, to €1.79 billion, equivalent to $2.1 billion. Advertising revenue returned to growth after sliding in the first half of the year, rising 9% to €185 million. Though advertising accounts for 10% or less of Spotify’s overall revenue, it has become a growth area—on a double-digit rise before the pandemic—as the company has expanded its podcast business, which led the rebound in the recent quarter.

Spotify swung to a loss of €101 million, or 58 European cents a share, in the third quarter, from a profit of €241 million, or 36 European cents a share, a year earlier. While the company has periodically reported a quarterly profit, executives have said it will continue to give priority to growth—attracting new subscribers and investing in podcasts.

For the fourth quarter, the company forecast growth in monthly active users to between 340 million and 345 million, and in premium subscribers to between 150 million and 154 million. It guided for revenue of €2 billion to €2.2 billion.

Day 3: Oct PPMs Out For San Antonio, Orlando + 10 Other Markets

Nielsen On Wednesday, October 28, 2020 released the third batch of October 2020 PPM data from the following markets:


21  Portland OR

23  Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill NC

25   San Antonio

27   Sacramento

28  Salt Lake City-Ogden-Provo UT

29   Pittsburgh

30   Orlando

31  Las Vegas

33  Cincinnati

34  Kansas City

35  Cleveland

36  Columbus OH

Click Here for Topline Numbers of Subscribing Nielsen Stations. 

Comcast Reports 22M Sign-Up For Peacock


The coronavirus pandemic continued to pressure the finances of Comcast Corp., a cable and entertainment conglomerate whose theme-park business experienced an 81% revenue drop in the latest quarter, reports The Wall Street Journal.

The Philadelphia-based company, owner of Xfinity-branded services, the NBCUniversal media empire and the Sky television business, said third-quarter net profit fell 37% to $2.02 billion from $3.22 billion a year earlier. Revenue slipped 4.8% to $25.53 billion from $26.83 billion.

The company’s Universal Studios theme parks have been hit hard by the pandemic. Its parks in California have been closed since March, and there is limited capacity at those opened in Florida and Japan, prompting the company to lay off a large number of employees. Theme-park revenue fell to $311 million from $1.63 billion a year earlier.

Comcast’s theme-park struggles were partly offset by its broadband business, which posted 633,000 subscriber additions, another record. As more people rely on home broadband during the coronavirus pandemic for work and school, providers have experienced a surge in customer growth in recent quarters.

The company continued to lose pay-TV customers, with 273,000 net defections in the latest quarter. Just like its peers, Comcast continues to shed pay-TV customers who are opting for streaming services. Last week AT&T Inc. reported its pay-TV division lost 627,000 customers.

Overall, Comcast’s cable unit—which includes a phone business—posted a 2.9% increase in revenue to $15 billion.

The NBCUniversal division, whose businesses include cable networks, the NBC broadcast-TV unit, the Universal Pictures movie studio and the Universal Studios theme parks, saw overall revenue fall by 19% to $6.72 billion. Beyond theme parks, the largest decliner was filmed entertainment, which continued to suffer from limited capacity in movie theaters because of the pandemic, posting a 25% revenue decline to $1.28 billion. Only the broadcast unit posted higher revenue, with a gain of 8.3% to $2.41 billion.

NBCUniversal said Peacock, its new streaming service, landed 22 million sign-ups since its official launch in July. Comcast broadband and pay-TV customers receive free ad-supported subscriptions to the premium version of the service. The company has yet to disclose how many sign-ups are from its current customer base.


NBCUniversal has been going through a period of deep cost-cutting and restructuring. Some of it is related to the coronavirus pandemic, but most of it is tied to a realignment of its TV-content-producing operations to give priority to Peacock.


Cumulus Promotes Wade Linder To VP/Classic Rock


CUMULUS MEDIA announces that it has promoted Wade Linder to Vice President, Classic Rock, for the company. 

In his new role, Linder will serve on Cumulus’ content leadership team as a key resource for the company’s 34 Classic Rock radio stations, and will report to Troy Hanson, Vice President/Corporate Programming, Rock Formats. Linder will continue in his current role as Program Director for 94.7 WLS in Chicago, IL, a position he has held since 2018, following four years as Program Director of WLUP-FM. Prior to that, Linder was Program Director for KXXR-FM in Minneapolis, MN, a station he programmed for nearly 20 years. 

Wade Linder
Brian Philips, Executive Vice President, Content & Audience, CUMULUS MEDIA, said: “Wade’s intellect, imagination and prowess across formats will serve him really well in this important new capacity.”

Troy Hanson, Vice President/Corporate Programming, Rock Formats, CUMULUS MEDIA, commented: “Wade’s track record is indisputable, and the respect he’s earned from programmers inside and outside the company is well-earned. His steady hand is a welcome addition to the content leadership team.”

Wade Linder remarked: “I'm grateful to be entrusted with this new appointment from Brian Philips and Troy Hanson. It's a privilege to work with the programming brains and pure personalities in Classic Rock at Cumulus, with so much brand knowledge already present. Add to that the daily grounding and inspiration I receive from my closest radio family here at 94.7 WLS-FM in Chicago - where Marv Nyren shows us how to win and be kind at the same time. I want to also thank Dave Milner, John Dimick, and Doug Hamand.”

The AM Rundown: Zeta Storms Ashore


➤HURRICANE ZETA MAKES LANDFALL IN LOUISIANA AS CATEGORY 2 STORM:
Hurricane Zeta made landfall in Louisiana yesterday afternoon as a strong Category 2 storm, coming ashore in the small town of Cocodrie in the southeastern part of the state with top sustained winds of 110 miles per hour. The fast-moving hurricane moved quickly across the New Orleans area and into Mississippi. Zeta brought strong winds and a storm surge as well as heavy rains as times, but because it was moving so rapidly, there wasn't much flooding from rainfall. It weakened over Alabama to a tropical storm as it headed northeast. At least one person was killed by Zeta, a New Orleans man electrocuted by a downed power line. Louisiana Governor John Bel Edwards will today tour coastal regions hardest hit by the storm, saying in a radio interview yesterday evening that the winds had caused extensive structural damage. Much of New Orleans and the surrounding area didn't have power last night. 
Zeta set a new record as the 11th named storm to make landfall in the continental U.S. in one season. 


 
➤TRUMP AND BIDEN BOTH IN TAMPA TODAY: With just five days left before the election, President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden will both be in the key swing state of Florida today, and both will be speaking in Tampa just hours apart. Biden voted in his home state of Delaware yesterday and also spoke in Wilmington, speaking about the coronavirus, the handling of which has been a central part of his criticism of Trump. Biden said, "Even if I win, it’s going to take a lot of hard work to end this pandemic I do promise this: We will start on day one doing the right things." Trump spoke at a rally yesterday in Arizona, continuing his focus on the economy as he said, "This election is a choice between a Trump super-recovery and a Biden depression."



➤PHILADELPHIA POLICE TO RELEASE 911 TAPES, BODY CAM FOOTAGE IN WALLACE'S FATAL SHOOTING: Philadelphia Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw yesterday pledged to release the 911 tapes and police body camera footage in the police shooting death of Walter Wallace Jr., a 27-year-old Black man with a history of mental health problems. Wallace's family says he was having a mental health crisis and that they'd called for an ambulance Monday afternoon when police arrived and shot him when he wouldn't put down a knife he was wielding. Outlaw and Mayor Jim Kenney both pledged to addressed the lack of coordinated mental health services in the city. Wallace's death led to protests both Monday and Tuesday night that led to clashes with police and looting in another part of the city. City officials announced yesterday they would enact a curfew from 9 p.m. until 6 a.m. and that the Pennsylvania National Guard would be deployed to help protect property and assist the police.

➤DOW JONES FALLS 943 POINTS, MOST SINCE JUNE, AMID RISING CORONAVIRUS CASES: The Dow Jones Industrial Average fell 943 points on Wednesday, the biggest one-day drop since mid-June, amid concerns about rising coronavirus cases and the effect on the economy. It was the fourth straight day of declines in the Dow. Coronavirus cases have risen by a record daily average of 71,832 over the past week, and coronavirus-related hospitalizations are up five percent or more in three dozen states, while cases are also surging in Europe.

➤FBI WARNS OF RANSOMWARE THREAT TO U.S. HEALTHCARE SYSTEM: The FBI warned yesterday that cybercriminals are set to launch a wave of ransomware attacks on the U.S. healthcare system, which could hurt patient care. The attacks are aimed at locking up hospital information systems to make them inaccessible and then demanding money to release them. AP cited independent security experts as saying at least five U.S. hospitals have been attacked this week, and hundreds more could potentially be targeted in the attacks by a Russian-speaking criminal gang.


➤GIRL SCOUTS REMOVE POSTS AFTER CRITICISM: The Girl Scouts of America deleted posts from its Twitter and Facebook pages yesterday evening that congratulated Amy Coney Barrett on becoming a Supreme Court justice after they came under criticism. The post showed an image of Barrett along with the other four women who've been appointed to the nation's highest court, along with the caption: "Congratulations Amy Coney Barrett on becoming the 5th woman appointed to the Supreme Court since its inception in 1789," and included an emoji of hands raised up. The post quickly drew a backlash, with critics including Democratic Rep. Ayanna Pressley, who tweeted: "What kind of patch does one earn for uplifting a woman who is the antithesis of justice?" But the post also got support, with one conservative woman tweeting: "Those of you bashing the organization, please remember there are conservatives that support Girl Scouts too. I was grateful to see the post in support of WOMEN, regardless of who they are." The Girl Scouts explained removing the post, saying that it was, quote, "quickly viewed as a political and partisan statement," which wasn't the intent. They added, "Girl Scouts of the USA is a nonpolitical, nonpartisan organization. We are neither red nor blue, but Girl Scout GREEN. We are here to lift up girls and women."



⚾MLB: DODGERS' TURNER VIOLATED CORONAVIRUS PROTOCOLS WHEN RETURNED TO FIELD: Major League Baseball said Wednesday that L.A. Dodgers third baseman Justin Turner violated the coronavirus protocols when he came back on the field to celebrate with his teammates after they won the World Series Tuesday night, including posing for the team photo, and refused directives from security to leave the field. Turner had been pulled after the seventh inning of the Series-winning game after his coronavirus test came back positive. MLB said it's starting a full investigation. The league said, "While a desire to celebrate is understandable, Turner’s decision to leave isolation and enter the field was wrong and put everyone he came in contact with at risk. When MLB Security raised the matter of being on the field with Turner, he emphatically refused to comply."

🎤WORLD SERIES RATINGS 32 PERCENT BELOW PREVIOUS LOW: The six-game World Series between the champion L.A. Dodgers and the Tampa Bay Rays had an average TV rating 32 percent below the previous low for a World Series. The games on Fox averaged a 5.2 rating, and the previous low was 7.6 for the San Francisco Giants’ four-game sweep of the Detroit Tigers in 2012. Ratings have been lower for sports overall this fall, possibly because of lower viewership during the pandemic and competition from election-related programming.

🏈REPORT: SUPER BOWL TO HAVE FANS AT 20 PERCENT CAPACITY: The NFL is expecting to have fans at the Super Bowl on its scheduled February 7th date, but their capacity will be set at 20 percent at Raymond James Stadium in Tampa, Florida, ESPN reported yesterday. The report said the fans will sit in pods six feet apart and be required to wear face masks.

🎌NASCAR PLAYOFF RACE FINALLY COMPLETED, BUSCH WINS: After being delayed for three days because of bad weather, NASCAR's playoff race at Texas was finally completed Wednesday, and won by Kyle Busch. The race was stopped Sunday after 52 laps due to weather, and no racing was able to be done Monday or Tuesday. There are still three open spots for the four-driver championship race to join Joey Logano in the season finale at Phoenix. The only race before that is on Sunday at Martinsville.

🏈WISCONSIN CANCELS NEBRASKA GAME DUE TO CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK: Number 9 Wisconsin yesterday canceled its game against Nebraska and paused football activities for at least a week after six players and six staffers, including coach Paul Chryst, tested positive for the coronavirus. Wisconsin is the first Big Ten school to cancel a game due to the coronavirus since the league started its pandemic-delayed season five days ago. The news came following reports that quarterback Graham Mertz had tested positive twice, which would require him to sit out at least 21 days, and that backup quarterback Chase Wolf had tested positive at least once.

🏃2021 BOSTON MARATHON POSTPONED: Next year's Boston Marathon is being postponed, with organizers saying yesterday that it won't be run on its traditional Patriots Day date in April because of the coronavirus pandemic for a second straight year. The organizers said the marathon would be postponed at least until next fall. This year's Boston Marathon was originally postponed from April to September, but then canceled altogether two months later.

Ted Cruz To Twitter: "Who The Hell Elected You?"

The Wall Street Journal 10/29/20

Chiefs of the largest social-media companies tangled with U.S. senators over their role in public discourse amid a contentious election that has stoked bipartisan criticism of the companies’ policies, reports The Wall Street Journal.

Facebook Inc. Chief Executive Mark Zuckerberg, Twitter Inc. CEO Jack Dorsey and Sundar Pichai, CEO of Google and YouTube owner Alphabet Inc., have spent the years since the 2016 election rewriting their policies and taking a more active role in moderating online speech—in part to avoid a spotlight like the one placed on them Wednesday.

Instead, the Senate Commerce Committee hearing reflected deep discontent with social-media platforms’ power and equally deep divisions about how to address it.

Republicans are pushing to update part of a 1996 law known as Section 230 that helps shield internet platforms from liability for user-generated content, claiming it has been misused to censor conservative views.

Sen. Cory Gardner (R., Colo.) questioned Twitter’s decisions to label some posts by President Trump as misleading but not others by Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei threatening Israel and denying the Holocaust. “I just don’t understand how Twitter can claim to want a world of less hate and misinformation while you simultaneously let the kind of content that the ayatollah has tweeted out to flourish,” he said.

In a series of testy exchanges with senators over the nearly four-hour hearing, which was conducted via webcast, the CEOs expressed varying degrees of openness toward changing Section 230 but denied any political bias.


 Dorsey faced perhaps the harshest questions, including about Twitter’s decision to block users from linking to recent New York Post articles concerning allegations against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, which his campaign has denied.

Sen. Ted Cruz (R., Tex.) accused Twitter of acting as a “Democratic super PAC” when it decided to block tweets of the articles, including by the Post.

“Who the hell elected you and put you in charge of what the media are allowed to report?” Mr. Cruz asked.

“I hear the concerns and acknowledge them,” Mr. Dorsey said, but he denied Twitter was favoring Democratic causes.

NY Post Editorial Accuses Twitter Of Blackmail

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey is practicing "blackmail" by demanding the New York Post delete a tweet sharing a link to its bombshell report about Hunter Biden before its account is unlocked, op-ed editor Sohrab Ahmari told "The Story" Wednesday.

During an exchange with Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, while testifying before the Senate Commerce Committee Dorsey explained that the Post is not technically locked out, because it can go back and delete the original post from two weeks ago announcing the Hunter Biden laptop story, and re-post it today because the site's "terms of service" have since changed.

"I say that sounds like high-tech racketeering," Ahmari told host Martha MacCallum. "We’re being blackmailed the way an old mob boss would do."

Though unable to tweet Thursday's cover, Ahmari said that it is available on the New York Post website and features Dorsey "blackmailing" investigative journalism.

"Nice paper you got there," Ahmari remarked in summing up Dorsey's comments. "Be a shame if you couldn’t reach your two million followers on our platform."



Ahmari added that while Dorsey drew attention to Twitter's "hacked" documents policy during the hearing, none of the documents featured in the Post report were hacked.

"It's a recovered laptop," he said, noting that the Post received the contents from the Wilmington, Del., computer store owner via former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

"He [Dorsey] has no evidence, so why would we have to delete our tweets?" Ahmari asked before adding that the power held by Dorsey and Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg is "unaccountable" and that they have "too much control over what we see and what we think."

SLC To Lose Both Daily Newspapers



In the span of just two days, Salt Lake City learned that it would join the list of American cities without a daily newspaper after both of its major papers said they would stop printing a daily edition at the end of the year. reports The NYTimes.

The Deseret News will instead print a weekly edition, as well as a monthly magazine, its editor, Doug Wilks, said in an op-ed article on Tuesday.  That news came the day after the city’s other major newspaper, The Salt Lake Tribune, announced that it would switch from a daily printing schedule to a weekly one.

The newspapers said that on Dec. 31 they would end a 68-year-old partnership that allowed them to collaborate on printing, delivery and advertising. Utah Media Group, which manages the printing operations, told its 161 employees on Monday about “the coming end of the printing company, detailing severance packages,” The Deseret News reported.

The change will end a nearly 150-year run of daily newspaper delivery for The Tribune.

The Deseret News, which is owned by the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, has been printing for nearly 170 years. It started as a “small weekly sheet” in 1850, three years after the territory it is named for was declared, Mr. Wilks wrote. It became a daily in 1865.

The economic decline caused by the coronavirus pandemic has pummeled a local newspaper industry already struggling with declining revenues, layoffs and pay reductions in newsrooms across the country.

David Noyce, the interim editor of The Tribune, told readers in an email that the paper was making the change to position itself financially for the future and that the change would not result in any reduction of its newsroom staff.

Spotify Says It Won't Ban Podcast Guests


Spotify has reportedly taken a new stance against banning guests following podcast host Joe Rogan's interview with conspiracy theorist Alex Jones on an episode this week.

Horacio Gutierrez, Spotify's chief legal officer and head of global affairs, wrote in an internal email to managers obtained by BuzzFeed News that anyone with content concerns should report them to the company's Trust & Safety team, but noted "[i]t’s all too common that things are taken out of context."

“We are not going to ban specific individuals from being guests on other people’s shows, as the episode/show complies with our content policies,” read one of several "talking points" outlined in the email Wednesday, though it did not names Jones directly, BuzzFeed reported.

Gutierrez also reportedly emphasized the importance of the platform sharing diverse points of view, reports The Hill.

“Spotify has always been a place for creative expressions. It’s important to have diverse voices and points of view on our platform,” the email stated, according to BuzzFeed.

“In closing, we appreciate that not all of you will agree with every piece of content on our platform,” Gutierrez wrote, according to the outlet. “However, we do expect you to help your teams understand our role as a platform and the care we take in making decisions.”