Tuesday, October 20, 2020

October 20 Radio History


➦In 1906...Radio pioneer Dr. Lee DeForest demonstrated the electrical vaccuum radio tube.


DeForest disliked the term "wireless" and chose a new moniker, "radio."

In 1902 he and his financial backers founded the DeForest Wireless Telegraph Company. In order to dramatize the potential of this new medium of communication,he gave public demonstrations of wireless telegraphy for businessmen, the press, and the military.



A poor businessman and a poorer judge of men, de Forest was defrauded twice by his own business partners. By 1906 his first company was insolvent, and he had been squeezed out of its operation. But in 1907 he patented a much more promising detector (developed in 1906), which he called the Audion; it was capable of more sensitive reception of wireless signals than were the electrolytic and Carborundum types then in use. It was a thermionic grid-triode vacuum tube—a three-element electronic “valve” similar to a two-element device patented by the Englishman Sir John Ambrose Fleming in 1905. In 1907 de Forest was able to broadcast experimentally both speech and music to the general public in the New York City area.

De Forest is credited with the birth of radio broadcasting when on January 12, 1910, he conducted experimental broadcast of part of the live performance of Tosca and, the next day, a performance with the participation of Italian tenor Enrico Caruso from the stage of Metropolitan Opera House in New York City.
Arlene Francis
➦In 1908...Arlene Francis was born in Boston, Massachusetts.  Francis became a well-known New York City radio personality, hosting several programs. In 1938 she became the female host of the radio game show "What's My Name?" although several men appeared as co-hosts over the years, Francis was the sole female host throughout the program's long run (on ABC, NBC and Mutual networks) until it ended in 1949.

In 1940, Francis played Betty in Betty and Bob, an early radio soap opera broadcast.

In 1943, she began as host of a network radio game show, Blind Date, which she hosted also on ABC and NBC television from 1949–52. She was a regular contributor to NBC Radio's Monitor in the 1950s and 1960s, and hosted a long-running midday chat show on WOR-AM that ran from 1960 to 1984.

Francis was a pioneer for women on television, one of the first to host a program that was not musical or dramatic in nature. From 1954-57, she was host and editor-in-chief of Home, NBC's hour-long daytime magazine program oriented toward women, which was conceived by network president Pat Weaver to complement the network's Today and Tonight programs. Newsweek put her on its cover as the "first lady of television". She hosted Talent Patrol in the mid-1950s.

Francis was also a panelist on the weekly game show What's My Line? from its second episode on CBS in 1950 until its network cancellation in 1967, and in its daily syndicated version from 1968–75.

She died May 31, 2001 in San Francisco at 93 after a long bout with Alzheimer’s and cancer.


➦In 1930...the "Adventures of Sherlock Holmes" premiered on the NBC Radio Network.



➦In 1945...'Break the Bank' debuted on Mutual radio.   Sponsored by Vicks, the series was heard Saturdays on Mutual until April 13, 1946. Initially, it featured different hosts each week, including John Reed King and Johnny Olson. Bert Parks became the full-time host in 1946. With Vitalis Hair Tonic as the sponsor, the series returned Friday, July 5, 1946, on ABC for a run until September 23, 1949. Bud Collyer and Bob Shepherd were the announcers, and Peter Van Steeden provided the music.

The questions were written by Joseph Nathan Kane, the author of Famous First Facts, who hand-delivered the sealed envelopes to the radio studio. Jack Rubin directed for producers Walt Framer and Ed Wolfe. On October 5, 1949, the series moved to NBC, continuing until September 13, 1950. It was heard weekdays on NBC in 1950-51 and weekdays on ABC (1951–53). With Miles Laboratories as the sponsor, it moved back to weekdays on NBC (1953–55), overlapping with a weekdays series on Mutual (1954–55).

In 1948, Radio Mirror called Break the Bank "the highest-paying quiz program in the world." That same year, the series moved to television with Bert Parks and Bud Collyer co-hosting.


➦In 1947...World Series radio rights were sold to Mutual for three years for $475,000.


➦In 1969...WCBS 101.1 FM switched to live deejays when it launched a freeform rock format, which was becoming increasingly popular, and all other CBS-owned FM stations followed suit.


For the first time, WCBS-FM would have an airstaff. Bill Brown began his long tenure with the station, and Don K. Reed began his late in 1971; both remained there until 2005. Radio personalities such as Bobby "Wizzard" Wayne, Tom Tyler, Ed Williams, Steve Clark, Roby Yonge, K.O. Bayley (Bob Elliott from WOR-FM), Les Turpin, Bob "Bob-A-Lew" Lewis also briefly joined the WCBS-FM "freeform" format. Besides Bill Brown and Don K. Reed, Wizzard Wayne and Ed Williams also stayed into the early part of the oldies format.

Here's a pre-Oldies aircheck of PD Gus Gossert on WCBS-FM (courtesy of nyradioarchive.com)


➦In 1973...the Family Station Inc. purchased shortwave station WNYW, changed the call letters to WYFR & moved it from New York City to Scituate, Massachusetts.


➦In 2015...Cory Wells, a co-founder and longtime member of the rock group ‘Three Dog Night,’ died at age 74 from an infection while battling cancer.


HAPPY BIRTHDAYS:
  • Rockabilly singer Wanda Jackson is 83. 
  • Actor-turned-nun Dolores Hart (“Where the Boys Are,” “King Creole”) is 82. 
  • Jennifer Nicole Freeman is 35
    Actor Melanie Mayron (“thirtysomething”) is 68. 
  • Director Danny Boyle (“Slumdog Millionaire,” “Trainspotting”) is 64. 
  • Actor Viggo Mortensen (“Lord of the Rings”) is 62. 
  • Drummer Jim “Soni” Sonefeld of Hootie and the Blowfish is 56. 
  • Bassist Doug Eldridge of Oleander is 53. 
  • “The View” co-host Sunny Hostin is 52. 
  • Actor Kenneth Choi (“Sons of Anarchy”) is 49. 
  • Rapper Snoop Dogg is 49. 
  • Country singer Jimi Westbrook of Little Big Town is 49. 
  • Actor-comedian Dan Fogler (“Fantastic Beasts,” “The Walking Dead”) is 44. 
  • Saxophonist Jon Natchez of The War on Drugs is 44. 
  • Actor Sam Witwer (“Smallville,” “Battlestar Galactica”) is 43. 
  • Actor John Krasinski (“The Office”) is 41. 
  • Bassist Daniel Tichenor of Cage The Elephant is 41. 
  • Actor Katie Featherston (“Paranormal Activity”) is 38. 
  • Actor Jennifer Nicole Freeman (“My Wife and Kids”) is 35.

Monday, October 19, 2020

Pittsburgh Radio: KDKA To Add Translator Simulcast


Another sign of the times. America's first licensed commercial radio station KDKA 1020 AM (50 Kw) is adding an FM simulcast on translator W261AX (99 watts) starting November 2.

Entercom has announced the simulcast to commemorate  the station’s centennial anniversary, News Radio 1020 KDKA will simulcast on FM for the first time ever and be heard on 100.1 FM as 100.1 FM and 1020 AM KDKA, effective November 2.

“KDKA Radio is part of the radio history books not just here in Pittsburgh, but on a national level,” said Michael Spacciapolli, Senior Vice President and Market Manager, Entercom Pittsburgh. “What started back in 1920 as an opportunity to instantaneously provide news and information about the presidential election returns has blossomed into a key part of our listeners’ lives. 

After serving Pittsburghers on our AM dial for the last 100 years, we are thrilled to expand the reach of historic KDKA on FM. It’s an honor to be part of the team carrying the torch from those before us into the next 100 years.”

Translator W261AX (99 watts) 

On October 27, 1920, the Department of Commerce issued the first commercial radio station license under the call sign KDKA. The station launched on November 2, 1920 when Frank Conrad, an engineer at Westinghouse Electric and Manufacturing Company, started 8ZZ and broadcast the results of the presidential election returns between Warren G. Harding and James Cox.

The station’s yearlong centennial celebration has also included various original sound, historical soundbites and a special weekly program every Wednesday.

SiriusXM Completes Acquisition of Stitcher


Sirius XM Holdings Inc. today announced that it has completed its acquisition of Stitcher and is moving forward as the premier full-service platform for podcast creators, publishers, and advertisers.

With this acquisition, SiriusXM adds Stitcher, a longtime pioneer in podcasting, to its leading audio entertainment platform. Alongside Pandora, Simplecast and AdsWizz, Stitcher strengthens SiriusXM's position in this fast-growing area. By combining Stitcher's leading programming and advertising networks with SiriusXM's existing suite of hosting and ad technology tools, the Company expands its pre-eminent position in digital audio advertising while generating new ways for creators to find and connect with a broader audience.

Jim Meyer, Chief Executive Officer of SiriusXM, said, "We are deepening our position in podcasting, the fastest-growing sector in digital audio, and with completion of this transaction, our vision is taking shape. With Stitcher and its varied assets, we are now a one-stop shop able to meet the needs of podcast creators, publishers and advertisers, while also providing listeners with access to great shows, series and programming."

To advance a powerful and coordinated content strategy, Erik Diehn, CEO of Stitcher, will report directly to Scott Greenstein, President and Chief Content Officer of SiriusXM, who also oversees content at Pandora. To help advertisers efficiently and effectively reach their customers across the largest digital audio ecosystem, Sarah van Mosel, Stitcher's Chief Revenue Officer, will report directly to John Trimble, Chief Advertising Revenue Officer of SiriusXM.

Meyer added, "On behalf of everyone at SiriusXM, we are thrilled to welcome Erik, Sarah, and all of the other talented Stitcher employees to our team. We look forward to working with them as we continue delivering the best listening experiences in audio entertainment and enhancing stockholder value."

Top Stitcher podcasts, available in North America and globally via the Stitcher App, include Freakonomics Radio, My Favorite Murder, SuperSoul Conversations from the Oprah Winfrey Network, Office Ladies, Conan O'Brien Needs a Friend, Literally! with Rob Lowe, LeVar Burton Reads, and WTF with Marc Maron. These titles, among other leading Stitcher podcasts, are also available for Pandora listeners both on-demand and via its personalized recommendations through Pandora's proprietary Podcast Genome Project ™ technology.

With the transaction now closed, SiriusXM is positioned to continue driving growth by:
  • Reaching more than 150 million listeners across its combined properties, the largest addressable audience in North America across all categories of digital audio – music, sports, talk, and podcasts;
  • Further extending the reach of SiriusXM in digital audio advertising through the SiriusXM and Pandora owned-and-operated digital platforms, combined with the company's exclusive ad sales arrangement with SoundCloud for the U.S., and the Stitcher and Midroll networks;
  • Helping solve some of the critical challenges in podcast advertising through precision targeting, ad efficiency, and improved measurement capabilities via a streamlined ad marketplace;
  • Combining the largest digital audio salesforce with a leading podcast ad network; and
  • Attracting more creators to its podcasting platform with enhanced production, marketing, and distribution capabilities that drive further listening, engagement, and monetization.

Colorado Springs Radio: KKMG Imports The Jubal Show For AM


CUMULUS MEDIA announces KKMG 98.9 Magic, its CHR radio station in Colorado Springs, CO, debuts The Jubal Show today, adding the comedic morning show to its weekday programming lineup. Jubal is widely known as co-host of the popular nationally syndicated show Brooke & Jubal which aired on KKMG-FM from March 2016-April 2020. Back and better than ever, Jubal’s all-new show originates from KBKS-FM/Hits 106.1 in Seattle, WA, and airs on 98.9 Magic FM Monday through Friday from 6-10am. The Jubal Show replaces Brooke and Jeffrey In The Morning on KKMG-FM. 

The previously syndicated morning program delivered double digit shares and ratings success stories in multiple markets on multiple formats across the U.S. The new show delivers the highly comedic, ratings busting benchmarks that earned Jubal a Marconi Award and the first-ever National Radio Hall of Fame “One To Watch” award. The Jubal Show is co-hosted by Alex Fresh, a newcomer to radio who is quickly earning the industry’s respect with her talent, wit and refreshing perspective, and “English” Evan, a newcomer to this country who is doing the same with his own brand of comedy, musical skills and of course, his accent. 

Dylan Salisbury, Program Director, KKMG-FM, said: “98.9 Magic FM is excited to welcome back Jubal Fresh and welcome The Jubal Show to Southern Colorado! Between his famous morning show bits and his standup comedy, Jubal’s unique edge is what MAGIC has been missing since his departure early this year.”

Jubal commented: “I’m so excited to be back on air in The Springs at Magic FM… I remember when we first partnered together and we took Mornings to No. 1. Can’t wait to do it again, even bigger and better, for many years to come.”

Cherry Creek to Syndicate Ag Programming

Gen Media Partners, J.L. Farmakis, Inc. and Cherry Creek Media have entered into a three-way partnership to expand the Pacific Northwest Ag Network, serving radio stations across Idaho, Oregon and Washington.

Cherry Creek Media will expand its award-winning news and content. First launched as Washington Ag Network in 2015, the Pacific Northwest Ag Network has developed a reputation of providing in-depth and accurate farm news and information producers across Washington have come to know and trust. Now that same programing is available for quality radio stations across the Northwest.

“The strength of the Pacific Northwest Ag Network is our connection to the farm community; those boots on the ground,” said Program Director Glenn Vaagen. “Each weekday, our team provides listeners across Washington not only the latest state and national ag news, but also the latest farm research occurring at area universities, connect them with the next generation of farmers through FFA and 4-H, and much more. We are excited about the opportunity to expand this programing across the entire Pacific Northwest.”

Affiliate, national and network advertising sales will be handled by Gen Media Partners and J.L. Farmakis, Inc.

J.L. Farmakis, Inc. is one of the leading agricultural media rep firms in the U.S. with more than 40 multimedia partners. “A perfect fit,” Bill Farmakis, president of J.L. Farmakis, Inc. says about the partnership with the Pacific Northwest Ag Network, “as it fits in perfectly with our other leading State Farm Radio Networks and with leading NAFB farm broadcasting on top stations in the Northwest.”

“For years, the Washington Ag Network, led by NAFB awarded Glenn Vaagen and his team, has produced top quality programming that provides vital information and insights to farmers and ranchers,” said Jeff Slivka, president, operations, Gen Media Partners. “We’re delighted to partner with Farmakis and Cherry Creek to deliver this engaging content to stations and advertisers who want to reach the ag community throughout the Pacific Northwest.”

“Glenn Vaagen and his team deliver ag news that’s second-to-none.” said Jonathan Brewster, CEO of Cherry Creek Radio. “We’ve wanted to expand the network for years. Now, with deep agency relationships J.L. Farmakis, Inc. and Gen Media Partners bring to the table, we can distribute our high-quality ag programs to a broader audience and offer terrific revenue opportunities to affiliated radio stations.”

The Rundown: Worst May Yet To Be


EX-FDA COMMISH WARNS CURRENT CORONAVIRUS WAVE LIKELY TO BE BIGGEST:
Former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Dr. Scott Gottlieb warned yesterday that the current surge of new coronavirus cases across the country, the fall surge that experts have been warning was coming, is likely to be the, quote, "biggest wave" we will have before a vaccine arrives. Gottlieb said on CBS' Face the Nation, "[I]t's probably likely to be the biggest wave that we endure without the benefit of a vaccinated population," and called it the "most difficult phase of this epidemic." Gottlieb said that 45 states have expanding epidemics, and that hospitalizations are rising in 42 states. 

There have been more than 219,600 deaths in the U.S. as of early this morning, according to Johns Hopkins University's count, and more than 8,154,000 confirmed cases.

➤TWITTER BLOCKS TRUMP ADVISOR POST THAT SAID MASKS DON'T WORK: Twitter blocked a post yesterday from Dr. Scott Atlas, a science adviser to President Trump, who suggested that face masks don't work to stop the spread of the coronavirus. Atlas, who joined the White House in August, had tweeted, "Masks work? NO," and said widespread use of masks isn't supported. The tweet violated Twitter's policy that bans sharing false or misleading misinformation about the coronavirus that could lead to harm. Atlas, a neuroradiologist who has no expertise in infectious diseases or public health, called Twitter's actions censorship. 

LA Times 10/19/20

➤TRUMP, BIDEN TRYING TO WIN STATES THE OTHER SIDE USUALLY DOES: With just over two weeks to go until the presidential election, President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden were both campaigning in states Sunday that their party hasn't won recently. Trump was in Nevada, which hasn't voted for a Republican president since 2004, and Biden was in North Carolina, which last voted for the Democratic nominee in 2008. Trump first visited the International Church of Las Vegas, where the senior associate pastor said God told her that morning that he would be re-elected. He held an evening rally in Carson City, where he bashed Biden for saying he'd listen to the scientists in dealing with the coronavirus, saying, "He’ll listen to the scientists. If I listened totally to the scientists, we would right now have a country that would be in a massive depression." Biden held a virtual discussion with African-American faith leaders, and then held a drive-in rally in Durham. He blasted Trump for having said that the country has turned the corner on the pandemic, saying, "As my grandfather would say, this guy’s gone around the bend if he thinks we’ve turned the corner. Turning the corner? Things are getting worse." 

➤PELOSI OPTIMISTIC ON AID BILL DEAL, BUT SAYS HAS TO COME WITHIN 48 HOURS: House Speaker Nancy Pelosi said on ABC's This Week yesterday that although there are still differences with the administration on a new coronavirus relief package, she's optimistic legislation could be passed before Election Day. However, she said an agreement would have to be reached within 48 hours for that to happen. The person Pelosi has mainly been negotiating with for weeks, Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin, is in the Middle East and won't be back until Tuesday, making that deadline difficult to meet. President Trump told reporters yesterday about a possible agreement, "I want to do it at a bigger number than [Pelosi] wants. That doesn't mean all the Republicans agree with me, but I think they will in the end." Senate Republicans have been objecting to passing another big relief bill. Majority Leader Mitch McConnell said the Senate will vote Wednesday on a $500 billion proposal, significantly smaller than what Mnuchin has offered or Pelosi wants, that will targeted at specific areas. But Democrats oppose such smaller bills, saying larger, more comprehensive legislation is needed.

Wall Street Journal 10/19/20

➤RALLIES IN FRANCE IN TRIBUTE TO TEACHER BEHEADED AFTER DISCUSSING MUHAMMAD CARICATURES IN CLASS: Rallies were held across France yesterday in tribute to 47-year-old history teacher Samuel Paty, who was beheaded near Paris on Friday after discussing caricatures of Islam's Prophet Muhammad with his class. The demonstrators were also supporting free speech, with some holding signs that said, "I am Samuel," echoing the "I am Charlie" motto after the deadly 2015 attack on the satirical newspaper Charlie Hebdo after it published Muhammad caricatures. The 18-year-old Chechen refugee who carried out the beheading was shot and killed by police. A Twitter account belonging to the suspect had posted a photo of Paty's decapitated head minutes after the attack with the message, "I have executed one of the dogs from hell who dared to put Muhammad down."


⚾DODGERS ARE NLCS CHAMPS AFTER 4-3 GAME 7 WIN, TO PLAY RAYS IN WORLD SERIES: The Los Angeles Dodgers won the National League Championship Series last night with a 4-3 Game 7 win over the Atlanta Braves. They will play the Tampa Bay Rays in the World Series starting tomorrow night after the Rays put away the Houston Astros in Game 7 of the American League Championship Series on Saturday. Cody Bellinger hit a tiebreaking solo home run for the Dodgers in the seventh inning that turned out to be the winning run as L.A. held on to get the win. The Dodgers came back to win the NLCS after having been down 3 games to 1 to the Braves. This is the third time in four years Los Angeles is going to the World Series, but they haven't won the championship since 1988.

🏈NFL SCORES -- WEEK 6:
  • Tennessee Titans 42, Houston Texans 36 (OT)
  • Indianapolis Colts 31, Cincinnati Bengals 27
  • Atlanta Falcons 40, Minnesota Vikings 23
  • Denver Broncos 18, New England Patriots 12
  • New York Giants 20, Washington Football Team 19
  • Baltimore Ravens 30, Philadelphia Eagles 28
  • Pittsburgh Steelers 38, Cleveland Browns 7
  • Chicago Bears 23, Carolina Panthers 16
  • Detroit Lions 34, Jacksonville Jaguars 16
  • Miami Dolphins 24, New York Jets 0
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers 38, Green Bay Packers 10
  • San Francisco 49ers 24, Los Angeles Rams 16
Tonight's games:
  • Kansas City Chiefs at Buffalo Bills (5:00 pm ET on Fox)
  • Arizona Cardinals at Dallas Cowboys (8:15 pm ET on ESPN)

🏈STEELERS' BUSH TO HAVE SEASON-ENDING SURGERY AFTER TEARING ACL:
Pittsburgh Steelers linebacker Devin Bush will have to undergo season-ending surgery after tearing his ACL in the Steelers' 38-7 win yesterday over the Cleveland Browns, according to ESPN. Bush, who was drafted by the Steelers in 2019 with the Number 10 pick, was injured on a play near the end of the first half.

🏈FLORIDA COACH MULLEN POSITIVE FOR CORONAVIRUS: Florida football head coach Dan Mullen announced Saturday that he'd tested positive for the coronavirus, saying a first test was confirmed by a second. The 48-year-old said he was self-isolating and had "mild to no symptoms." The news came after Florida had at least 21 players and coaches test positive earlier in the week, which led to the postponement of its next two games. It also came after Mullen had said last week he wanted 90,000 fans packed into Florida's stadium against LSU, and doubled down for days before finally apologizing for making those comments amid the pandemic.

➤LOGANO WIN CLINCHES CUP SERIES FINALE SPOT: Joey Logano held off Kevin Harvick to win at Kansas Speedway yesterday and clinch a spot in the NASCAR Cup Series finale at Phoenix. It was the third win of the season for Logano and his first since the pandemic began. 

➤KOKRAK GETS FIRST PGA TOUR WIN IN 233 TOURNAMENTS: Jason Kokrak won the CJ Cup at Shadow Creek Golf Course in Las Vegas Sunday, getting his first PGA Tour victory in 233 tournaments over 10 seasons. The 35-year-old finished at 20-under 268, winning by two strokes over fellow American Xander Schauffele.

St. Louis Radio: Deal For KFNS Reported To Be In the Works

St. Louis personality John  Hadley, who has had various managerial titles in addition to an on-air role in his 3½ years at the KFNS 590 AM, reportedly is putting together “a group of guys who are young and enthusiastic and want to get after this,” to purchase the station, reports The St. Louis Dispatch.

Current station owners Randy Markel confirmed last week that his talks are advanced with Hadley’s organization.

“They would take over immediately, once the deal is signed,” Markel said. “But we’ve been there before.”

According to the story, that’s in reference to numerous deals that seemed to be close, but never finalized, in the nearly five years Markel has owned KFNS. He has had major flirtations just this year with two Metro East businessmen as well as a group convened by Tim McKernan, co-host and owner of the the station’s morning drive-time show. There also have been significant talks with others. Now …

“A deal has been agreed to in principal” with Hadley and company, Markel said. “Hopefully we can get it signed next week.”

KFNS 590 AM (1 Kw)

Hadley, in his off-air role, has been involved in Markel’s negotiations with some of the other suitors. He insisted that “this deal will be finalized … it is not like anything in the past” with KFNS. “And this is coming from a very conservative guy.”

Hadley said that his group would return the station to the sports-intensive format that is its roots, which it has veered away from at times in recent years.

A key move already is pending, one that strongly indicates a deal finally seems to be imminent. Frank O. Pinion, owner and lead host of the station’s “Large Morning Show in the Afternoon” program, announced Thursday that its final installment at KFNS will be on Oct. 29.

The entertainment/general chit-chat program has been a fixture in 590’s Monday-Thursday 3-6 p.m. slot for three years, and Pinion said on the air that there are no hard feelings about the run ending.

The purchase price is believed to be about $500,000.

Report: Journalists Now Hiring Private Security

Denver Post photo

When protests turned violent in Denver in June, ABC national news hired local freelance video journalist Carl Filoreto to cover the demonstrations — and paid for armed security guards to accompany him as cops fired tear gas and projectiles at people angry over the death of George Floyd at the hands of Minneapolis police, reports The Denver Post.

“I never felt threatened in Denver but knowing you have that extra set of eyes on you that are there for protection, it’s very reassuring when you’re out covering that kind of thing,” Filoreto said. “You just never know what spark is going to incite a major confrontation.”

The fatal shooting of a demonstrator by a security guard working for 9News following demonstrations in Denver on Oct. 10 illustrates just how quickly something can go wrong when large crowds gather.

That day’s dueling political protests, while boisterous, had not been violent and were ending when a small group started arguing outside the Denver Art Museum while walking to their cars. It’s unclear what led the victim, Lee Keltner, and the security guard, Matthew Dolloff, to engage with each other, but the encounter turned fatal within seconds.

Until that moment, few people in Denver — including other journalists — were aware that some news outlets hire private security to escort their staffs. Media experts say it’s a practice increasingly used by local media, particularly TV stations, since the 2015 Ferguson police protests and the 2016 campaign of President Donald Trump.

In Denver, 9News and Denver7 acknowledged in statements after the shooting that they hire security guards and request that they be unarmed. Fox31 Vice President and General Manager Byron Grandy and CBS Denver News Director Tim Wieland would not discuss whether their stations provided bodyguards to journalists while covering local news.

Colorado Public Radio and its online news site, Denverite, have not, said Kevin Dale, CPR’s executive editor. The Denver Post has not hired private security for its journalists.

Broadcast journalists with their large, expensive cameras are most often at risk and more likely to hire security, multiple media experts said.

Tech Chiefs Going To Washington


The chief executives of Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc. and Alphabet Inc. will appear before a Senate committee Oct. 28 to face questioning about their policies for moderating content on their internet platforms.

Mark Zuckerberg of Facebook, Jack Dorsey of Twitter, and Sundar Pichai of Alphabet, the owner of Google and YouTube, will appear before the Senate Commerce Committee via videoconference, the Republican-led committee said Friday.

The hearing will center on Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act, which shields social-media platforms from liability for user content—but which Republicans say has been used by tech companies to censor conservative opinions.

The companies say they make those decisions without regard to political viewpoints. Democrats, for their part, have encouraged the companies to be more proactive in policing false information on social media.


The Senate Commerce Committee’s announcement said the Oct. 28 hearing “will provide an opportunity to discuss the unintended consequences of Section 230’s liability shield and how best to preserve the internet as a forum for open discourse.”

The panel’s chairman, Sen. Roger Wicker (R., Miss.), has pushed for the hearing to occur on a short time line. He moved to authorize the issuance of subpoenas against the three CEOs earlier this month, less than a week after first asking them to appear. At a hearing to vote on the subpoenas, he noted the fast-approaching Nov. 3 election.

Democrats didn’t oppose issuing the subpoenas, although some said they didn’t believe it was necessary to question the CEOs before the election.

The Senate Commerce Committee hearing is separate from an Oct. 23 hearing planned by the Senate Judiciary Committee, which on Thursday threatened to subpoena Dorsey to appear on that date after Twitter blocked a pair of New York Post articles containing allegations against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden.

Post-Biden Story: U-S Senator Wants Answers From FBI

Senate Homeland Security Chairman Ron Johnson (R-Wis.) is requesting a statement from FBI Director Christopher Wray about the veracity of details found on a laptop purported to belong to the son of Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, after the New York Post published explosive new claims about the family’s business ties abroad.

Johnson, in a letter (pdf) to Wray over the weekend, said a whistleblower contacted his committee on Sept. 24 about the laptop that was left at his business, saying he turned it over to the FBI. Johnson said that his staff immediately asked if the agency could either confirm or deny details to validate the claim about emails by the former vice president’s son, Hunter Biden, but he said that the FBI wouldn’t confirm or deny the information found on the device.

“I have a responsibility to validate and verify the contents of any information produced to my committee,” Johnson said in his letter. “The committee must know if it receives information that could be fraudulent or not accurate.”

He mentioned that the information could be related to a foreign election interference campaign, saying that if that is the case, a defensive briefing is necessary. Johnson added that if the whistleblower provided false information, it could be a crime.

Johnson appeared to be referring to the laptop that was purportedly taken to a computer repair shop before its contents were turned over to the N.Y. Post, which published emails and photos pertaining to Hunter Biden. A copy of the hard drive was first sent to former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, who told The Epoch Times that the device contains about 800 of Biden’s photos, alleging that some of them contain illegal acts.

“For these reasons, the committee must know whether the FBI has assessed the validity of materials the whistleblower has provided, and what, if any, actions the FBI has taken since obtaining this information,” Johnson said in the letter.

He also included a series of questions that the FBI should answer about the laptop, including whether the agency has material from the device, how they acquired it if they did indeed obtain the laptop, if the records on the hard drive have been altered or are genuine, whether the records were authored by Hunter Biden, or if the laptop was hacked in some way.

FCC Staffer Slams Twitter For Censoring NY Post Tweet



A top Federal Communications Commission staffer blasted Twitter for freezing The NYPost’s account in the wake of its exposé on Hunter Biden’s e-mails — while Iran’s Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei was still free to fire off tweets.

The NY Post reports the dictator — who once called for the destruction of Israel on the social media site — has posted at least six tweets since Wednesday, when The Post’s account was blocked, FCC Chief of Staff Matthew Berry noted.

“Who gets access to their Twitter account?” Berry wrote on Twitter Saturday.

He added a check mark next to “Supreme Leader of Iran” and a cross mark beside “New York Post.”

Twitter has refused to unlock The Post’s account unless the news organization deletes six tweets about its own reporting on Joe Biden’s son.

That’s despite Twitter changing its policy on Thursday night and allowing other users to tweet the very same links, following outrage over the social-media suppression of the stories.

In the four days The Post’s account was locked, Khamenei was tweeting away, including a message Wednesday calling Former Israeli Prime Minister Ariel Sharon a “butcher” and a “wolf in human skin.”

Florida-Georiga Line Honored With 'Angels Among Us' Award


Country duo Florida Georgia Line received St. Jude Children's Research Hospital's “Angels Among Us” award during a livestream presentation Thursday afternoon. 

The Memphis Commercial-Appeal reports the livestream event, titled “We Won’t Stop,” was part of an annual celebration of the Country Cares for St. Jude Kids radio program.

Launched 30 years ago, the Country Cares initiative "unites more than 200 radio stations and dozens of country music artists annually to raise awareness and support for St. Jude kids with childhood cancer and other life-threatening diseases," according to St. Jude. 

The Angels Among Us award recognizes "the duo’s generosity and passion for serving the St. Jude mission." The award — which is formally known as the Randy Owen "Angels Among Award," named after the Alabama front man — has been previously presented to Lady A, Jake Owen, Brad Paisley and John Rich, among other country stars. 

Florida Georgia Line members Tyler Hubbard and Brian Kelley have been heavily involved with St. Jude over the last several years, putting on various events and visits to aid and support patients. During Florida Georgia Line's 2019 “Can’t Say I Ain’t Country Tour," the group staged a St. Jude on-campus concert that attracted a record crowd for the hospital. 

“There is truly no place like St. Jude,” Hubbard said in a statement. “Whenever we visit, we are continually inspired by the kids’ strength and their amazing stories of bravery. Giving back is in our hearts and to be presented this award is an absolute honor.” 

Kelley added: “Music is healing and we love being able to help in any way we can to further the mission of St. Jude. And, for this award to be named after Randy Owen — who has always been one of our influences — that’s pretty incredible.”

R.I.P.: Sid Hartman, Voice of Minnesota Sports, Dead at 100

Sid Hartman
Sid Hartman, the man who for 75 years with the Star-Tribune and 65 years with WCCO 830 AM, died Sunday after dominating the sports world across Minnesota.  He was 100 years old, according to the station's website.

He has described his early life as difficult.  It was a very poor area full of Jewish immigrants.  Sid’s father was an immigrant from Russia.

When Sid was 10-years old, he met a famous newspaper writer and WCCO Radio personality he would one day work with, Halsey Hall who was one of the legendary personalities in Twin Cities’ history.  He wasn’t the only big personality either.

Sid was a corner newspaper boy.  He would bike to the paper, pick up his stack and sell them in downtown Minneapolis.  Assording to the Star-Tribune obit, Hartman started selling newspapers in 1928, a 9-year-old kid pedaling his bicycle to Newspaper Alley, where he would buy 100 copies of the Minneapolis Star, the Journal, the Morning Tribune or the Evening Tribune for $1.10, then sell them for two cents apiece.

"If you sold 100, you made 90 cents,'' Hartman said.

In 1955, WCCO Radio general manager Larry Haeg hired Sid to bring sports news to the radio.  Sid created “Sports Heroes”, which were a daily interview with the biggest names in sports.  Whether it was a local athlete or stars for the New York Yankees, Sid could track them down, according to WCCO.

In 1957, he became the sports editor of the Minneapolis Tribune. For more than a decade, he would write his column six days a week, run the sports department and also take care of his radio duties at WCCO.

Over the course of decades, Sid Hartman was a fixture on the radio and in the newspaper.  Even into his 100th year, Sid was still heard each week on-air and in print.  COVID certainly slowed his travels around town, but Sid was still seen at games, practices, in the offices of head coaches and across the Twin Cities until the end of his life.

Sid Hartman died surrounded by his close family including son Chad who confirmed his passing on Sunday afternoon.

October 19 Radio History


Bern Bennett
➦In 1921...Announcer Bern Bennett born (Died at age 92 – May 29, 2014). For nearly sixty years, beginning in 1944, Bennett was a staff announcer at CBS Radio and television. In the 1940s and 1950s, he was closely associated with Bud Collyer, as announcer on three Collyer-hosted game shows, Winner Take All, Beat the Clock, and To Tell the Truth, all produced by Mark Goodson and Bill Todman.

Other radio programs for which Bennett was the announcer included This Is Broadway, School of the Air and Breakfast With Burrows. In 1960, he was host of Upbeat Saturday Night, a 30-minute program featuring live jazz music on CBS radio




➦In 1937...the radio classic, “Big Town“, made its debut on CBS radio. Star reporters at the Illustrated Press, Steve Wilson and Lorelei Kilbourne, were played by Edward G. Robinson and Claire Trevor. In 1942 they were succeeded by Edward Pawley and Fran Carlon, who carried the show for most of its 14 year run.


➦In 1953...Julius LaRosa was fired live on-air by Arthur Godfrey.

La Rosa was on Godfrey's shows from November 19, 1951 to October 19, 1953. When Archie Bleyer, Godfrey's bandleader, formed Cadence Records in 1952, the first performer signed was La Rosa. Cadence's first single, which was also La Rosa's first recording, was "Anywhere I Wander." It reached the top 30 on the charts, and his next recording, "My Lady Loves To Dance", was a moderate success.

After La Rosa's third recording, and a dispute with Godfrey over his failure to attend a Godfrey-mandated dance class required of all cast members, La Rosa hired his own agent and manager: Tommy Rockwell.



With hit recordings and his appearances on Godfrey's shows, La Rosa's popularity grew exponentially. At one point, La Rosa's fan mail eclipsed Godfrey's. A year after La Rosa was hired, he was receiving 7,000 fan letters a week.  Godfrey did not react well to LaRosa hiring Rockwell as his manager. After consulting with CBS President Frank Stanton, on the morning of October 19, 1953 (in a segment of the show broadcast on radio only), after La Rosa finished singing "Manhattan" on Arthur Godfrey Time, Godfrey fired La Rosa on the air, announcing, "that was Julie's swan song with us." La Rosa tearfully met with Godfrey after the broadcast and thanked him for giving him his "break".

In 1970, he became a very successful and amiable disc jockey at one of America's biggest radio stations in the top market, Metromedia's WNEW 1130 AM in New York City.


➦In 1958...Brenda Lee, still weeks short of her 14th birthday, recorded a Johnny Marks song destined to become a seasonal classic, ‘Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree.’ Floyd Cramer played piano for the Nashville session, Boots Randolph was on sax.


➦In 1975...Phillips Haynes Lord died at age 73 (Born - July 13, 1902). He was a radio program writer, creator, producer and narrator as well as a motion picture actor, best known for the Gang Busters radio program that was broadcast from 1935 to 1957.

His thirty-minute program ran on Wednesday nights at 10:00 p.m. on CBS radio and opened with the portentous sounds of machine gun fire, police whistles screaming and tires screeching, causing the phrase "coming on like gangbusters" to be coined. Copied years later by the television show America's Most Wanted, each episode of Gang Busters had up-to-the-minute reports of criminals wanted by the FBI or other law enforcement officials, many of whom were later arrested due to tips from listeners.



The Gang Busters radio show was an enormous long-running success with 1,008 radio broadcasts over twenty-one years from July 20, 1935, to November 20, 1957.  In 1998, Gang Busters was part of the 30-hour audio cassette called CBS's 60 Greatest Old-Time Radio Shows.


➦In 1991...Grant Turner, WSM-AM Nashville and Grand Ole Opry announcer for 49 years, died at the age of 79.

Grant Turner
Jesse Granderson "Grant" Turner was born May 17, 1912 in Baird, Texas, near Abilene. In 1928, while in high school, he performed as Ike and His Guitar announced for Abilene, TX. Turner majored in journalism at college and worked for Texas and Louisiana newspapers during the 1930s, but he returned to radio announcing in 1940 at KFRO in Longview, TX., before joining a station in Sherman, TX.

In 1942, he moved to Knoxville, TN.. Turner rode an all-night bus to Nashville and auditioned for WSM, where he joined the staff on June 6, 1944, which was D-Day, the day the Allies invaded Europe in World War II.

He first announced early-morning programs, but a few months later joined George D. Hay's staff of Saturday night Grand Ole Opry announcers. Turner became announcer for R. J. Reynolds's NBC network half hour of the Grand Ole Opry, in the late 1940s: the Prince Albert Show, piped weekly to some 170 stations and some 10 million listeners by 1953. In the early 1950s he hosted WSM's Mr. DJ, USA program, featuring guest DJs from around the nation, and in the mid-1950s became the third regular announcer for Ernest Tubb's WSM Midnight Jamboree, a job he held until 1977

Turner for years hosted the pre-Opry Grand Ole Opry Warmup Show-spinning records and taking requests on the Opry House stage. He worked the Friday and Saturday night Opry shows, besides the summer matinees, until the night before he died. Grant Turner was one of three original members to be inducted into the Country Music D J Hall of Fame in 1975. He was elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1981.

➦In 1991...Dan Ingram debuted at Oldies WCBS 101.1 FM NYC.  Here's an un-dated aircheck:




➦In 1994...comedienne/singer/actress Martha Raye died after a lengthy illness at age 78. The big-mouthed comic appeared with Al Jolson on radio, and had her own weekly TV series 1954-56. Thereafter she was a frequent guest on numerous TV variety shows.


➦In 2010…Albany NY radio personality "Boom Boom Brannigan" died at age 82.

Born in Utica as Joseph Charles Motto, he became well known during the 1960s as a disc jockey at Albany-Troy giant WPTR 1540 AM. Brannigan was going by the name Ronny Victor at a Buffalo radio station when he landed the job at WPTR during the early 1960s.

In a 1998 interview, Brannigan said he was trying to think of a new name for the Capital Region market when he tuned in his new employer and learned his stage identity had already been chosen. “I heard this jingle that said ‘Boom Boom is coming’ and then there would be this sound of drums,” he said.Brannigan remained at WPTR until 1975, when the popularity of disc jockey-driven rock ’n’ roll had been replaced by album-oriented rock formats and talk radio.



Later, he would buy small radio stations like WKOL in Amsterdam and WSCG in Corinth, both NY.

Brannigan had chances to move to bigger broadcasts in New York City and Philadelphia to compete against national talents such as Dick Clark and Wolfman Jack, but Brannigan didn’t want to move.


Luther Masingill

➦In 2014...Chattanooga radio legend  Luther Masingill passed away after a short illness at age 92.  With a career that spanned an incredible 74 years, Luther had been at the morning mic at WDEF radio for both Pearl Harbor (1941) and 9/11 (2001).



He had also appeared on the WDEF-TV noon news every weekday since the station signed on in 1954.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Actor Tony Lo Bianco (“The French Connection”) is 84. 
  • Artist Peter Max is 83. 
  • Actor Michael Gambon (“Harry Potter” films) is 80. 
  • Actor John Lithgow is 75. 
  • Ciara Renee is 30
    Singer Jeannie C. Riley is 75. 
  • Singer Patrick Simmons of The Doobie Brothers is 72. 
  • Actor Annie Golden (“Orange is the New Black”) is 69. 
  • Talk show host Charlie Chase is 68. 
  • Singer-keyboardist Karl Wallinger of World Party is 63. 
  • Singer Jennifer Holliday is 60. 
  • TV host Ty Pennington (“Extreme Makeover: Home Edition”) is 56. 
  • Singer-guitarist Todd Park Mohr of Big Head Todd and the Monsters is 55. 
  • Actor Jon Favreau is 54. 
  • “South Park” co-creator Trey Parker is 51. 
  • Comedian Chris Kattan (“Saturday Night Live”) is 50. 
  • Singer Pras Michel of The Fugees is 48. 
  • Actor Omar Gooding (“Hangin’ With Mr. Cooper”) is 44. 
  • Country singer Cyndi Thomson is 44. 
  • Writer-director Jason Reitman (“Juno”) is 43. 
  • Actor Benjamin Salisbury (“The Nanny”) is 40. 
  • Actor Gillian Jacobs (“Community”) is 38. 
  • Singer Zac Barnett of American Authors is 34. 
  • Actor Ciara Renee (“Legends of Tomorrow”) is 30. 
  • Actor Hunter King (“The Young and the Restless”) is 27.