Friday, August 20, 2021

Feds Renew Anti-Trust Case Against Facebook


Federal regulators are targeting Facebook with another antitrust case again, after their first attempt failed, dismissed by a federal judge in June. 

The Federal Trade Commission alleged in a revised complaint yesterday (August 19th) that Facebook pursued a, quote, "buy or bury" against its rivals to suppress competition. 

If the FTC is successful this time, they're seeking remedies that could include forcing Facebook to sell Instagram and WhatsApp or restructure the company. 

In the original case, the judge rejected the complaint that Facebook engaged in a "systematic strategy" to eliminate its competition, saying the FTC didn't provide enough evidence to prove the company is a monopoly. 

The new case addresses that, with the FTC presenting a detailed history of Facebook's conduct to support its claim. Advocates say that Congress needs to update its antitrust laws, as the current ones are weakened and make cases like the FTC's against Facebook and other Big Tech companies harder. A bipartisan overhaul of antitrust laws was approved by the House Judiciary Committee in June and sent to the full House.

Chicago Media: Jennifer Lyons Named GM At CBS2


Jennifer Lyons, the former WGN-TV news director who most recently helped launch the NewsNation cable news network, is taking the reins at WBBM-TV CBS 2 Chicago as president and general manager.

The Chicago Tribune reports the announcement Thursday fills a void at CBS 2 Chicago after general manager Derek Dalton was ousted last month following an investigation into an allegedly hostile work environment at the CBS-owned station.

Jennifer Lyons
“We feel extremely fortunate to have someone like Jennifer, who has a proven track record of success in Chicago, joining as the leader of our team, products and platforms at CBS 2,” Wendy McMahon, president and co-head of CBS News and Stations, said in a news release.

The move adds a respected Chicago TV news veteran in Lyons, who spent most of her 27-year career at WGN-TV, where she worked her way up to news director in 2014. She was promoted last year to oversee the transformation of WGN America into NewsNation under Dallas-based owner Nexstar Media Group, which bought the cable network in 2019 as part of its $4.1 billion acquisition of Chicago-based Tribune Media.

Lyons recruited the air talent, assembled 150 newsroom staffers and coordinated the NewsNation launch in September 2020. She resigned from the struggling cable news network in March amid shrinking ratings and growing criticism that its programming was drifting to the right of the political spectrum, reneging on a pledge to deliver unbiased reporting.

At CBS 2, Lyons inherits a station embroiled in its own turmoil. Last month, Dalton and Jay Howell, general manager of KCBS-TV in Los Angeles, were ousted after a six-month investigation into an allegedly hostile work environment at the CBS network’s group of 28 TV stations.

Fort Wayne Radio: Peter Dominowski Retiring At Non-Com WBOI-FM

Peter Dominowski
A veteran of 47 years in public media, Peter Dominowski is retiring from his role as President/General Manager of the region’s public radio station, WBOI 89.1, at year-end. 

He joined WBOI in 2013 from Strategic Programming Partners as a managing partner and consultant to radio stations on programming, promotions and fund raising. During his tenure at WBOI, the organization achieved greater financial stability and listenership. Dominowski plans to resume his consulting practice with public media and nonprofits and will relocate to Florida.

“The NPR brand continues to attract listeners and members who value the extensive reporting of international and national news, as well as music, conversations and humor heard 24/7 on WBOI,” said NIPR Board Chair Lynne Gilmore. “The Northeast Indiana Public Radio Board of Trustees is grateful to Peter for his leadership and contributions to the organization, and we will continue this growth and listener engagement as we seek the next leader. We know WBOI is a critical source of news and local programming in our community and will continue to move our mission forward.”

The Board of Trustees is conducting a national search for the next President/General Manager.

Usually Supportive WaPo Columnist Lashes Out At TWH

Washington Post columnist Jennifer Rubin is lashing out at the White House for not ramping up efforts to rescue Americans out of Afghanistan after spending much of the week cheerleading President Biden's withdrawal. 

Reacting to the Pentagon press briefing, Rubin drew a sharp contrast between Britain's handling of getting its citizens out of the Taliban-controlled country versus the U.S. 



FOX News reports this marks a sudden shift in tone from Rubin, who is known for showering Biden with praise and a Twitter favorite of White House chief of staff Ron Klain. 

On Monday, Rubin hailed Biden's speech to the nation, declaring it "the best possible defense of his Afghanistan withdrawal."

On Tuesday, Rubin continued her marathon of complimenting the president with a column titled, "Biden refused to fall for two decades of military dissembling."

The Post columnist even defended the Biden administration by scolding the media for the "false narratives" being pushed. 

The fawning continued into Wednesday in a column insisting Biden still "has leverage in Afghanistan."

"We still have firepower on the ground, and we have financial leverage over the Taliban. A skillful administration would be using both to full effect," Rubin wrote. "We need a transactional relationship that we are willing to enforce through remaining military forces and financial pressure. If we can do that and continue to protect our interests, the Biden administration’s reputation for competency might get a much-needed boost."

Fox News Digital Tops CNN In Key Categories


Fox News Digital topped CNN in multiplatform minutes and multiplatform views during the month of July to finish as the No. 1 news brand, according to Comscore. 

Americans flocked to Fox News Digital for the latest information and analysis, as it reached nearly 1.6 billion multiplatform views and approximately 3.4 billion multiplatform total minutesFox News Digital has now topped CNN in multiplatform minutes for five-straight months and outperformed a variety of other brands including digital properties from NBC News. ABC News, CBS News, Washington Post, The New York Times, HuffPost, Reuters and USA Today. 

FOX Business reports Fox News Digital has put an emphasis on breaking news, original reporting, outside-the-box features, dynamic opinion content, exclusive interviews and video of Fox News Channel’s key segments. It delivered close to 89 million unique visitors and the Fox News Mobile App delivered nearly 6.9 million unique visitors. Fox News’ app has now beaten CNN’s in the category for three-straight months. 

July also marked the 83rd straight-month that Fox News was the most engaged brand across Facebook, Twitter and Instagram with over 40 million total social media interactions. 

Fox News finished July with over 18 million Facebook interactions and over 21 million on Instagram to finish as the top news brand, according to Socialbakers. In addition, Fox News piled up over 253 million YouTube video views to finish as the top news outlet in the coveted category. 

Fox News’ YouTube content has seen a 25 percent increase in video views compared to 2020. In addition, Fox Business topped all business competitors in the category with over 26 million views. 

Fox Business finished the month with 111 million total multiplatform views and 197 million multiplatform total minutes, increasing from last month in both categories. Fox Business has now topped Forbes.com in multiplatform minutes for 10-straight months and finished July with 19.7 million multiplatform unique visitors for the month. 

August 20 Radio History


Alan Reed
➦In 1907...Actor and voice artist Alan Reed born Herbert Theodore Bergman (Died  from a heart attack at age 69 – June 14, 1977).  He was best known as the original voice of Fred Flintstone on ABC-TV cartoon series The Flintstones and various spinoff series. He also appeared in many films, including Days of Glory, The Tarnished Angels, Breakfast at Tiffany's, Viva Zapata! (as Pancho Villa), and Nob Hill, and various television series.

As early as 1930, Reed (billed as Teddy Bergman) co-starred with Herbert Polesie in Henry and George, a CBS program that featured "minute dramas, popular laugh makers ... interspersed with dance music selections."

Reed's radio work included having two roles in Valiant Lady, the role of Solomon Levy on Abie's Irish Rose, as the "Allen's Alley" resident poet Falstaff Openshaw on Fred Allen's NBC radio show, and later on his own five-minute show, Falstaff's Fables, on ABC, as Officer Clancey and other occasional roles on the NBC radio show Duffy's Tavern, as Shrevey the driver on several years of The Shadow, as Chester Riley's boss on the NBC radio show The Life of Riley, as Italian immigrant Pasquale in Life with Luigi on CBS radio, various supporting roles on Yours Truly, Johnny Dollar and The Phil Harris-Alice Faye Show, and as Lt. Walter Levinson in several episodes of Richard Diamond, Private Detective.

Reed was "heard regularly on the Crime Doctor series," and "was the original Daddy to Fanny Brice on Baby Snooks." Billed as Teddy Bergman, he had the title role on Joe Palooka.

Billed as Teddy Bergman, Reed appeared on Broadway in Double Dummy (1936), and A House in the Country (1937),  and Love's Old Sweet Song (1940).


Andre Baruch
➦In 1908...veteran golden-voiced announcer André Baruch born in France (Died at age 83  – September 15, 1991).  He was a film narrator, radio announcer, news commentator, talk show host, disc jockey and sportscaster.

Baruch began his career as a pianist for NBC Radio. He got into the wrong line of applicants; he had entered the announcers' line and was hired on the spot.

After World War II, Baruch and his wife worked as a husband-and-wife disc jockey team in New York on WMCA, where they were billed as Mr. and Mrs. Music. Their show was later presented on the ABC and NBC networks.

Baruch was an announcer for such programs as The American Album of Familiar Music, The Fred Waring Show, The Kate Smith Show, The Shadow, Your Hit Parade and The United States Steel Hour.

Fulfilling a 20-year dream, in 1954 he was named to the Brooklyn Dodgers broadcast team, for whom he worked for two years on WMGM radio and WOR-TV.

In 1973, Baruch and Wain moved to Palm Beach, Florida where they did a top-rated daily four-hour talk show on WPBR 1340 AM. Baruch was the host of the show and ran the control board.

After nine years, Baruch and Wain relocated to Beverly Hills, California. During the early 1980s, the pair hosted a syndicated version of Your Hit Parade, reconstructing the list of hits of selected weeks in the 1940s and playing the original recordings.

1920 Front-Page Ad for 8MK Radio
➦In 1920...WWJ owned by The Detroit News inaugurated daily broadcasts from a studio established in the newspaper's headquarters building, located at the corner of Lafayette and 2nd Avenues. These initial broadcasts, by what was then called the "Detroit News Radiophone", were sent under an amateur station license operating with the call sign "8MK"

The person most responsible for establishing the Detroit News Radiophone service was the newspaper's vice-president and managing director, William E. Scripps. The Scripps family had a long history of interest in radio developments.

8MK began nightly trial broadcasts, in order to check if the equipment was ready for regular service. However, because the station was still un-publicized the original audience consisted only of a small number of interested local amateur radio enthusiasts. The test programs proved satisfactory, so on August 31, 1920 the Detroit News announced on its front page that, starting that evening, nightly (except Sunday) broadcasts would be transmitted by the "Detroit News Radiophone" service. That evening's debut program featured regularly updated returns for a primary election held that day, plus vocal performances by Lois Johnson. Malcolm Bingay, managing director of the Detroit News, was the broadcast's master of ceremonies.

The front page of the next day's News contained enthusiastic reports attesting to the success of the election night broadcast, which had begun "promptly at 8:10 p. m.", with the newspaper declaring: "The sending of the election returns by The Detroit News Radiophone Tuesday night was fraught with romance and must go down in the history of man's conquest of the elements as a gigantic step in his progress." The paper also reported receiving "numberless telephone calls to The News office asking for details of the apparatus".

Daily broadcasts, most commonly between 7 and 8 p.m., continued through September. Although the initial programs consisted mostly of phonograph records interspersed with news announcements, programming also included fight results from the heavyweight championship bout between Jack Dempsey and Billy Miske on September 6, and, in October, play-by-play accounts as the Cleveland Indians bested the Brooklyn Dodgers in the 1920 World Series baseball championship. In March 1922, the call-letters were changed to WWJ, which they have remained ever since. Today the station is owned by Entercom Communications and airs news/talk.


➦In 1960...19-year-old Marv Alpert, a journalism major at Syracuse University and future sportscaster was working at WMGM 1050 AM radio in New York during the summer in the record library and news department.


➦In 1963...It was announced that all-night talk show host Long John Nebel - heard on WOR 710 AM in New York would also be heard on WNAC 680 AM in Boston, also owned by RKO-General.




➦In 1963...NYC Deejay Stan Z. Burns at 1010WINS, New York had the magic touch. After playing “That Sunday, That Summer” off of Nat King Cole’s latest album with tremendous response, Capitol Records announced it will release it as a single.


Rick Sklar
➦In 1963...Many in the industry were stunned by the promotion of Rick Sklar, director of community services at 77 WABC Radio in New York, to Program Director, replacing Sam Holman. The announcement was made by newly-appointed vice-president and general manager Walter Schwartz. “Sam Holman, who has done so much to bring WABC to its present enviable position in the market, will continue to be a front-line piece of talent for us" (Holman was also a DJ).

Under his management, WABC became the model for tight-playlist, teenager-targeted Top 40 programming, with a strong signal and famed disc jockeys such as "Cousin Brucie" Bruce Morrow, Dan Ingram, Harry Harrison, Chuck Leonard, and Ron Lundy.

His relationship with some of the DJs he oversaw was contentious at times. Scott Muni departed from WABC after a number of confrontations with Sklar over playlists including Sklar's refusal to remove Louis Armstrong's version of the #1 smash hit "Hello, Dolly" from the playlist at Muni's request. Under Sklar, the station's ratings soared and was often the most listened to radio station in North America through the mid-60s into the late 70s.

In March 1977, Sklar was promoted to vice president of programming for ABC’s radio division. In 1984 he left ABC to start his own consulting firm, Sklar Communications.


➦In 1963...CBS radio network launched its Net Alert systems.  Units were installed in more than 200 affiliate stations of the CBS radio network. Net Alert allowed the network newsrooms in New York or Los Angles to notify affiliates of important breaking news stories.


➦In 1967...With FM radio making some ratings noise in New York, it was announced that a new kind of transmitting antenna was available to improve FM reception. WABC 95.5 FM & WCBS 101.1 FM in New York, began transmitting in September with a circularly polarized antenna from the Empire State Building.

FM transmissions are either horizontal or vertical or both, which means your radio antenna must be positioned the same way. Circularly polarized transmitting antennas means you will be able to set your FM antenna anyway a listener wanted.


➦In 1967...the New York Times reported about a noise reduction system for album and tape recording developed by technicians R. and D.W. Dolby. The Elektra Records’ subsidiary, Checkmate Records became the first label to use the new Dolby process in its productions.


➦In 1997...Talk show host Bob Grant sued his former radio station – Talkradio 77WABC New York which he says, tried to blacklist him after he made controversial remarks about deceased commerce secretary Ron Brown.


➦In 2009...Larry Knechtel died from a heart attack at age 69 (Born - August 4, 1940). He was a  keyboard player and bassist, best known as a member of the Wrecking Crew, a collection of Los Angeles-based session musicians who worked with such renowned artists as Simon & Garfunkel, Duane Eddy, the Beach Boys, the Mamas & the Papas, the Monkees, the Partridge Family, the Doors, The Grass Roots, Jerry Garcia, and Elvis Presley, and as a member of the 1970s band Bread.

As a  studio musician, he played  on such classic recordings as Bridge Over Troubled Water, Mother And Child Reunion, Swayin' To The Music, Rockin' Pneumonia-Boogie Woogie Flu, Mac Arthur Park, Stoned Soul Picnic, Good Vibrations, Up Up And Away, Wouldn't It Be Nice, Monday Monday, Dream A Little Dream Of Me, Christmas-Baby Please Come Home, Eve Of Destruction, Summer Breeze and many others .

Martin & Lewis 1949
➦In 2017...Comedian Jerry Lewis died of heart-related issues at age 91. At first,  he was partnered with Dean Martin, with whom he starred in NBC radio (1949-1953) & early TV series.  Nicknamed the “King of Comedy” he is best known by recent generations for annually hosting a Labor Day telethon raising funds to fight Muscular Dystrophy.

Jimmy Pankow is 74

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAYS:
  • Former News anchor Connie Chung is 75. 
  • Trombone player Jimmy Pankow of Chicago is 74. 
  • Actor Ray Wise (“Reaper,” ″Twin Peaks”) is 74. 
  • Actor John Noble (“Lord of the Rings” films) is 73. 
  • Singer Robert Plant (Led Zeppelin) is 73. 
  • Singer Rudy Gatlin of the Gatlin Brothers is 69. 
  • Singer-songwriter John Hiatt is 69. 
  • Meghan Ory is 39
    Actor-director Peter Horton (“thirtysomething”) is 68. 
  • “Today” show weatherman Al Roker is 67. 
  • Actor Joan Allen is 65. 
  • Actor James Marsters (“Angel,” ″Buffy the Vampire Slayer”) is 59. 
  • Rapper KRS-One is 56. 
  • Actor Colin Cunningham (“Falling Skies”) is 55. 
  • Actor Billy Gardell (“Mike and Molly”) is 52. 
  • Singer Fred Durst of Limp Bizkit is 51. 
  • Actor Jonathan Ke Quan (“Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom”) 51. 
  • Guitarist Brad Avery of Third Day is 50. 
  • Actor Misha Collins (“Supernatural”) is 47. 
  • Singer Monique Powell of Save Ferris is 46. 
  • Actor Ben Barnes (“Westworld,” ″Prince Caspian”) is 40. 
  • Actor Meghan Ory (“One Upon a Time”) is 39. 
  • Actor Andrew Garfield (“The Amazing Spider-Man”) is 38. 
  • Actor Brant Daugherty (“Pretty Little Liars”) is 36. 
  • Singer-actor Demi Lovato is 29. 
  • Actor Christopher Paul Richards (TV’s “The Kids Are Alright”) is 18.

    Thursday, August 19, 2021

    Radio Unites Against Common Threat: Spotify


    Philadelphia-based radio and digital broadcaster Audacy is providing a digital home for yet another competitor after reaching a content distribution partnership with Urban One.

    The Philadelphia Business Journal reports the deal will bring the content of Urban One’s 57 stations across 13 different markets to the Audacy app. With the partnership, the platform now has over 2,000 local and national radio stations from more than 100 markets.

    Audacy said a typical distribution partnership allows a company such as Urban One to expand its digital audience while selling additional advertising. In return for providing the digital platform, Audacy benefits from selling pre-roll ads that automatically play directly before featured content begins. The arrangement also brings more listeners to the Audacy app, where the company hopes they will stay and seek out more content.

    Audacy's pact with Urban One is the just latest in a string of similar deals with radio rivals. In February 2019, it announced content distribution partnerships with Cox Radio and Bonneville, and then similar arrangements with Alpha Media and Salem Media Group later that year.

    In November, Audacy signed a partnership with Beasley Media Group to livestream its 64 stations situated in 15 different markets, including Beasley's six Philadelphia stations — classic rock station 102.9 WMGK-FM, country station 92.5 WXTU, sports talker 97.5 The Fanatic, rock station 93.3 WMMR-FM, pop station 95.7 BenFM (WBEN-FM) and talk station 860 WWDB-AM.

    It seems counterintuitive to promote stations that are fierce rivals and could eat into the listenership of Audacy’s local stations — KYW Newsradio, SportsRadio 94 WIP-FM, adult contemporary station B101 (WBEB-FM), classic hits 98.1 (WOGL-FM), pop station 96.5 WTDY-FM and conservative talk station 1210 WPHT-AM. But Corey Podolsky, Audacy’s vice president of business development, said a healthy radio industry helps both Audacy and its traditional terrestrial radio competitors as the industry as a whole locks horns with streaming alternatives such as Spotify.

    “We believe if you build radio listenership in general, that helps us,” Podolsky said. “So we absolutely compete with them when it comes to radio but not when it comes to technology.”

    Podolsky said the fragmentation of radio listenership has hurt the industry but when all of that radio listenership is pulled together, it dwarfs Spotify.

    This is the second major deal struck with Silver Spring, Maryland-based Urban One. Last November, Audacy and Urban One competed a station swap where Audacy acquired hip hop formatted WPHI (103.9 FM) and turned it into an FM simulcast for KYW. In return, Urban One received five stations in St. Louis, Washington, D.C., and Charlotte. Despite the sale of WPHI, Urban One retained two Philadelphia FM stations 100.3 RnB (WNRB) and Classix 107.9 (WPPZ), which both play throwback R&B music.

    One rival not partnering with Audacy is iHeart Media, the only radio broadcaster with a larger footprint. iHeart has a robust app of its own and just last month reached a partnership that will enable streaming service TuneIn to distribute iHeart’s more than 850 digital stations.

    AP Boss: Support of Journalists In Afghanistan Is 'Moral Duty'

    CNN's  Clarissa Ward being watched

    The swift Taliban takeover of Afghanistan has news organizations simultaneously trying to cover the story, protect their journalists and families, and help people who have done work for them over the past two decades, according to the UK's Press-Gazette.

    Video of chaotic scenes from the Kabul airport were frequently repeated during news reports of the fast-developing story Monday, which President Joe Biden addressed in a speech to the nation.

    CNN reporter Clarissa Ward, in an interview from Afghanistan, said even some Taliban fighters she had spoken to were surprised at the speed the country fell.

    “I don’t think they ever doubted they would win,” she told The Associated Press. “But I don’t think they anticipated it would happen this quickly.”

    Ward’s own reporting from Kabul streets illustrated uncertainties about the country’s future. At one point, she noted that the Taliban had given her permission for CNN to film a report, but she was asked to stand to the side “because I’m a woman.”

    She adjusted her attire to reflect the takeover by the more culturally conservative forces, wearing a tighter head covering that obscured her hair.

    News organizations were continually assessing security needs: At one point NBC News’ Richard Engel said the network had moved out of its office to a safer location. CBS News’ Roxana Saberi reported from her hotel room on “CBS This Morning” on Monday because the facility was on lockdown.

    The Committee to Protect Journalists said it had fielded requests from 475 journalists in Afghanistan – who work for both local and international news organizations – for help leaving the country, said Maria Salazar-Ferro, the organization’s emergencies director.

    CPJ is working with the US military, along with governments in Canada, France, Germany and Britain, to seek landing places for some of these journalists and their families, she said. But for much of Monday, no planes were leaving Kabul.

    News organizations, many of them working together, are making day-to-day decisions on where journalists should be deployed for safety reasons.

    Safety is always a concern for journalists in unstable countries. The added element in Afghanistan now, as it was previously in Iraq, is the safety of people – not just journalists but drivers, translators and others – who helped news organisations at different points in the 20 years the US and UK fought in the country.

    The AP is seeking visas for what may amount to hundreds of people, including current and former staff, freelancers and their families.

    “It’s a moral duty,” said Ian Phillips, AP’s vice president for international news. “They may not work for us now, but they worked for us in difficult years.”

    Maddow's Court Victory May Help Conservative Media


    MSNBC’s Rachel Maddow this week scored another legal victory when an appeals court upheld a ruling that found she didn’t defame conservative network One America News (OAN). Mediapost reports the decision may benefit OAN and Fox News Channel in fending off billion-dollar defamation suits in connection with their reporting on alleged election fraud.

    The Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Maddow’s comments that described OAN as “paid Russian propaganda” were protected speech. Maddow in 2019 had referred to a Daily Beast story that described how OAN employee Kristian Rouz also worked for Sputnik News, a Russia state-owned media outlet.

    OAN, which is owned by Herring Networks, sued Maddow for $10 million, claiming her remarks were “malicious and utterly false.” U.S. District Judge Cynthia Bashant in May 2020 threw out the suit, ruling there were "no set of facts that could support a claim for defamation based on Maddow's statement."

    MSNBC's Maddow
    The appeals court backed that ruling, determining that “Maddow’s statement was well within the bounds of what qualified as protected speech under the First Amendment. The challenged statement was an obvious exaggeration, cushioned within an undisputed news story.”

    The three-judge panel also upheld a lower court decision requiring OAN to pay $250,000 of Maddow's legal fees.

    The ruling is notable as Smartmatic and Dominion Voting Systems, the makers of voting machines, sue conservative media outlets for defamation.

    Smartmatic in February sued Fox News and two of Donald Trump's former lawyers, Sidney Powell and Rudy Giuliani, accusing them of spreading a false claim that the company had rigged the election. A judge in that case this week questioned Fox News’ motion for a dismissal.

    Dominion this month filed defamation suits against OAN, Newsmax and former Overstock.com CEO Patrick Byrne. The barrage of litigation followed earlier suits against Fox News, Giuliani, Powell and Mike Lindell, CEO of MyPillow.

    The Maddow defense that such statements were obvious exaggerations may be useful in seeking dismissal of these suits. It would be ironic if OAN were granted a dismissal on similar grounds.

    With R Kelly on Trial, What Has Become of His Music?


    In some ways, R Kelly, 54, stands out as an emblem of so-called cancel culture, his music — including hits like “I Believe I Can Fly” and “The World’s Greatest” — all but erased from the radio and other commercial placements, his high-profile concerts and record deals a thing of the past.

    The NY Times reports data show that the popularity of his music online has remained remarkably steady in recent years. Since January 2019, when the Lifetime documentary series “Surviving R. Kelly” finally turned public opinion against him, Kelly’s music has had about 780 million audio streams in the United States — not counting YouTube videos, where he also remains popular — and his work is promoted on hundreds of official playlists. On Spotify, he draws 5.2 million listeners each month.

    Looking at Kelly’s performance across multiple streaming and social-media platforms, the data service Chartmetric ranks him as one of music’s top 500 artists, at a level comparable to Michael Bublé and Carrie Underwood. On TikTok, some of the platform’s most popular influencers have used his music to soundtrack their posts, putting his total views there in the same ballpark as J. Cole and Frank Ocean.

    Such a dichotomy may be the fate of superstar entertainers accused of serious misconduct — pariahs in certain places, but with enduring bodies of work that still draw large audiences. In the case of Michael Jackson, the subject of another 2019 documentary alleging sexual abuse, the commercial impact has proved minimal — in fact, streams of Jackson’s songs have grown.

    The critic and filmmaker Dream Hampton, the executive producer of “Surviving R. Kelly,” called what Kelly has experienced in recent years a kind of “social death,” in which corporations and everyday members of society — exercise instructors, Uber drivers, backyard barbecue D.J.s — make a collective decision to stop embracing an artist.

    Even before 2000, when The Chicago Sun-Times published the first major investigation into allegations of abuse by Kelly, the singer had been followed by rumors and accusations of misconduct. Throughout the 1990s, he settled lawsuits accusing him of having sex with underage girls; in 1994, at 27, Kelly married Aaliyah, his then-15-year-old protégée, allegedly using forged documents.

    In 2002, Kelly was indicted on child pornography charges after a video surfaced that authorities said showed the singer urinating on and having sex with an underage girl. He was acquitted in 2008. But Kelly thrived before, during and after the controversy, releasing 12 platinum albums in all. He collaborated with stars like Jay-Z, Whitney Houston, Lady Gaga and Chance the Rapper, and headlined major festivals into the 2010s.

    The tide started to turn against Kelly in 2017, when Jim DeRogatis, who had long covered the Kelly case, reported for BuzzFeed News that the singer was holding young women in an abusive “cult.” A grass-roots campaign called #MuteRKelly gained traction that summer, targeting the singer’s label, RCA Records, along with radio stations, streaming services and concert venues.

    After the broadcast of “Surviving R. Kelly,” with gripping firsthand accounts from his alleged victims, in January 2019, RCA dropped the singer from its roster, and some of his past collaborators apologized, while law-enforcement investigations in multiple states pursued the allegations anew.

    “There was a long period where you could have enough plausible deniability, and then in one moment, it just collectively ended,” said Peter Rosenberg, a D.J. and morning show host for New York’s Hot 97 (97.1 FM), who called Kelly “completely dead” at the station.

    Wake-Up Call: U-S Troops Will Stay To Evac Americans

    President Biden said in an ABC News interview Wednesday that U.S. troops will remain in Afghanistan until all Americans are evacuated, even if that means having them there beyond his August 31st deadline for withdrawal. Some 6,000 U.S. troops are being sent to help with the evacuation from the airport in Kabul, not just of the up to 15,000 Americans in the country, but of allies and of Afghans who helped the U.S. during the two-decade war and are at risk. AP cited a White House official as saying last night that 6,000 people have been evacuated so far.

    In the ABC interview, Biden pushed back against criticism that there was poor planning for the evacuation and withdrawal, saying, "The idea that somehow, there’s a way to have gotten out without chaos ensuing, I don’t know how that happens." General Mark Milley, the chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, spoke yesterday about how they didn't foresee the speed of the collapse of the Afghan military and government, saying, "There was nothing that I or anyone else saw that indicated a collapse of this army, and this government, in 11 days."
     

    Meanwhile, former Afghan President Ashraf Ghani, who fled the country on Sunday as the Taliban took over Kabul, said in a video statement from the United Arab Emirates that he left to avoid being killed by the Taliban and that he plans to return. Ghani also said he fled because he wanted to prevent violence and the destruction of the capital city. He denied, however, reports that he fled the country with many millions of dollars, saying he left, quote, "empty-handed," stating, "I left with one shirt, one pants, one vest and one sandals."

    ➤U.S. HEALTH OFFICIALS ANNOUNCE PLANS FOR COVID BOOSTER SHOTS: As had been expected, U.S. health officials announced plans yesterday to give Covid-19 vaccine booster shots to all Americans amid the surge driven by the delta variant and indications that the vaccines' effectiveness begins to wane after several months. The plan will be for people to get their booster eight months after they got their second shot of the Pfizer or Moderna vaccine. The extra shots could being the week of September 20th. People who got the Johnson & Johnson vaccine will also probably need a booster, according to health officials, but they are waiting for more data. World Health Organization scientists criticized the U.S. plans to give boosters, saying that poor countries aren't getting enough vaccine for their first shots. White House officials said the U.S. had donated 115 million doses to 80 countries, more than all other nations combined, and said the U.S. has enough vaccine for boosters.


    Meanwhile the administration announced that nursing homes will be required to mandate that staffers be vaccinated in order to continue getting federal funds.

    ➤BIDEN TELLS EDUCATION SECRETARY TO LOOK AT POSSIBLE LEGAL ACTION AGAINST STATES BLOCKING SCHOOL MASK MANDATES: President Biden directed Education Secretary Miguel Cardona yesterday to look into possible legal action against states that have blocked school mask mandates and other public health measures meant to protect students against the coronavirus. That order came as some Republican governors, including notably in Florida and Texas, have banned school mask mandates and sometimes threatened consequences if school districts implement them anyway. The Education Department raised the possibility of using its civil rights division, saying on its website that banning mask mandates could amount to discrimination if it leads to unsafe conditions that prevent students from attending school.

     ➤SCHOOL DISTRICT MAKES MASKS PART OF SCHOOL DRESS CODE:  The Paris Independent School District in Texas has made face masks part of its school dress code, viewing it as loophole to get around Republican Governor Gregg Abbott's statewide ban on mask mandates. 


    The district in north Texas, which has about 4,000 students, said in a statement, "The Board believes the dress code can be used to mitigate communicable health issues. The Texas Governor does not have the authority to usurp the Board of Trustees’ exclusive power and duty to govern and oversee the management of the public schools of the district." The district is requiring masks for all employees and students. A spokeswoman for Abbott -- who is himself quarantining after testing positive for Covid-19 -- told the Washington Post, "There is no loophole. While a school district cannot mandate or prohibit masks, parents and guardians have the right to decide whether their child will wear a mask or not." Texas has been dealing with surging Covid infections and hospitalizations driven by the delta variant.

    ➤ADMIN. PROPOSES CHANGING ASYLUM CLAIMS SYSTEM TO REDUCE BACKLOG FROM BORDER: The administration yesterday proposed changing how asylum claims are handled, looking to reduce the huge backlog of cases of people claiming asylum at the southern border. That backlog has left people waiting for years to find out if they'll be allowed to stay in the U.S. Routine asylum cases would no longer be automatically referred to the inundated immigration court system under the proposal, but would instead be overseen by asylum officers from U.S. Citizenship and Immigration Services. Those backing the change believe it can better help those with legitimate asylum claims, while allowing people who don't qualify or who are taking advantage of the long delay to stay in the U.S. to be more quickly removed.

    ➤BIDEN INVITES NEW ISRAELI PM TO WASHINGTON NEXT WEEK: The White House said yesterday that President Biden had invited new Israeli Prime Minister Naftali Bennett to come to Washington next week to discuss Iran and Israel’s relationship with the Palestinians. White House spokesman Jen Psaki said the August 26th meeting will, quote, "underscore the United States' unwavering commitment to Israel’s security."

    📱T-MOBILE SAYS DATA OF 40 MILLION PEOPLE EXPOSED IN BREACH: Two days after confirming that it had been affected by a data breach, T-Mobile exposed the large scope of it Wednesday (August 18th), saying the names, Social Security numbers and information from driver’s licenses or other ID of just over 40 million people who applied for T-Mobile credit were exposed. The same data for about 7.8 million current customers also appeared to have been compromised. T-Mobile said it will offer two years of free identity protection services to those affected. Vice had reported Sunday that T-Mobile had been the target of a data breach, saying the culprits were apparently trying to sell about one-third of the data taken online.

    ⏰RESEARCHERS FIND MEN HAVE BIOLOGICAL CLOCK TOO: British researchers have found that men appear to have a biological clock too, with their fertility waning as they get older. The study by a team from the Centre for Reproductive and Genetic Health in London found that the probability of a live birth is 33 percent lower if the father is over 50 years old. Some 40 percent of the men over age 50 had sperm counts and motility within the healthy range, compared to 60 percent in younger men. While male age was a factor in fertility, the researchers didn't find that it increased the rate of miscarriage.

    ➤NO MORE FREE 'FAST PASSES' AT DISNEY WORLD, DISNEYLAND:
    Disney World and Disneyland didn't bring back the FastPass when they re-opened after their pandemic closures, and now they're saying they aren't coming back. The passes were a free way to make a reservation window for a ride, cutting down on the wait time, using Disney's app. Disney is introducing a new system, called Disney Genie, which visitors will be able to use by putting in what rides, food, etc. they want and then getting a personalized itinerary designed to minimize wait times. Although that's free, getting a FastPass equivalent called Lightning Lane to cut wait times further will be available, but it will cost $15 per person per day at Disney World at $20 per person per day at Disneyland.
     
    ➤TOILET PAPER AND WATER DISAPPEAR FROM COSTCO STORES AS DELTA VARIANT SPREADS:  Costco shoppers took to Twitter recently to complain about toilet paper and water shortages, mirroring the start of the pandemic in the US in March 2020. Research shows stockpiling could return as the Delta variant sweeps through the nation. A study survey from Inmar Intelligence showed that 69.4% of the 1,000 adults surveyed would consider stockpiling items amidst the spread of the Delta variant. One customer from Nevada lamented, “Did we not learn from last year at all? I pulled up to Costco and they are out of toilet paper and water. These people never learn.” Another customer from California expressed this could be a “sign of the times to come.”

    ➤MORE PAST TROUBLING BEHAVIOR SURFACES FOR NEW JEOPARDY! HOST RICHARDS: Things haven't been going well for Mike Richards since it was announced earlier this month that the Jeopardy! executive producer would become the iconic TV game show's new host. His selection resurfaced a decade-old lawsuit from when he was the executive producer of The Price is Right by two models on the show alleging pregnancy discrimination, saying he made insensitive statements and took questionable actions after they became pregnant. 

    Then there was talk about how much involvement he, as executive producer, had in choosing himself to be the new host. And now, crude comments he made more than seven years ago about women, Jews and Haiti in a podcast he hosted have resurfaced. Among the remarks from The Randumb Show: he said one-piece bathing suits make women look "really frumpy and overweight"; he asked his co-hosts who were both younger women if they'd ever taken nude photos, asking them, "Like booby pictures?"; in response to a comment about big noses, said, "Ixnay on the ose-nay. She’s not an ew-Jay"; and when a co-host talked about problems with her apartment, said, "Does Beth live, like, in Haiti? Doesn’t it sound like that? Like, the urine smell, the woman in the muumuu, the stray cats." 

    Richards apologized, saying in a statement to The Ringer, which reported the story: "It is humbling to confront a terribly embarrassing moment of misjudgment, thoughtlessness, and insensitivity from nearly a decade ago. Looking back now, there is no excuse, of course, for the comments I made on this podcast and I am deeply sorry."

    🏈ATTORNEY SAYS FBI INVOLVED IN SEX ASSAULT, HARASS PROBE OF TEXANS' WATSON: Tony Buzbee, an attorney for 22 women who have filed lawsuits accusing Houston Texans quarterback Deshaun Watson of sexual assault and harassment, said yesterday that the FBI is involved in the probe. Buzbee said he and some of his clients have spoken to the FBI about the case, telling the Associated Press that the FBI, quote, "reached out to me, and I responded." Watson's attorney, Rusty Hardin, said yesterday that the FBI had spoken with the quarterback about allegations that one of his accusers was trying to extort him. The women accuse Watson of exposing himself, touching them with his penis or kissing them against their will during massage appointments. He denies the claims, saying that "sexual activity" during some of the appointments wasn't forced. Houston police and the NFL are both investigating.

    ⚾BASSITT OUT OF HOSPITAL, WILL NEED SURGERY AFTER BEING HIT BY LINE DRIVE: Oakland A's pitcher Chris Bassitt was out of the hospital yesterday after being hit in the head by a line drive the night before in a game against the Chicago White Sox. Bassitt has broken bones in his cheek that will need surgery to fix, but he didn't have any eye damage, a brain scan was normal, and he hasn't shown any signs of a concussion. He received some stitches for two cuts on his face. It's not yet known how long the 32-year-old will be out, but A's athletic trainer Nick Paparesta said six weeks is the usual healing time for his type of injury.

    Daily Mail 8/19/21
    ⚾BAUER'S ACCUSER QUESTIONED FOR THIRD DAY:
    The 27-year-old woman who's accused Trevor Bauer of assaulting her during two sexual encounters was questioned for a third day yesterday as she seeks a five-year restraining order against the L.A. Dodgers pitcher. Bauer's attorney again asked her about texts she'd sent to Bauer, including one that said, "gimme all the pain" and indicated she wanted to be choked. But she said yesterday, "To me, text messages do not mean consent. I did not consent to hurting all over my body and being put in the hospital and having things done to me when I was unconscious." Bauer's attorney also brought up texts she exchanged with her sponsor nearly two weeks after she went to the hospital after the second encounter and spoke to police. The sponsor texted, "pretty soon I'll be like HEY RICH B****," and the woman answered, "hopping in the god damn RANGE ROVER," and the sponsor answered, "You can make it rain daily." Bauer is expected to take the stand today, the last day of the hearing, but his attorneys told the judge he'll only state his name and that he's a Major League Baseball player and will invoke the Fifth Amendment if asked any more questions.

    🏈NCAA INVESTIGATING NEBRASKA'S FOOTBALL PROGRAM: Nebraska said yesterday that the NCAA is investigating its football program, amid allegations that staff improperly used analysts and consultants with the knowledge of head coach Scott Frost and moved workouts off campus last year to avoid detection when they were banned due to the pandemic. Frost said any workouts were approved by "athletic department administration and campus administration."

    Report: ESPN's Max Kellerman Headed To Morning Radio

    Clutchpoints Screen shot 8/19/21

    Max Kellerman is expected to be removed from ESPN’s “First Take,” the show in which he and Stephen A. Smith verbally battle each other for hot-take supremacy, reports the NY Post citing sources.

    This is not the end of Kellerman at ESPN, as he is likely headed for the network’s morning national radio show to be teamed with Keyshawn Johnson, according to sources. Under the scenario, Kellerman would replace Zubin Mehenti. It is unclear if Jay Williams will remain on the program as it is a bit onerous with his NBA role. If everything is signed, the changes are expected to go through next month.

    Kellerman is also likely to have an afternoon TV show with 2 p.m. the anticipated time slot, according to sources. ESPN currently runs “Jalen & Jacoby” and “Highly Questionable” from 2-3 p.m. Those shows could be potentially moved to ESPN2. Kellerman already does a boxing-focused program.

    Front Office Sports first reported that Kellerman could be out from “First Take.” ESPN declined comment.

    On “First Take,” ESPN does not plan on replacing Kellerman with anyone in particular. Instead, a rotation of verbal sparring partners will likely make the short walk over each morning from another ESPN show, “Get Up,” which is located in the same Seaport studios. Molly Qerim is expected to continue to host, but Smith is the undisputed star.

    Kellerman’s removal from “First Take” has been in the offing for a long time, as Smith has further cemented himself as the face of ESPN.

    Smith, who signed a five-year, $60 million deal with ESPN in 2019, has often appeared disenchanted with Kellerman.

    Originally, ESPN Radio wanted to pair Kellerman with Johnson on its morning show when it shook up its entire lineup last fall. But Kellerman ended up doing a two-hour afternoon radio program heard nationally while Johnson teamed with Williams and Mehenti. Mehenti has been out for much of the year due to complications from diabetes.

    Alan Hahn has filled in for Mehenti, and has been positioned to potentially take over for him full-time.

    Kellerman, though, is now the leading candidate to be on mornings as he is soon expected to have his last take on “First Take.”