Monday, December 9, 2019

Report: CBS Owned Stations Face Harassment And Misogyny Claims

Michele Gillen with just a few of the 25 regional Emmy Awards she has earned (LA Times photos)
Jill Arrington was a star in TV sports. Then, four years ago, the former NFL sideline reporter traded national exposure for what she thought would be a more stable job at CBS’ television stations in Los Angeles.

The LA Times reports Arrington took on additional duties as the weekend sports anchor for KCBS-TV Channel 2 and KCAL-TV Channel 9. But one thing about her job galled her: She was earning nearly $60,000 less a year than the male anchor she replaced. When her contract came up for renewal, she told the station’s top managers that it was unacceptable to pay a woman so much less than a man.

Jill Arrington
Six months after that meeting, a bombshell detonated at the highest level of the company: CBS’ larger-than-life chief executive, Leslie Moonves, was ousted over claims he harassed and assaulted multiple women decades ago.

More than two dozen current and former employees of KCBS and KCAL described a toxic environment where, they said, employees encountered age discrimination, misogyny, and sexual harassment — and retaliation if they complained.

Discrimination complaints have also surfaced at CBS-owned stations in Chicago, Dallas and Miami.

The U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission filed a lawsuit against CBS after investigating allegations that station managers in Dallas denied a full-time position to a 42-year-old traffic reporter and instead hired a 24-year-old former NFL cheerleader who didn’t meet the job’s requirements.

In late November, shortly before a scheduled trial, CBS reached a tentative agreement to resolve an age discrimination and retaliation lawsuit brought by award-winning Miami-based journalist Michele Gillen, who sued CBS last year. The company admitted no liability in the agreement. In her court filings, Gillen called CBS a “good ole boys club” that “protects men despite bad behavior.”

Managing a nationwide television station group with thousands of employees is challenging, CBS Television Stations President Peter Dunn said in a statement. But, he added, “the vast majority enjoy where they work every day and take great pride in serving their local community. At the same time, I am very mindful that in a large company we have people who are unhappy at times. We respect all voices who express workplace concerns to us.”

The job has become even more challenging due to profound shifts in media. TV stations are no longer the profit centers they used to be. At some stations, including KCBS and KCAL, anchors have seen their salaries shaved to save money. Highly paid employees are booted, and station managers increasingly rely on part-time workers to deliver the news. But networks still haven’t attracted younger audiences.

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AGT's Simon Cowell Lawyers Up


“America’s Got Talent” executive producer Simon Cowell has set his legal representation for an investigation into the NBC competition series, which was announced by the network last week after a lengthy meeting with ousted judge Gabrielle Union, reports Variety.

Simon Cowell
Cowell has hired Larry Stein, a longtime litigator in Hollywood and media spaces, multiple individuals familiar with the matter told Variety. Stein is expected to advise Cowell and participate in a probe regarding complaints of a toxic culture at the show, raised by staffers including Union. The complaints included numerous accusations of racial insensitivity and excessive critiques of the female cast.

Cowell’s banner Syco, production company Fremantle and NBC all expressed a desire to learn more about Union’s issues a week ago, which resulted in a five-hour meeting on Tuesday — though sources said Cowell was notably absent for this exploratory meeting, as was any representative from Syco. The meeting included an NBC staffer who took notes, Fremantle’s North American COO, Suzanne Lopez, and a third party counselor hired by the network.

Des Moines Radio: Marty Tirrell Facing Prison After Fraud Plea


Longtime Des Moines sports radio host Marty Tirrell faces up to 20 years in prison after taking a plea deal in fraud case Friday.

According to The Des Moines Register, Tirrell was accused earlier this year of a defraud scheme that lost people more than $1 million between September 2016 to December 2017. He pleaded guilty Friday to one count of mail fraud. His nine other counts of fraud were dismissed, federal court records show.

At his sentencing, scheduled for April 7, Tirrell could face a maximum fine of $250,000 and three years of supervised release in addition to prison time, court records show.

Marty Tirrell
The 60-year-old initially faced six criminal fraud charges tied to the swindling of at least eight investors out of $1.5 million, records show.

Tirrell, who appeared on Mediacom's local cable shows and hosted popular talk shows for years on stations including KXNO 1460 AM, told the investors he could buy sports tickets with their money, resell them, and then split any profit with them, according to federal court records.

To gain investors' trust, Tirrell began by giving them back their invested money along with profits, as promised, as well as VIP access to sporting events. But Tirrell eventually started lying to the victims, using their money on personal items or to pay back other investors.

He just needed more time to pay other investors, he told them. He also sent them checks he knew would bounce to provide victims with false wire transfer information, according to court documents.

The radio host was previously the defendant in numerous civil lawsuits that alleged similar scams — online Iowa court records include at least 24 small claims and other civil actions against him.

He was charged with felony theft in 2017 in connection with not paying for a flight he took with eight friends to the last game of the World Series between the Chicago Cubs and Cleveland Indians the previous fall. The charge was dropped after Tirrell paid the bill.

Candidate Bloomberg Muzzles His Reporters

It's His Way or The Highway
Billionaire presidential candidate Mike Bloomberg is refusing to buckle under pressure and change the rules of engagement for his news outlet's political reporters—who are forbidden from investigating him or any other Democratic White House hopeful.

The Daily Mail reports Bloomberg told CBC News in an interview Friday that News journalists  will 'just have to learn to live with some things.'

'They get a paycheck,' the former New York City mayor lectured, 'but with your paycheck comes some restrictions and responsibilities.'

DailyMail.com's anecdotal sampling of Bloomberg reporters' opinions shows scattershot unease but no willingness to contest the company policy, which has left President Donald Trump the only candidate they are permitted to dig into.

Bloomberg News founder Michael Bloomberg is running for president, and his journalists have been told not to investigate him or any other Democrat—only Donald Trump; he says such 'restrictions' are part of the deal when Bloomberg pays your salary.


Trump has vented about the unequal treatment Bloomberg is giving him, and some White House aides expect repercussions directed at Bloomberg News reporters

'None of us likes this,' a Bloomberg reporter said. 'This is the opposite of what the profession fights for.'

'Bloomberg News has declared that they won't investigate their boss or his Democrat competitors, many of whom are current holders of high office, but will continue critical reporting on President Trump,' said Parscale.

Candidate Biden Snaps At NPR Reporter

Candidate Joe Biden
Former Vice President Joe Biden got in a fiery exchange with an NPR host after she compared his recent attack on an Iowa voter to President Trump’s “bullying,” according to The Washington Examiner.

Last week, Biden snapped at a voter who pressed him to answer questions about his son Hunter Biden’s high-paying job on the board of the Ukrainian gas company, Burisma. The former vice president berated the man and challenged him to a push-up contest or a foot race after appearing to call the man “fat.” He also claimed he was a “damn liar” after he suggested that Biden sold access to the presidency by allowing his son to rake in cash.

During an interview on Morning Edition, reporter Rachel Martin asked him about his decision to smear a random Iowa voter as a “damn liar” and his odd requests for a push-up contest or an IQ test.

Biden brushed off the question and claimed he was “joking” with the man.

“He came along. What was he saying? He said he’s entitled to do this. He said, ‘You’re too old.’ He said, ‘You’re too old. I can’t vote for somebody as old as you.’ I said, 'OK.' And he was challenging me what kind of shape, and so I kidded. I said, ‘Want to do a pushup contest?’ I was joking. Look, I’m in pretty good shape,” Biden explained.

Martin pushed back, asking, “Which is what Donald Trump says a lot. ‘Hey, you can’t take a joke. I was joking.’”

Biden got frustrated and fired back, “Don’t compare me to Donald Trump.”


Biden, 77, is the front-runner in the crowded Democratic primary. His RealClearPolitics polling average shows him with 27.8% support.

Rush Limbaugh: Hatred Driving Democrats


Radio talk show host Rush Limbaugh said Friday that impeachment efforts by Democrats are driven by "pure, raw hatred" of President Trump during an interview with "Fox & Friends" on Friday.

The comments from Limbaugh come one day after Sinclair Broadcasting investigative reporter James Rosen asked House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-Calif.) if she "hated" Trump, which prompted a fiery response from the California congresswoman.


"Democrats are wandering aimlessly and being propelled by one thing. You're watching it. You watched it with the three so-called expert witnesses," Limbaugh said Friday morning of three of the four constitutional scholars who testified Wednesday and called for impeachment of the president. "We are watching pure, raw hatred. They hate the man and they hate the people who elected him. They hate him because he beat them."

Democrat Candidates: Break 'em Up


Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vt.) is calling to break up the largest internet and cable companies in the country, a proposal that would limit the power of corporations like Comcast and Verizon, according to The Hill.

In a sweeping "High-Speed Internet for All" plan released Thursday night, Sanders accused the massive internet service providers of exploiting their dominance to "gouge customers and lobby government at all levels."

His proposal emerges weeks after Sen. Elizabeth Warren (D-Mass.), another top presidential contender, released her own plan to expand internet access in rural areas, often the parts of the country with the worst coverage.

Warren's plan did not specifically call to break up Comcast and Verizon, though it offered proposals that would pare down internet service providers' power and prohibit their "sneaky maneuvers" to "unfairly squeeze out competition."

In his plan, Sanders called out Verizon, Comcast and AT&T specifically over their billions of dollars in profits.

"With no incentive to innovate or invest, these conglomerates charge sky-high internet prices to reap profits from consumers, and they collect government subsidies to provide service to rural households while still leaving millions of Americans unconnected," Sanders wrote.

Another Candidate Is Spending More On Ads Than Bloomberg


Michael Bloomberg’s big spending on ads has generated headlines and annoyed some YouTube viewers since he announced his 2020 run for president late last month, but another candidate has spent even more on TV commercials since then.

Fellow billionaire Tom Steyer spent $18.5 million on ads in the past 30 days for a total of 3,617 airings, MediaPost reported, citing iSpot.tv data.

Even since Bloomberg ads began airing on Nov. 23, Steyer spent $9.1 million, compared to just $7.1 million spent by Bloomberg, according to Fox Business citing the report.

Steyer ads have appeared on 31 TV networks so far, according to the report. Bloomberg’s have appeared on nine.

Bloomberg’s campaign has reportedly said it intends to spend $37 million on the ads. It’s also been spending $100 million for online advertising that started before Bloomberg even announced his plans to run, The Associated Press reported.

“You will be seeing a lot of Mike Bloomberg,” an adviser, Howard Wolfson, told The New York Times before the former New York mayor’s candidacy was announced.

Sen. Elizabeth Warren, who is also seeking the Democratic nomination for president, has criticized Bloomberg for his heavy ad spending, accusing him of trying to “buy a nomination.”

CNN Ratings Tumble


CNN ratings have continued to plummet with the company averaging a nearly three-year low in viewership last week.

The network hit a five-year low among the key 25-54 demographic while it brought in 138,000 prime-time demographic viewers. The company averaged 643,000 prime-time viewers overall.
Fox News averaged 1.3 million viewers for its programming that week, and its prime-time listings brought in 2.2 million viewers on average and 303,000 demographic viewers.

Fox News topped the list of cable network day viewership, followed by the Hallmark Channel, ESPN, MSNBC, and Nickelodeon.

According to live-plus-same-day data from Nielsen, Fox News had six of the top 10 cable news shows for the month of November among total viewers (and 4 of the top 5), while MSNBC had the other 4, led by Maddow.
Cuomo Prime Time hosted by Chris Cuomo was once again CNN’s top show in total viewers (No. 23 overall), while Erin Burnett Outfront was CNN’s No. 1 show for November among adults 25-54 (No. 11 overall).




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R.I.P.: Rene Auberjonis, Character Actor

René Auberjonois, a prolific actor best known for his roles on the TV shows "Benson" and "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine" and his part in the 1970 film "M.A.S.H." playing Father Mulcahy, has died.

René Murat Auberjonois
(June 1, 1940 – December 8, 2019)
He was 79, according to KNX 1070 AM Los Angeles.

The actor died Sunday at his home in Los Angeles of metastatic lung cancer.

René Auberjonois worked constantly as a character actor in several golden ages, from the dynamic theater of the 1960s to the cinema renaissance of the 1970s to the prime period of network television in the 1980s and 90s — and each generation knew him for something different.

For film fans of the 1970s, he was Father John Mulcahy, the military chaplain who played straight man to the doctors' antics in "M.A.S.H." It was his first significant film role and the first of several for director Robert Altman.

For sitcom watchers of the 1980s, he was Clayton Runnymede Endicott III, the hopelessly highbrow chief of staff at a governor's mansion on "Benson," the ABC series whose title character was a butler played by Robert Guillaume.

And for sci-fi fans of the 1990s and convention-goers ever since, he was Odo, the shape-shifting Changeling and head of space-station security on "Star Trek: Deep Space Nine."

Auberjonois was also a regular on the ABC law-firm dramedy "Boston Legal" from 2004 to 2008.

"I am all of those characters, and I love that," Auberjonois said in a 2011 interview with the "Star Trek" website. "I also run into people, and they think I'm their cousin or their dry cleaner. I love that, too."

Auberjonois was born in New York in 1940, the son of Fernand Auberjonois, Swiss-born foreign correspondent for U.S. newspapers, and the grandson of a Swiss post-impressionist painter also named René Auberjonois.

R.I.P.: Caroll Spinney, Brought Life To Beloved Muppets

Caroll Edwin Spinney (December 26, 1933 – December 8, 2019)
Sometimes he stood 8 feet 2 inches tall. Sometimes he lived in a garbage can. He often cited numbers and letters of the alphabet, and for nearly a half century on “Sesame Street” he was Big Bird and Oscar the Grouch, opening magic doors for children on the secrets of growing up and the gentle arts of friendship.

The NY Times reports his name was Caroll Spinney — not that many people would know it — and he was the comfortably anonymous whole-body puppeteer who, since the 1969 inception of the public television show that has nurtured untold millions of children, had portrayed the sweet-natured, canary-yellow giant bird and the misanthropic, furry-green bellyacher in the trash can outside 123 Sesame Street.

Spinney, who also performed his characters in live concerts around the world and at the White House many times and was featured in films, documentaries and record albums, died on Sunday at his home in Woodstock, Conn. He was 85.



His death was announced by Sesame Workshop. It said in a statement that he had lived for some time with dystonia, which causes involuntary muscle contractions.

R.I.P.: Jarad Higgins aka Juice Wrld, Rising Rapper

Juice Wrld, a young rapper from the Chicago area who recently signed with a major label, died Sunday morning after suffering cardiac arrest at a private hangar at Midway Airport, according to The Chicago Tribune.

Paramedics were called to the hangar operated by Atlantic Aviation shortly after 2 a.m., according to Chicago Fire Department spokesman Larry Langford. The 21-year-old rapper, whose real name was Jarad Higgins, apparently had arrived at Midway on a private jet.

Higgins was taken to Advocate Christ Medical Center, where he was pronounced dead at 3:14 a.m., according to the Cook County medical examiner’s office.

Langford said he did not know what caused Higgins to go into cardiac arrest. An autopsy will be performed Monday.


He first gained traction with the single “All Girls Are The Same” in early 2018 before his follow-up single, the Sting-sampling “Lucid Dreams,” became one of the biggest hits of that year, peaking at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart. The smash single helped Juice WRLD win the top new artist trophy at the Billboard Music Awards in 2019.

He continued collecting hits with his album Death Race for Love, which became his first No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart earlier this year.

December 9 Radio History



➦In 1902...Brace Beemer born  (Died from a heart attacked at age 62 – March 1, 1965). He was a radio actor and announcer at radio station WXYZ-AM, Detroit.

He is best known as the radio voice of the Lone Ranger.  Beemer became the third radio voice of the Lone Ranger on April 18, 1941, and remained so until the series' last new episode on September 3, 1954. During the 13 years and 3,000 episodes that Beemer played the title character, he was required by contract to restrict his radio acting to that one role until the program left the air.

The experienced and popular Western film actor, Clayton Moore, was chosen to take over the role for the TV series. Although Beemer had the right voice and had made many public appearances as the Ranger, he had no experience as a film actor, as he preferred live action to television. However, Beemer's voice as the character was so familiar that Moore imitated his sound in the earliest TV episodes.

Beemer also portrayed "Sergeant William Preston" of the Yukon on Challenge of the Yukon, for a brief time after the Lone Ranger series ended.

Beemer's last TV appearance, was an interview in 1965 with former film actor, Bill Kennedy on his "At the Movies" show on CKLW TV9 from Windsor, Ont., Canada. Brace Beemer died the very next day.

➦In 1921...Ted Rogers Sr., who would later invent the first alternating-current vacuum radio tube, and give birth to Toronto’s CFRB Radio, became the first amateur radio operator in Canada to successfully transmit a signal across the Atlantic. He was taking part in a competition sponsored by the American Radio Relay League (ARRL).


➦In 1933...Talk show host Morton Downey Jr. was born in Los Angeles.  Unsuccessful as a pop & country singer, in the 1960’s he turned to deejaying at radio stations in Bakersfield, San Diego, and Miami as “Doc Downey the DJ.”

He perfected the abrasive, right-wing populist style of talk radio at Sacramento’s KFBK before transferring it to TV out of New York. (He was replaced at KFBK by Rush Limbaugh.)

Downey died from lung cancer Mar 12, 2001 at age 67.



➦In 1940...the radio panel show that originated with joke-telling sessions at the Friar’s Club, 'Can You Top This' debuted on WOR New York.  It would hit the networks 22 months later, and run on first NBC, then Mutual, ABC, and then NBC again, until 1954.

➦In 1940... the Longines Watch Company signed for the first FM radio advertising contract — with experimental station W2XOR in New York City. The ads ran for 26 weeks and promoted the Longines time signals.


➦In 1968...Early computer pioneer Douglas Carl Engelbart (January 30, 1925 – July 2, 2013) first demonstrated the computer mouse.  He is best known for his work on founding the field of human–computer interaction, particularly while at his Augmentation Research Center Lab in SRI International, which resulted in creation of the computer mouse, and the development of hypertext, networked computers, and precursors to graphical user interfaces. 

➦In 1977...Gene Klavan last show at WNEW 1130 AM NYC.

Klavan is most known for his time as half of the morning program "Klavan and Finch." The program ran from 1952 to 1968; prior to 1952, Dee Finch had co-hosted the show with Gene Rayburn. Co-host Finch departed and Klavan continued solo until 1977.



He wrote a biography in 1964, "We Die at Dawn", that largely focused on the morning show. He followed it up in 1972 with "Turn That Damned Thing Off", a book about the news media industry. In 1977 he moved to 710 WOR and left radio in 1980. He later became a commentator at WCBS-TV, a host for the AMC channel, and a columnist for Newsday.

➦In 1998...CBS Corp. raised $2.9 billion by selling a 17 percent stake in Infinity Broadcasting Corp., its radio and outdoor advertising business. The initial public offering of stock was the largest ever in the media industry.

➦In 2004...David Barry Brudnoy died at age 64 (Born -- June 5, 1940) was an American talk radio host in Boston from 1976 to 2004. He was known for espousing his libertarian views on a wide range of political issues, in a manner that was courteous. Thanks to wide signal reach of WBZ 1030 AM, he gained a following from across the United States as well as Canada. On December 9, 2004, he succumbed to Merkel cell carcinoma after it had metastasized to his lungs and kidneys.

David Brudnoy
Brudnoy began a career in broadcast commentary in 1971 on Boston's local PBS television station, WGBH-TV.

In 1976, David Brudnoy took over as host of his friend Avi Nelson's radio show on WHDH, in the midst of the city's unrest over forced busing and desegregation in schools. From 1981 to 1986, he appeared on former Top 40 WRKO, which was now news and talk, before moving to WBZ. The top-rated talk radio host in New England, he appeared in a regular weekday evening slot until his retirement. At the end of his career, Brudnoy was among the most-listened-to evening talk hosts in the United States.

Over the years, Brudnoy also appeared as a news commentator and host on local TV stations besides WGBH, including WCVB-TV (ABC), WNAC-TV, and WBZ-TV (CBS). He also appeared nationally on the CBS Morning News. He wrote movie reviews for Boston magazine and local community newspapers. During the 1970s he wrote articles for the National Review, and befriended its editor William F. Buckley.  He also wrote for The Alternative (later known as The American Prospect) in the early 1970s, but quit because of the editor's unwillingness to adopt a more liberal position on gay rights.

In 1990, his WBZ show was canceled, but a mass public response, including a letter writing campaign sponsored by The Boston Globe, helped lead to his quick return to the station's lineup.

His popularity in Boston was so great that when he returned to the air in early January 1995, after his first battle with HIV/AIDS kept him off the air for ten weeks, Boston Mayor Thomas Menino formally declared January 5 as "David Brudnoy Day."

Brudnoy was awarded the Freedom of Speech Award from the National Association of Radio Talk Show Hosts, and nominated for the "Personality of the Year" Marconi Award, both in 1997.

Cliff St. James
➦In 2016…Cliff St. James, a TV weatherman and radio broadcaster for KSD and KWK, died at age 91 from pneumonia.

In 1962, he became a freelance announcer at KSD-TV, St. Louis’ only television station. He later became the TV personality Corky The Clown loved by children of the era. His show, “Corky’s Colorama,” aired seven days a week and at one time there was a three-year waiting list to attend the live television show.  It was the first locally produced color program in St. Louis.