Tuesday, February 26, 2019

February 26 Radio History



In 

➦1919...Mason Adams born (Died - April 26, 2005 at age 86). He was an American character actor and voice-over artist.

Adams was heard on many radio programs during Radio's Golden Age. A notable recurring role was that of Pepper Young in Pepper Young's Family, which aired from 1947 to 1959. He also portrayed the deadly Nazi Atom Man in a classic 1945 serial on the radio version of The Adventures of Superman.

Mason Adams
Adams is perhaps most famous for his role as Managing Editor Charlie Hume in the television series Lou Grant, which aired from 1977 to 1982.

During the 1960s, he was ubiquitous as a voiceover actor in television commercials for foods and household products, most notably for Chiffon margarine and Crest toothpaste ("Helps stop cavities before they start"). He also did the vocal part of the television commercials for Smucker's preserves ("With a name like Smucker's, it has to be good!"), a role he resumed in his later years. Beginning in the 1980s, Adams provided the voiceover for Cadbury Creme eggs, which were advertised on television with Adams' catchy slogan, "Nobunny knows Easter better than him [the Cadbury Bunny]."

In addition, Adams was the narrator for Kix commercials in the 1990s as well as a few Dentyne commercials and a few Swanson commercials. He was also the announcer for a 1992 WCBS-TV news promo, as well as a 1986 Lysol commercial. In the early 1990s, he narrated The Discovery Channel series on milestones of aviation called "Frontiers of Flight". In one of the early episodes of Sesame Street, he voiced a cartoon featuring a "jazzy" triangle and a "square" square. He voiced those two, as well as being the narrator, with jazz music in the background.

During the 1970s, he was a co-star of the NBC soap opera Anothe


➦In 1932...Singer Johnny Cash Born (Died September 12, 2003 at age 71).  He was an American singer-songwriter, guitarist, actor, and author. He is one of the best-selling music artists of all time, having sold more than 90 million records worldwide.  Although primarily remembered as a country music icon, his genre-spanning songs and sound embraced rock and roll, rockabilly, blues, folk, and gospel. This crossover appeal won Cash the rare honor of being inducted into the Country Music, Rock and Roll, and Gospel Music Halls of Fame.

➦In 1951...WMCA FM changed call letters to WHOM FM in NYC

According to NYC City FM History, the station, purchased by WHOM 1480 AM, initially featured a foreign-language format of 13 languages, including some not widely spoken ones such as Swiss-German, Carpatho-Ruthenian, Ukrainian, Russian, Turkish and Chinese.

In August 1961, WHOM-FM began a syndicated classical music format under the "Heritage" name. This continued until June 15, 1962 when WHOM-FM began simulcasting the mostly Spanish programming from WHOM-AM.

Charles Baltin, VP of WHOM, noted the many Spanish-speaking listeners moving to New York and said the "WHOM-FM signal will extend farther than the WHOM-AM signal, providing listeners with a radio service they could not otherwise obtain." The simulcast continued until 1970, when the FCC refused an extension of its permit to simulcast the AM.

The station then started broadcasting the "Romantic Sounds Of Stereo," a Latin-type beautiful music program service with Spanish and English announcers, but continued to simulcast the AM station from 5a-9a and all day Sunday.

By 1975, the station had evolved into a Pop/Rock leaning AC format, with calls of WKTU.


On July 24, 1978, WKTU abruptly switched to an "All Disco" format as "Disco 92", which eventually evolved into more of a Rhythmic CHR by the Fall of 1979.

In the summer of 1984, WKTU became a mainstream CHR.

Then, in July of 1985, after airing the Live Aid concert, the station switched to a mainstream AOR format, featuring new and classic rock as WXRK "K-Rock".

In September 1985, Howard Stern (who had been fired from WNBC earlier that year) joined the station, initially for afternoons and in early 1986 switched to mornings.

In 1987, WXRK had instituted a classic rock format and on January 5, 1996, evolved into an alternative/active rock format.

On April 4, 2005, WXRK debuted a mainstream rock format, encompassing music from the 60's to today.

Howard Stern
On December 16, 2005, Howard Stern broadcast his last show on the station, before his anticipated move to Sirius Satellite Radio on January 9, 2006.

On January 3, 2006, 92.3 became an "all-talk" station (with the exception of weekends when it features a rock format) using the "Free FM" slogan and featuring David Lee Roth in mornings.
Calls were officially changed to WFNY on January 1.

In April 2006, David Lee Roth was replaced with Opie & Anthony.

On May 24, 2007 at 5pm, "K-Rock" returned to 92.3.

Calls were changed back to WXRK on May 31, 2007.

On March 11, 2009, 92.3 switched to a CHR format as "92.3 Now FM", with the "K-Rock" format moving to 92.3's HD2 channel.

92.3 changed calls to WNOW on November 8, 2012.

On May 22, 2014 at 2pm, 92.3 re-branded themselves as "92.3 AMP."

Calls changed to WBMP on June 23, 2014.  On February 2, 2017, CBS Radio announced it would merge with Entercom. The merger was approved on November 9, 2017, and was completed on November 17.  On that day, at 10 a.m., after playing "Too Good at Goodbyes" by Sam Smith and "Encore" by Brooklyn native Jay-Z, WBMP flipped back to alternative as Alt 92.3, launching with "My Hero" by The Foo Fighters. The switch marked the return of the format to the market for the first time since 2012. The station call letters are now WNYL-FM.

➦In 1955…45-rpm records were outsleling 78 rpms according to Billboard magazine. The 45 rpm was named for the number of revolutions the record made during a minute.  Physical singles declined in the United States during the '90s, and many record companies stopped releasing them altogether to concentrate more on album sales.

Since the establishment of the Billboard Hot 100, singles were not eligible to enter the chart unless they were available to purchase as a physical single. By the late 1990s, several popular mainstream hits never charted on the Hot 100. No Doubt's 1996 hit "Don't Speak" spent 16 weeks at number one on the Hot 100 Airplay chart, but it never charted on the Billboard Hot 100. On 5 December 1998, Billboard changed the rule to allow airplay-only songs onto the chart.

Aaliyah's "Try Again" (2000) was the first single ever to reach number one on the Billboard Hot 100 based solely on radio airplay.




➦In 1966...Frank Sinatra's eldest daughter, Nancy, scored a number 1 hit with "These Boots are Made for Walkin'".   Other defining recordings include "Sugar Town", the 1967 number one "Somethin' Stupid" (a duet with her father), the title song from the James Bond film You Only Live Twice, several collaborations with Lee Hazlewood such as "Jackson", and her cover of Cher's "Bang Bang (My Baby Shot Me Down)".


➦In 1970...The Beatles released  Hey Jude (original title: The Beatles Again).. It was a 1970 collection of non-album singles and B-sides by the Beatles. It included "I Should Have Known Better" and "Can't Buy Me Love", two singles released by Capitol Records whose only previous American album appearance had been on the A Hard Day's Night soundtrack album, which had been released by United Artists Records. The Hey Jude LP had been out of print since the late 1980s, although it remained available on cassette during the 1990s. The album was issued on CD for the first time in 2014, as an individual release and in a box set titled The U.S. Albums.



➦In 1973...WHN 1050 AM NYC changed to country music. After researching the market, Storer converted WHN to a country format in 1973. Mutual bought WHN in the late 1980s. WYNY- FM  flipped to country from 1980 to 1984, hurting WHN’s ratings.

Doubleday Broadcasting bought WHN in 1985, and Emmis Communications bought it the following year. Emmis added sports talk in the evenings, keeping the country format during the day.

In 1987, Emmis announced WHN would become all-sports WFAN.  When Emmis purchased NBC’s New York radio stations in 1988, the company moved WFAN from 1050 AM to 660 AM, formerly occupied WNBC.

Spanish Broadcasting System purchased the 1050 AM license and became WUKQ, a Spanish Adult Contemporary station.  Spanish Broadcasting System wanted to swap 1050 AM with cash for the Jewish Daily Forward’s FM station, WEVD 97.9 FM.  The deal was approved in 1989.

Buy This Book
 WEVD’s call letters and programming moved to the 1050 AM frequency.  The station mainly carried a brokered format of ethnic programs, talk shows and foreign-language programming.  By the mid-1990s, WEVD moved to a left-leaning news-talk format.

An agreement with ABC/Disney brought ESPN’s “The Dan Patrick Show” to WEVD in 2001.  On September 2, 2001, WEVD became “1050 ESPN Radio.”

The call letters were changed to WEPN in 2003, competing directly with WFAN’s all-sports format.  In 2012, WEPN’s programming moved to 98.7 FM.  ESPN Deportes later moved the 1050 AM frequency.


➦In 1976...Jay Reynolds does last show at 77 WABC NYC almost 6-years to the date when he started.


➦In 1983...Michael Jackson's scored another Number One Album with Thriller. It stayed atop the album charts in the U-S for 37-weeks.


Thriller is the sixth studio album by American singer Michael Jackson, released on November 30, 1982, in the United States by Epic Records and internationally by CBS Records. It explores genres similar to Jackson's previous album, Off the Wall (1979), including pop, post-disco, rock and funk. Recording took place from April to November 1982 at Westlake Recording Studios in Los Angeles, with a production budget of $750,000.

In just over a year, Thriller became the world's best-selling album, having sold an estimated 66 million copies. It is the second-best-selling album in the United States, behind the Eagles' album Their Greatest Hits (1971–1975).

➦In 2006...Radio personality and actor Jack Lazare, a Hartford, CT resident for two decades, died after a long illness. He was 83.

Jack Lazare
In the 1950s heyday of Big Bands, Lazare was host of the popular "Milkman's Matinee" on WNEW in New York. His studio guests included Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong and Benny Goodman.

Lazare's radio career later took him to Boston, hosting "Music 'til Dawn" on WEEI, and "Sounds in the Night" and a talk show on WHDH.

Born in New York City, Lazare studied communications at the University of California at Berkeley. After serving in the Navy as a pilot, he went on to become executive producer of programming for the Voice of America, supervising 17 Southeast Asia language desks.

As an actor, Lazare was in the film "See How She Runs," starring Joanne Woodward, and "The Defection of Simas Kudirka," starring Alan Arkin.

The New England representative for the Screen Actors Guild of America, Lazare moved to Essex in 1985 and purchased a Meriden-based radio station, WMMW. He also worked in Farmington as program director for WRCH-WNEZ.

➦In 2015…After more than a year of public debate, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission passed "net neutrality" rules. Net neutrality, the principle that Internet service providers (ISPs) treat all data on the Internet the same, and not discriminate, has been an issue of contention between network users and access providers since the 1990s.


A core issue to net neutrality is how ISPs should be classified under the Communications Act of 1934, if they should be Title I "information services" or Title II "common carrier services". The classification affects the Federal Communication Commission's (FCC) authority over ISPs: the FCC would have significant ability to regulate ISPs if classified as Title II common carriers, but would have little control over them if classified as Title I. Because the Communications Act has not been amended by the United States Congress to account for ISPs, the FCC has the authority to designate how ISPs should be treated in addition to what regulations they can set on ISPs. The makeup of the 5-member FCC has changed with each new administration, leading to the state of net neutrality flipping back and forth over the last two decades.

In 2005, the FCC adopted network neutrality principles "to preserve and promote the vibrant and open character of the Internet as the telecommunications marketplace enters the broadband age."

Between 2005 and 2012, five attempts to pass bills in Congress containing net neutrality provisions failed. Opponents claimed that these bills would have benefited industry lobbyists instead of consumers. In response to legal challenges from ISPs challenging the FCC's ability to set net neutrality principles, the FCC in 2015 issued the Open Internet Order which reclassified ISPs as Title II services and giving them authority to enforce net neutrality. The Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia upheld the FCC's new rules in a legal challenge raised by advocate groups representing ISPs.

Upon becoming FCC chairman in April 2017 as part of the Trump Administration, Ajit Pai proposed to repeal the neutrality policies, returning to the previous classification of ISPs as Title I services.

Monday, February 25, 2019

San Diego Radio: KYXY Adds Rob And Joss For Mornings

Entercom today welcomed Rob and Joss Taylor as morning drive hosts for KYXY 96.5 in San Diego. “Mornings with Rob & Joss” will air weekdays from 5:00 a.m. to 9:00 a.m. PT.

“Rob and Joss bring an engaging dynamic to our airwaves,” said Bob Bolinger, Senior Vice President and Market Manager, Entercom San Diego. “Their show is fun, entertaining and genuine, which we think the San Diego community will enjoy tuning in to at the start of their day.”

“We are thrilled to come down the coast as we embark on our next adventure with Entercom San Diego,” said Rob and Joss Taylor. “KYXY has a great reputation and we look forward to sharing weekday mornings with our listeners.”


Rob and Joss Taylor cohosted the morning show for KFGY in Sonoma County, CA for 13 years.

Tampa Radio: CMG Promotes Brennan, Kesneck, Thomas


John Brennan
Cox Media Group (CMG) Tampa Radio has announced the promotion of several team members throughout the organization.

John Brennan’s responsibilities have been expanded to include director of branding and programming for WXGL 107.3 The Eagle, Tampa Bay’s Classic Hits Station. Brennan has served as the director of branding and programming for WHPT 102.5 The Bone for the past five years. “107.3 The Eagle is where I got my start in radio and I’m honored to be named the director of branding and programming for such a great heritage brand,” he said.

Jenna Kesneck
Jenna Kesneck has been promoted to director of branding and programming for WSUN 97X, Tampa Bay’s heritage alternative rock station. Kesneck was previously the assistant program director for WSUN/WPOI. “It is truly an honor to lead the station I grew up listening to and where I began my radio career. I am so grateful to CMG leadership for this incredible opportunity,” she said.

Rick Thomas
Rick Thomas, operations manager, will assume programming for WWRM Magic 94-9, in addition to his responsibilities as director of branding and programming for WDUV 105.5 The Dove. “We at CMG Tampa will always do what is best for our radio brands, to ensure we’re positioned for growth and success,” said Thomas. “I’m excited for what’s to come!”

“I am proud and excited for John, Jenna and for all of CMG Tampa,” said Keith Lawless, vice president and market manager, CMG Tampa Radio. “We are committed to continually developing our people and are fortunate to have the opportunity to elevate some of our top talent to greater responsibility.”

In addition, CMG Tampa has announced the search for a director of branding and programming for CHR WPOI Hot 101.5.

TV Ratings: Slight Uptick For The Oscars


UPDATE 10:15 AM 2/25/19:  The ratings for the 2019 Oscars telecast are up slightly from last year in the preliminary numbers.  The awards show, which went without a host this year, drew a 20.1 rating in metered market households, up approximately 6% from the 18.9 last year’s telecast drew.

The 2018 Oscars’ household rating was down approximately 16% from the 22.5 rating drawn by the telecast in 2017. The 2018 Oscars initially drew a 6.4 rating in adults 18-49 and 24.4 million viewers before rising to a 6.8 rating and 26.5 million. That final number is the lowest viewership for an Oscars telecast in the show’s history.

Earlier...

Green Book and Bohemian Rhapsody swept the 91st Academy Awards, which were held Sunday, February 24th, 2019, at the Dolby Theatre in Los Angeles. Bohemian Rhapsody brought home four, besting Green Book’s three.

Green Book, based on the real life story of a black musician who hired a white driver to tour the Deep South in the 1960s won Best Picture, against Roma, Black Panther, BlacKkKlansman, Bohemian Rhapsody, The Favourite, A Star Is Born, and Vice.

Green Book was widely considered an underdog, having been the subject of numerous controversies, including old revelations of director Peter Farrelly flashing his penis on-sets and star Viggo Mortenson using the N-word, in addition to an outcry over its accuracy.



The other big wins were Olivia Colman, for Best Actress in The Favourite and Rami Malek, for Best Actor in Bohemian Rhapsody. Alfonso Cuoron won Best Director for Roma. Colman’s victory was considered an upset, with many expecting seven-time nominee Glenn Close to clinch the win.

The Oscars are considered to be the culmination of the awards season, and this year there were all of the usual draws—glimpses of the world’s biggest stars in couture gowns and diamonds, the year’s best films earning (or being overlooked) the industry’s highest honors, amazing speeches, riveting gaffes. But this year, the drama kicked off ahead of time, starting when Kevin Hart was named as host then stepped down after homophobic tweets he sent out years ago were resurfaced.

The Academy did its level best to deliver an exciting show sans host, bringing in A-listers to present and lining up a rollicking roster of performers.

SHOW HIGHLIGHTS

Cord Cutting Accelerated Toward End of 2018


The rate of consumers dropping their cable and satellite TV packages hit the highest level ever in the last three months of 2018. And for the first time in a few years, the losses weren’t more than offset by people signing up for Internet TV subscriptions, reports Fortune.

The total number of pay TV subscribers dropped 4.1% from a year earlier, the highest rate of decline since the trend of cord cutting emerged in 2010, analysts at MoffettNathanson Research reported on Friday. About 985,000 more customers dropped cable or satellite in the quarter than signed up for new service industrywide.

The huge drop didn’t surprise report author and longtime cable analyst Craig Moffett, however. “That the satellite operators are dead men walking has been obvious to all for some time, and the cable operators, while actually not doing all that badly in video, have made clear that they increasingly view their core business to be broadband, not video,” he writes. “It may not be an overstatement to say that the pay TV business as we know it is beginning to unravel.”

One big change from a year ago that prompted Moffett’s more dire assessment was the fate of cable channel packages offered over the Internet. Most providers, like Google’s YouTube TV and AT&T’s DirecTV Now, had to raise prices last year to account for higher costs charged by cable programmers, so subscriber growth has slowed. The number of additional people who signed up for the Internet packages totaled 740,000 in the fourth quarter, down from a 900,000 gain a year earlier. At year-end, about 7.6 million people subscribed to one of the offerings, the firm said.

The cable bundle has become increasingly unappealing as consumers have turned to more flexible and less expensive video offerings, from services like Netflix and Hulu that feature traditional TV and movie formats, to shorter programming from YouTube, Facebook, and others.

Philly Radio: iHM Names Jeff Moore, SVP/Sales

Reception at iHeartMedia, Philadelphia
iHeartMedia/Philladelphia has announced Jeff Moore has been named Senior Vice President of Sales for iHeartMedia Philadelphia.

Jeff Moore
He most recently served as the General Sales Manager for the iHM cluster. Moore has also served as the Account Executive for WPEN.

"I have been very impressed with Jeff's leadership and knowledge of the business in Philadelphia," said iHeartMedia Philadelphia Market President Nick Gnau. "Jeff's track record in helping our advertisers grow has earned him this promotion. I am excited to see Jeff take our sales organization to new heights."

"I couldn't be more proud to have the opportunity to lead this incredibly talented group of sales professionals in a market with such powerful brands, on-air personalities and massive live events," said Moore. "My team and I will strive to make iHeartMedia Philadelphia the place where client's needs are put first, and talented sales professionals are rewarded for the hard work they put in creating the solutions needed in a changing advertising environment."

Study: Men Continue To Dominate News Bylines


Data from a new report by the Women’s Media Center on the state of women in U.S. media are sobering. While there are more women than men in journalism programs and colleges, they represent just 41.7% of newsroom employees.

“The media is in a state of great disruption, but despite all the change, one thing remains the same: fewer women report the news than men,” Julie Burton, WMC president, writes in the foreword of the nearly 200-page report, called “The Status of Women in the U.S. Media 2019.”



Founded in 2005 by Jane Fonda, Robin Morgan and Gloria Steinem, the WMC is a feminist organization that “works to ensure women’s realities are covered and women’s voices are heard.”

The data for the new report was collected between September and November 2017.

Source: Radio-TV Digital News Association
Highlights include:
  • A record number of women are working in TV news, including as news directors; but fewer women and people of color are employed in radio news, according to the Radio Television Digital Association.
  • Women owned 7.4 percent of the nation’s commercial TV stations, according to the federal government’s most recent tally.
  • Women were general managers of 17.4 percent of the nation’s AM and FM stations, according to Mentoring Inspiring Women in Radio.
  • Women were general managers at roughly one-fifth of almost 2,000 of the nation’s AM and FM radio stations
  • More precisely, women comprised 18.1 percent of general managers at 1,974 stations as of Dec. 31, 2017. In 2016, the figure was 17.8 percent and, in 2004, it was 14.9 percent, according to the women’s radio group,
  • In the top 100 radio markets, 18.5 percent of general managers were female in 2017, up slightly from17.7 percent in 2016.
  • The tally of female managers in radio continued to be highest in the stations’ sales divisions. In 2017, 31.9 percent of stations had a female sales manager; that was a half-percentage point higher than in 2016.
  • In the top 100 radio markets, 32.7 percent of stations had female sales managers in 2017 and, in 2016, 31.7 percent had female sales managers.
  • Of all groups of radio managers, women were the least likely to be program directors: Females occupied that position at 10.5 percent of stations, the same rate for each of the last 11 years.
  • At the top 100 radio stations, 11.7 percent of program directors were female in 2017, a rate down slightly from 2016.
  • Mentoring and Inspiring Women in Radio cautioned that its data might be limited because it’s based on what radio stations report to PrecisionTrak.

Peter Frampton: Muscular Disease Forcing Farewell Tour

Peter Frampton, the legendary guitarist whose 1976 record, "Frampton Comes Alive," is still one of the best-selling live albums of all time, has revealed he will stop touring because of a rare degenerative muscular disease.

The musician announced Friday his next tour will be his last and opened up for the first time about his condition in an interview with "CBS This Morning: Saturday" co-host Anthony Mason.

Frampton said he has been furiously recording music since he was diagnosed with inclusion body myositis, a rare and incurable inflammatory condition which causes muscles to weaken slowly.

"Between October and two days ago, we've done like 33 new tracks," he said. "I just want to record as much as I can, you know, now, for obvious reasons."

"Going upstairs and downstairs is the hardest thing for me," he said. "I'm going to have to get a cane ... and then the other thing I noticed, I can't put things up over my head."


Frampton was diagnosed about three and a half years ago after a fall on stage. The disease progressed gradually, but sometime around last September or October, after he came off tour, he felt the effects speed up. He started to make plans to leave the road after a particularly bad fall while on vacation with his daughter in Maui.

"What will happen, unfortunately, is that it affects the finger flexors," he said. "That's the first telltale sign is the flexors, you know. So for a guitar player, it's not very good."

His run started in the 1960s, as a teen idol in England with the group, The Herd. Frampton then co-founded Humble Pie, a band that took him onto the British charts.

But his breakthrough would come as a solo artist with his live album "Frampton Comes Alive," which spent 10 weeks at No. 1.

KPIX 5 Crew Robbed, Security Guard Shot


A KPIX 5 news crew covering the Oakland Teachers Strike was robbed of a camera and tripod by two suspects, one of whom shot the crew’s security guard before fleeing on Sunday evening.

Before 5 p.m. Sunday, reporter Joe Vasquez and photographer John Anglin were gathering interviews for the strike at the Oakland Library near 81st Ave. when they were robbed of their equipment.

Wounded Security Guard Assisted
The KPIX 5 crew was outside their news van when a car pulled up. Two suspects got out of the car and one pulled a gun on the crew, demanding their camera. The crew surrendered the equipment and then began walking back to the van.

One suspect and the security guard exchanged fire. The guard was shot in the upper leg, transported to Highland Hospital and listed in stable condition.

Oakland police officers engaged in a pursuit of a champagne-colored Lexus sedan in connection with the shooting. The driver crashed the vehicle into several cars before stopping. Police detained the driver.

Alameda County Sheriff spokesperson Sgt. Ray Kelly said that around 5:15 p.m., a 21-year-old man walked into Highland Hospital, seeking treatment of several gunshot wounds. Deputies detained the man and Oakland police arrested him in connection with the shooting.

Oakland Police Public Information Officer Johanna Watson confirmed that the department had detained several other individuals in connection with the armed robbery and shooting. As a result, the stolen camera was recovered.

Vasquez and Anglin were said to be OK, but understandably shaken up.

Robberies of television news crews and still photographers have plagued the San Francisco Bay Area in recent years.  The Associated Press tallied five robberies in 2012, two in 2013, three in 2014 and at least three in 2015 plus several burglaries of vehicles.

“We don’t know what the market is for these cameras,” San Francisco Police Sgt. Michael Andraychuk told The Associated Press in 2015. Even though the cameras can cost upward of $50,000 each, it is specialized equipment that can’t be easily sold on the black market, Andraychuk said, and none of the stolen cameras have turned up on Craigslist, eBay or any other online marketplace.

Smartphone Users Have Practical Wish List


Infographic: What Smartphone Buyers Really Want | Statista You will find more infographics at Statista

A recent survey by Morning Consult has revealed that something much more mundane and practical is at the top of smartphone users' wish-lists. According to the survey, longer battery life is the most important feature for American smartphone owners, ahead of usability, storage and durability.

Interestingly, many of the recent innovations in smartphone technology, e.g. AR/VR and facial recognition, are among the features Americans don't really care about. This, along with ever-rising prices, could explain the recent slowdown in worldwide smartphone sales, at least to a certain extent.

Petition Aims To 'Reinstate' Hawkeye's Radio Voice


An online petition to 'reinstate' Hawkeye radio sportscaster Gary Dolphin immediately. Dolphin was recently suspended after making controversial comments during a basketball game last week.

According to KCRG-TV9 News, the petition, which was created by Levi Thompson, Sunday, on change.org, had already garnered more than 12,000 signatures in a span of about six hours.

"Gary Dolphin was wrongfully suspended for giving a collegiate athlete a compliment," Thompson said in his post about the petition. "If you take Gary Dolphin's comment as being racist, I challenge you to search your own heart and see where you stand."

Thompson, who manages the Facebook fan page Hawkeye Heaven, set a 15,000 signature goal for the petition. He also listed Iowa Athletic Director Gary Barta's email and phone number.

Dolphin's indefinite suspension came following an announcement by Hawkeye Sports Properties. It came a few days after Tuesday's coverage of the Iowa-Maryland men's basketball game in which Dolphin referred to Maryland player Bruno Fernando, who is black, as “King Kong.”

Following his suspension, Dolphin issued this statement:
"During the broadcast, I used a comparison when trying to describe a talented Maryland basketball player. In no way did I intend to offend or disparage the player. I take full responsibility for my inappropriate word choice and offer a sincere apology to him and anyone else who was offended. I wish the Iowa Hawkeye players, coaches and fans all the very best as they head into the final stretch of the season. I will use this as an opportunity to grow as a person and learn more about unconscious bias.”
For the remainder of the basketball season, Jim Albracht and Bobby Hansen were expected to serve as the radio announcers for Iowa men’s basketball games.

Hot Seat: Alabama Newspaper Publisher Retires

Goodloe Sutton
A black woman is the new editor and publisher of an Alabama newspaper after her predecessor has stepped down following widespread condemnation of his Feb. 14 editorial that called for mass lynchings and for saying that the Ku Klux Klan needed to “clean out” Washington.

“Time for the Ku Klux Klan to night ride again,” the editorial in the weekly Democrat-Reporter read. The text asserted Democrats, along with some Republicans, were planning to raise taxes in Alabama. “Seems like the Klan would be welcome to raid the gated communities up there,” it continued.

When confronted, the paper’s publisher and editor, Goodloe Sutton, stood by his words, telling the Montgomery Advertiser that people who were upset could call him, write a letter or boycott the paper if they wanted. He inherited the publication, which is based in Linden, Ala., and has a circulation of about 3,000, from his father in the 1980s.

On Thursday, however, Sutton had an apparent change of heart. He turned control of the paper over to Elecia Dexter — an African American woman from Chicago who served as the paper’s front office clerk.

“Everything has been a little surreal, and there’s a lot going on,” Dexter said in an interview Saturday. “I’m grateful for this opportunity.”

According to The Washington Post, Dexter is a graduate of Eastern Illinois University, where she received a bachelor’s degree in speech communication, according to a news release announcing her appointment. She also received a master’s degree in human services from the Spertus Institute for Jewish Learning and Leadership in Chicago and a master’s degree in counseling from Argosy University in Virginia.

R.I.P.: 'The Bearman' Longtime WZZO Lehigh Valley Morning Host

Longtime Lehigh Valley radio personality Kevin “The Bearman" Schutts, a mainstay of WZZO’s morning programming with partner Keith Moyer, has died, according to The Morning Call citing a post on the station’s Facebook page today.

He was 64.

“With great sadness, we must inform you of The Bearman’s sudden and unexpected passing,” says the post, which did not disclose a cause of death.

“He was a wonderful family man and great partner with his friend and teammate Keith. There will be opportunities to share your favorite memories in the coming days. At this difficult time, we ask that your thoughts are with Bearman’s family and friends,” the post said.

Schutts and Moyer built their show around goofy, often crude humor and stunts. In a 1994 Morning Call story about their 1,000th show — aired from the State Theatre in Easton — Schutts offered a cheerfully self-deprecating assessment of the team’s appeal: “God, the biggest joke on our show is us — and we know it.”

The post about Schutts’ death drew more than 1,000 comments and thousands of shares within an hour.


“Tomorrow morning and hereafter on WZZO will never be the same without your voice,” said a typical comment.

Schutts lived a nomadic broadcast life. He began as a part-time disc jockey in Allentown in 1972 when the station’s call letters were WGPA.

He became a full-time DJ in 1977 before moving to a station in his native Buffalo, N.Y., in 1980. After two years there, he moved to several different markets before returning to Allentown in 1988 and pairing with Moyer.

That lasted for two years before Schutts decamped to Buffalo again. But in 1992, he returned to WZZO and reunited with Moyer.

February 25 Radio History



➦In 1928... Charles Jenkins Laboratories of Washington, DC, became the first holder of a television license from the Federal Radio Commission.



➦In 1943...George Harrison born (Died 29 November 2001 from cancer at age 58).  He was an English musician, singer-songwriter, music and film producer who achieved international fame as the lead guitarist of The Beatles.

Often referred to as "the quiet Beatle", Harrison embraced Indian culture and helped broaden the scope of popular music through his incorporation of Indian instrumentation and Hindu-aligned spirituality in the Beatles' work.



Although the majority of the band's songs were written by John Lennon and Paul McCartney, most Beatles albums from 1965 onwards contained at least two Harrison compositions. His songs for the group included "Taxman", "Within You Without You", "While My Guitar Gently Weeps", "Here Comes the Sun" and "Something".


➦In 1995... Frank Sinatra  sang for the very last time, before a live audience of 1200 select guests at the Palm Desert Marriott Ballroom, on the closing night of the Frank Sinatra Desert Classic golf tournament. Esquire reported of the show that Sinatra was "clear, tough, on the money" and "in absolute control"

He died on May 14, 1998.

➦In 2004...The controversy surrounding the Super Bowl XXXVIII halftime show (Nipple-Gate), aired live on February 1, 2004 and led to the government's crackdown on indecency in radio and television following a surge in audience complaints.

The situation prompted tighter control over content by station managers which made Stern feel "dead" creatively.

On this date, Clear Channel dropped The Howard Stern Show from its station after it and Viacom were fined for content the FCC deemed indecent.

 The situation culminated on October 6, 2004, when Stern announced the signing of a five-year deal with Sirius Satellite Radio, a subscription-based satellite radio service exempt from the FCC's broadcast regulations, starting in 2006. It is a move that has been regarded as the start of "a new era of radio." Stern's final live show on terrestrial airwaves aired on December 16, 2005.


Bert Lee
➦In 2004...Bertram Lebhar Jr., a retired radio and television station operator, who formerly broad cast sports here under the name of Bert Lee and who was long a leading tournament bridge player, died at age 65.

He gave up a law career to go into radio advertising sales. He got his initial training with the Columbia Broadcasting System, switched to WOR for four and a half years, and for four years was vice president of WMCA. In 1939, he became director of sales for WHN.

Bert Lee, sportscaster, broke into sports announcing while at WMCA, when he had to pinch hit for an announcer who was ill. He did one of the earliest New York Rangers hockey broadcasts.

At WHN, doubling as sales director and sportscaster, he did the shows “Warm‐Up Time” and “Sports Extra” before and after the Brooklyn Dodgers’ baseball games.

On his WHN sports program “Today's Baseball,” with Marty Glickman, he gave listeners a play‐by‐play description of the best games of the day—all crowded into a quarter of an hour with sound effects.

He sold the idea of this specially compressed baseball game to a sponsor, not expecting to take part in it himself. But when the sponsor was not satisfied with the work of several announcers who auditioned for the job, he stepped up to the mike to show them how it should be done.

In his enthusiastic play‐by play description of a game he hadn't seen, Bert Lee would draw with such enthusiasm on his vivid imagination that he sometimes ran over his allotted time. When listeners, not interested in sports, sent in letters of complaint, Bertram Lebhar, executive, wrote hack apologies for Bert Lee, sportscaster.

Radio station WHN for a period was WMGM, of which Mr. Lebhar was named director in 1949.

From 1957 to 1964 he was a partner in and general manager of WEAT radio and television station in West Palm Beach. He continued as a part owner until 1966. From 1968 to 1970 he operated radio station WXVI in Riviera Beach, Fla.


➦In 2014…Radio, TV personality Jim Lange died of an apparent heart attack at age 81 (born: August 15, 1932).


He was an American game show host and disc jockey. He was known to listeners in the San Francisco and Los Angeles radio markets with stints at several stations in both markets, racking up over 45 years on the air. Lange was also known to television viewers as the host of several game shows, including The Dating Game.

Lange began his radio broadcasting career in the Twin Cities after winning an audition as a teenager.

After graduating from the University of Minnesota and serving in the Marines, Lange moved to San Francisco. After making his Bay Area broadcast debut as "The All-Night Mayor" on KGO, he moved to afternoons on KSFO in 1960.

Lange's network television career began in San Francisco with The Ford Show in 1962, where he was the announcer for, and sidekick to, host Tennessee Ernie Ford. Three years later he would sign on to host The Dating Game (1965–1980). While still on-air at KSFO, he commuted to Los Angeles to tape the TV program.

Lange was introduced to Los Angeles local audiences on KMPC in 1970, in order to limit his commute while taping The Dating Game. He returned to Gene Autry/Golden West-owned KSFO by 1971 and remained there until the station was sold in 1983. He then returned to KMPC, where he did mornings and afternoons (at different times) until the end of the decade.

In the early 1990s, Lange returned to full-time radio in the Bay Area. During that period he initially worked afternoons on 610/KFRC. He eventually accepted an offer to broadcast weekday mornings on "Magic 61," by then owned by real estate magnate Peter Bedford (Bedford Broadcasting). Magic 61 was formatted as "American pop standards" (Frank Sinatra, Tony Bennett, Johnny Mathis, Harry Connick, Jr., Peggy Lee, Ella Fitzgerald, et al.). After the sale of KFRC AM and FM (99.7) FM (the new owners decided to simulcast the FM "oldies" format on 610 AM), Jim and the show decamped for a run on KKSJ, San Jose.

In 1997, Lange became morning host of The Lange Gang on KABL in San Francisco. Lange retired in 2005 after KABL went off the air.