Tuesday, October 27, 2020

Shepard Smith News Show Off To Slow Start on CNBC


Shepard Smith, once a star anchor at Fox News, made headlines last year when he abruptly left the network. Now, his highly anticipated — and heavily promoted — new show at CNBC is falling behind repeats of Fox Business show Lou Dobbs Tonight, reports Mediaite.

Since its launch on September 30, CNBC’s The News with Shepard Smith has presented a sleek hard news program with big name guests like Dr. Anthony Fauci — all while facing a continued decline in viewership.

Bringing in an average of 343,000 total viewers in its first week according to Nielsen, the show dropped to 268,000 in its second week, 254,000 in its third, and is set to continue to decline for week four (ratings for last Friday will be in later today).

The 25-54 age demo ratings have been significantly lower, going from a meager 58,000 average viewers in the show’s debut week to just 48,000 the week later.

Between September 30 and October 22, The News with Shepard Smith was at the bottom of 7 p.m. cable news ratings — behind MSNBC’s Joy Reid, CNN’s Erin Burnett and Fox News’ Martha MacCallum — with an average of 272,000 viewers.

As far as the business network competition goes, Smith’s show placed behind the 7 p.m. repeat of Fox Business show Lou Dobbs Tonight, which pulled in 305,000 viewers (Dobbs initially airs at 5 p.m.)

At Fox News, Smith’s 3 p.m. show Shepard Smith Reporting consistently averaged more than a million viewers, with 25-54 age demo ratings sometimes higher than The News with Shepard Smith‘s current total average viewership. During his last month at Fox News — September 2019 — Smith’s show averaged 1.3 million viewers and 195,000 in the demo.

SiriusXM and Entercom Join WhyHunger's Hungerthon Campaign



With 1 in 6 Americans projected to experience hunger by the end of the year, amplified by the impact of COVID-19, participating in 

WhyHunger’​s 35th Hungerthon drive is more crucial than ever. A leader in the movement to end hunger and advance the human right to nutritious food in the U.S. and around the world, WhyHunger’s multifaceted fundraising campaign launched today and runs through the holiday season.

Now through December 31, a donation to hungerthon.org moves the needle beyond charity to strike at the root causes of hunger, getting people the nutritious food they need now and investing in long-term solutions that tackle urgent human needs through social, racial and economic justice.

The Hungerthon 2020 holiday campaign consists of:

  • Celebrity, Radio and Business Partnerships: Radio partners at Entercom New York and SiriusXM, nationally, as well as celebrity supporters including Yoko Ono Lennon, Billy Joel, Kenny Loggins, Tom Morello, FRZY, Molly Tuttle, Jesse Colin Young, MJ Songstress, Niko Brim, Sean McConnell and JoJo Brim, raise funds and awareness to invest in real solutions to end hunger and ensure everyone has the right to nutritious food. Additional partnerships include activations with sponsors vitafusion Gummy Vitamins, ADX Foundation/VME (Virtual Music Entertainment) and On The Move.
  • Charity Auctions & Merchandise Offerings: Consumers can bid on unique auction items and priceless experiences donated by musicians, athletes and celebrities through Charitybuzz starting in November. Additionally, signature WhyHunger merchandise, including exclusive John Lennon “Imagine There’s No Hunger” and Billy Joel items, are available as a gift with your Hungerthon donation.
  • Live Hungerthon Day: On November 24, WhyHunger will host its annual Live Hungerthon Day via radio partners at Entercom New York on stations including: WFAN 101.9 FM/660 AM (WFAN-FM/AM), WCBS 880 (WCBS-AM), 1010 WINS (WINS-AM), WCBS-FM 101.1 (WCBS-FM), ALT 92.3 (WNYL-FM), NEW 102.7 (WNEW-FM), and New York’s Country 94.7 (WNSH-FM). Live broadcasts feature interviews, auctions, exclusive Hungerthon merchandise and more. Donations are accepted online at hungerthon.org or via the volunteer-staffed phone room (1-800-5-HUNGRY). Entercom New York has supported WhyHunger’s Live Hungerthon Day since 1985.
  •  Thanksgiving Virtual Race: On November 26, through charity app RunforGood.org, individuals can participate in a nationwide virtual Race to Give Thanks on Thanksgiving Day where they can run, walk or cycle 5.4 miles (in solidarity with the 54 million Americans who are food insecure) and raise funds to support Hungerthon. Registration will begin on October 26 at Hungerthon.org/Race.

“COVID-19 has greatly exacerbated food insecurity rates, and the social injustices that have long existed at the root of hunger, from racism to the lack of a living wage. Hunger is a solvable problem, and we urge you to participate in this year’s campaign to help tackle the urgent human need for access to nutritious food,” said Noreen Springstead, executive director at WhyHunger. “From donating to participating in our virtual Race to Give Thanks to learning and spreading the facts about hunger in America, there are many ways individuals can get involved and give back. We are honored and humbled to kick off Hungerthon 2020, working with dedicated partner organizations and celebrities to become one step closer to ending hunger and ensuring everyone’s right to food.”

👉Hunger in America by the Numbers:

  • 54 million Americans, or 1 in 6, will struggle with food insecurity this year—an increase of 19 million from 2019.
  • 18 million children, or nearly 1 in 4, will struggle with food insecurity in 2020.
  • Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, more than 39.4 million people - greater than 12% of the population - were living in poverty in the U.S. 

Available to anyone in need, the WhyHunger Hotline at 1-800-5-HUNGRY and the Find Food database helps veterans, seniors, families and food insecure individuals find food in their neighborhoods as well as government programs like SNAP year around and in times of crisis. In 2020, WhyHunger is projected to help connect over 1 million people in the U.S. to nutritious food.

Since launching over three decades ago, Hungerthon has raised millions of dollars in the fight to end hunger and invest in community-driven solutions to build social justice for all. To find out more information and support this year’s Hungerthon, visit hungerthon.org and follow the conversation on social media via #Hungerthon.

October 27 Radio History


➦In 1920...Westinghouse's radio station in East Pittsburgh, KDKA was issued the first-ever commercial radio license.  But it would be another week before it took to the air .. with the Harding-Cox election returns Nov. 2.   The audience was approximately 1,000 people.


KDKA's roots began with the efforts of Westinghouse employee Frank Conrad who operated KDKA's predecessor 75 watt 8XK from the Pittsburgh suburb of Wilkinsburg from 1916. Conrad, who had supervised the manufacturing of military receivers during WWI, broadcast phonograph music and communicated with other amateur radio operators via 8YK. On September 29, 1920, the Joseph Horne department store in Pittsburgh began advertising amateur wireless sets for $10, which could be used to listen to Conrad’s broadcasts.

Westinghouse vice president and Conrad’s supervisor, Harry P. Davis, saw the advertisement and recognized the economic potential of radio.  Instead of it being limited as a hobby to scientific experimenters, radio could be marketed to a mainstream audience. Consequently, Davis asked Conrad to build a 100-watt transmitter, which would air programming intended to create widespread demand for Westinghouse receivers.

The KDKA call sign was assigned sequentially from a list maintained for the use of US-registry maritime stations, and on November 2, 1920, KDKA broadcast the US presidential election returns from a shack on the roof of the K Building of the Westinghouse Electric Company "East Pittsburgh Works" in Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania.

According to Britannica.com, the first voice and music signals heard over radio waves were transmitted in December 1906 from Brant Rock, Massachusetts (just south of Boston), when Canadian experimenter Reginald Fessenden produced about an hour of talk and music for technical observers and any radio amateurs who might be listening. Many other one-off experiments took place in the next few years, but none led to continuing scheduled services. On the West Coast of the United States, for example, Charles (“Doc”) Herrold began operating a wireless transmitter in conjunction with his radio school in San Jose, California, about 1908. Herrold was soon providing regularly scheduled voice and music programs to a small local audience of amateur radio operators in what may have been the first such continuing service in the world.

The radio hobby grew during the decade before World War I, and the ability to “listen in” with earphones (as there were no loudspeakers) and occasionally hear voices and music seemed almost magical. Nevertheless, very few people heard these early broadcasts—most people merely heard about them—in part because the only available receivers were those handmade by radio enthusiasts, the majority of them men and boys.

Among these early receivers were crystal sets, which used a tiny piece of galena (lead sulfide) called a “cat’s whisker” to detect radio signals. Although popular, inexpensive, and easy to make, crystal sets were a challenge to tune in to a station. Such experiments were scattered, and so there was little demand for manufactured receivers. (Plug-in radio receivers, which, through the use of loudspeakers, allowed for radio to become a “communal experience,” would not become widespread until after 1927.) Early broadcasters in the United States, such as Herrold, would continue until early 1917, when federal government restrictions forced most radio transmitters off the air for the rest of World War I, stalling the growth of the medium.

After the war, renewed interest in radio broadcasts grew out of experimenters’ efforts, though such broadcasts were neither officially authorized nor licensed by government agencies, as would become the practice in most countries by the late 1920s.

Westinghouse application for licenses
Another early station appeared in Canada when station XWA (now CFCF) in Montreal began transmitting experimentally in September 1919 and on a regular schedule the next year. (The first commercially sponsored stations in Canada appeared in 1922.)

Broadcasting got an important boost in the huge American market when about 30 radio stations took to the air in different cities in 1920–21. Most of these developed out of amateur operations, each dedicated to a different purpose. “Doc” Herrold returned to the air in 1921, but he soon had to sell his station for lack of operating funds. The University of Wisconsin’s WHA began as a physics department transmitter, but as early as 1917 it was sending wireless telegraph agricultural market reports by Morse Code to Wisconsin farmers. WHA, the first American educational outlet, probably began voice broadcasts in early 1921, though several other universities soon initiated stations with similar aims. KDKA in Pittsburgh, most often cited as the first radio outlet in the United States, had begun as the amateur station 8XK in 1916, but it was forced off the air in World War I. It reappeared on November 2, 1920, as a “commercial” voice-and-music service operated by the Westinghouse electrical manufacturer to help sell the company’s radio receivers. Westinghouse added other stations in different cities over the next two years, and General Electric and the newly formed Radio Corporation of America (RCA) soon entered the radio business as well. Detroit’s amateur operation 8MK (which debuted on August 20, 1920) soon became WWJ, the first station to be owned by a newspaper (The Detroit News).


➦In 1947...“This is Nora Drake” premiered on NBC radio. Nora solved domestic, social and child-raising problems in its daily soap slot until January 2, 1959.


➦In 1947..."You Bet Your Life" made its debut on ABC Radio Network with Groucho Marx as quizmaster and George Fenneman as his announcer. The program continued on radio until 1959 and ran on TV from 1950 to 1961.

Father Coughlin
➦In 1979…Radio evangelist Father Charles Coughlin, one of the first political leaders to use radio to reach a mass audience, died at age 88. In the 1930s, his weekly broadcasts had an audience of 30 million people.

Coughlin began his radio broadcasts in 1926 on station WJR, in response to cross burnings by the Ku Klux Klan on the grounds of his church, giving a weekly hour-long radio program. His program was picked up by CBS four years later for national broadcast.  Until the beginning of the Depression, Father Coughlin mainly covered religious topics in his weekly radio addresses, in contrast to the political topics which dominated his radio speeches throughout the 1930s. He reached a very large audience that extended well beyond his own Irish Catholic base.


➦On 1999...composer/arranger/conductor Frank DeVol, a veteran of both radio & TV, died of congestive heart failure at age 88. In the 40′s and early 50′s he directed the orchestra nightly for CBS radio’s “Jack Smith Show.”  He composed the theme songs for TV’s The Brady Bunch, Family Affair, Gidget, and My Three Sons. DeVol also played “Happy Kyne” on TV’s Fernwood Tonight.


➦In 2003...XM Satellite Radio announced it had reached the 1 million subscriber milestone.


➦In 2003…'Price is Right" Announcer and former radio personality (KOST-Los Angeles, KLIF-Dallas, WKBW-Buffalo, KQV-Pittsburgh, KOMA-Oklahoma City) Rod Roddy died of colon and breast cancer at 66.

After graduating from Texas Christian University, Roddy began his professional broadcasting career as a disc jockey and talk show host on KLIF and KNUS-FM (Dallas, Texas). He also worked overnights and mid-days at the Buffalo, New York radio station WKBW 1520 AM, a big-signal station covering the Eastern Seaboard of the United States, and at other high-profile stations. Returning to KLIF and KNUS during the 1970s, Roddy hosted a call-in program, "Rod Roddy's Hotline," whose controversial host and topics made him a frequent target of death threats. He conducted a long-running on-air feud with an elderly woman (dubbed "Granny Hate"), who claimed to represent the local Ku Klux Klan.


➦In 2016...horror movie TV host and radio personality John Zacherle, nicknamed “The Cool Ghoul,” died  at age 98.  A TV movie host in Philadelphia and New York in the 1950’s and 60’s, he also hosted a TV dance show, which led to him becoming morning radio host on WNEW-FM NYC.

Zacherley made a Halloween appearance during a two-hour show at WCBS 101.1 FM with Ron Parker on October 31, 2007. The 89-year-old was one of the very few people left in radio that was older than the medium itself. The Broadcast Pioneers of Philadelphia inducted Zacherle into their Hall of Fame in 2010.

HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Actor-comedian John Cleese is 81. 
  • Country singer Lee Greenwood is 78. 
  • Director Ivan Reitman is 74. 
  • Country singer-guitarist Jack Daniels (Highway 101) is 71. 
  • Sherri Rappaport is 43
    Bassist Garry Tallent of Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band is 71. 
  • Author Fran Lebowitz is 70. 
  • Guitarist K.K. Downing (Judas Priest) is 69. 
  • TV personality Jayne Kennedy is 69. 
  • Actor-director Roberto Benigni(“Life Is Beautiful”) is 68. 
  • Actor Peter Firth (“That’s Life”) is 67. 
  • Actor Robert Picardo (“The Wonder Years,” ″China Beach”) is 67. 
  • Singer Simon LeBon of Duran Duran is 62. 
  • Keyboardist J.D. McFadden (Sixpence None the Richer, The Mavericks) is 56. 
  • Drummer Jason Finn of Presidents of the United States of America is 53. 
  • Actor Sean Holland (Film and TV “Clueless”) is 52. 
  • Actor Channon Roe (“Murder in the First”) is 51. 
  • Actor Sheeri Rappaport (“CSI,” ″NYPD Blue”) is 43. 
  • TV personality Kelly Osbourne is 36. 
  • Actor Bryan Craig (“General Hospital”) is 29. 
  • Actor Troy Gentile (“The Goldbergs”) is 27.

Monday, October 26, 2020

Phoenix Radio: Entercom Promotes Hernandez and Valentine

Chris Hernandez
Entercom announces the promotion of Chris Hernandez as operations manager for the company’s Phoenix market. In this role, Hernandez will lead operations efforts for 94.5 KOOL FM, KMLE Country 107.9 and LIVE 101.5 (KALV-FM). Subsequently, Daniel Valentine has been elevated to the role of music director for LIVE 101.5. 

Both promotions are effective October 28.

“Chris Hernandez has consistently shown amazing drive that leads to substantial results and I’m confident in his ability to take our collection of stations to higher levels,” Dave Pugh, Senior Vice President and Market Manager, Entercom Phoenix. “Daniel Valentine has proven his extensive music expertise over the years and I’m looking forward to watching his career grow as he leads LIVE’s music operations. Both are veterans in our company, and I’m honored to elevate two hard working individuals.”

Daniel Valentine
“I am thrilled for the opportunity to oversee our market’s collection of such iconic Phoenix radio brands and grow my career in this next chapter,” said Hernandez.

Hernandez joined LIVE 101.5 in 2007 as an on-air mixer and imaging director, roles he held until 2015 when he became the station’s assistant program director and music director. His most recent experience with the station includes serving as brand manager since 2018.

“I have complete confidence in the team around me as I embark in this new role,” said Valentine. “It feels great to know they have the same confidence in me and I couldn’t ask for a better group of people to continue learning from.”

Valentine has served as LIVE 101.5’s mix show coordinator and on-air mixer since 2016. He joined Entercom (then CBS Radio Phoenix) as a promotions assistant in 2013.

R.I.P.: Ron Britain, Legendary Chicago Radio Personality

Veteran radio personality Ron Britain has died.  His son confirmed to Chicago Radio Watcher Robert Feder that the 86-year-old Britain took his own life Sunday.

According to his son, Birtain was inconsolable over the death last week of his wife of 62-years.  His wife Helen died from the effects of a fall in her Louisville, KY home.

Over a radio career that spanned more than 50 years, Britain worked at 21 stations in 11 cities. But he found his greatest success and most lasting fame in Chicago, where he first joined the former WCFL in 1965.

Brittain, whose real name was Ron Magel, made his first appearance on the radio at age 14. At the suggestion of a program director in Cincinnati, he changed his named to Ron Britain in 1960.


In addition to two stints at WCFL, Britain also worked in Chicago at WIND, WLS-FM, WJMK, WTMX and Satellite Music Network.


The AM Rundown: Pence Campaigns Despite Aides' Testing Positive


Vice President Mike Pence is sticking to his campaign schedule during this last week before the presidential election despite at least five of his aides, including his chief of staff Marc Short, testing positive for the coronavirus, according to reports. Another who's reportedly tested positive is Zach Bauer, Pence's "body man," meaning someone who's with him all the time to provide a assistance. However, Pence, who heads the coronavirus task force, isn't quarantining. He and his wife, Karen Pence, tested negative on Sunday. 



Meanwhile, President Trump's chief of staff, Mark Meadows, said on CNN yesterday, "We’re not going to control the pandemic," saying when asked why, "Because it is a contagious virus just like the flu." He said instead, "We are going to control the fact that we get vaccines, therapeutics and other mitigation areas." His remarks came as the U.S. passed 225,000 deaths from the coronavirus yesterday, according to Johns Hopkins University's count, as the nation's fall wave of the virus continues to grow. 

The Covid Tracking Project has recorded an increase in the seven-day average of daily new cases from 42,348 on October 2nd to 66,557 on Friday, and in increase in the seven-day average of daily deaths, from 703 on October 2nd to 807 on Friday.

➤EARLY VOTING ALREADY MORE THAN 2016 TALLY: Election Day is still more than a week away, and more people have already voted early than voted early or absentee for the entire time before Election Day in 2016. AP reported yesterday that 58.6 million ballots had been cast so far, more than the 58 million that were early or absentee in the 2016 election. The surge in early and absentee voting is being driven in part by people trying to avoid crowded polling places on Election Day amid the coronavirus pandemic, but also by voter enthusiasm. More Democrats than Republican have been doing early voting, but AP notes the margin is narrowing some, with more Republicans showing up in recent days to vote. 


➤FBI INVESTIGATING FIRE SET IN BALLOT DROP BOX IN BOSTON: The FBI is investigating after a fire was set in a ballot drop box in Boston early Sunday morning. The drop box was outside the Boston Public Library downtown, and Massachusetts election officials said the incident appears to have been a "deliberate attack." Firefighters put out the fire by filling the drop box with water. There were 122 ballots inside, and 87 were still legible and able to be processed. People who used the drop box who can't confirm online that their ballot was processed were urged to contact Boston's Elections Department. Boston Police released surveillance images of a person near the ballot box at that time of the arson.


➤BARRETT'S SENATE CONFIRMATION VOTE SET FOR TODAY: A confirmation vote in the full Senate for Supreme Court nominee Judge Amy Coney Barrett is expected for today, after a rare Sunday session in which Senate Republicans voted to advance the nomination over Democratic objections that the winner of the presidential election should fill late Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg's seat because it's so close to the election. Barrett is expected to be confirmed in the Republican-majority Senate. Only two Republicans, Senator Susan Collins of Maine and Lisa Murkowski of Alaska, voted with all the Democrats against advancing the nomination in yesterday's 51-48 vote. But while Murkowski voted no in the procedural vote because she's against installing a justice so close to the election, she said Saturday she will vote to confirm Barrett in the final vote, stating, "While I oppose the process that has led us to this point, I do not hold it against her." Collins, who's in a close election in Maine, has said she'll still vote no, the only Republican expected to do so.
 

➤TROPICAL STORM ZETA LIKELY TO THREATEN GULF COAST AS HURRICANE: Forecasters said Sundaythat newly-formed Tropical Storm Zeta is likely to become a hurricane today before hitting Mexico's Yucatan Peninsula later in the day or early tomorrow, and will threaten the U.S. Gulf Coast by Wednesday, although it may weaken by then. Zeta is the earliest named 27th Atlantic storm, breaking the previous record of a 27th storm that formed on November 29, 2005. Storms are now being named following the Greek alphabet after official names ran out because we've had so many this Atlantic hurricane season.



⚾DODGERS TAKE 3-2 WORLD SERIES LEAD WITH 4-2 WIN OVER RAYS: The Los Angeles Dodgers took a 3-2 World Series lead with a 4-2 win over the Tampa Bay Rays last night, putting them one win away from the championship. 


Dodgers starter Clayton Kershaw gave up Tampa Bay's only two runs and five hits, staying in until the sixth when he was pulled with two outs. Before that, he prevented a Rays' attempt to steal home for a tying run in the fourth inning, backing off the rubber and throwing to the catcher after he heard first baseman Max Muncy scream, "Step off!" as he went into his stretch position. L.A. scored two runs in the first, and Joc Pederson and Muncy added solo home runs in the second and fifth innings, respectively. Game 6 is on Tuesday.

🏈NFL SCORES -- WEEK 7: Here are the results of this weekend's NFL games:
  • Detroit Lions 23, Atlanta Falcons 22
  • Cleveland Browns 37, Cincinnati Bengals 34
  • Pittsburgh Steelers 27, Tennessee Titans 24
  • New Orleans Saints 27, Carolina Panthers 24
  • Buffalo Bills 18, New York Jets 10
  • Washington Football Team 25, Dallas Cowboys 3
  • Green Bay Packers 35, Houston Texans 20
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers 45, Las Vegas Raiders 20
  • Kansas City Chiefs 43, Denver Broncos 16
  • San Francisco 49ers 33, New England Patriots 6
  • Los Angeles Chargers 39, Jacksonville Jaguars 29
  • Arizona Cardinals 37, Seattle Seahawks 34 (OT)
Tonight's Monday Night Football game on ESPN:
  • Chicago Bears at Los Angeles Rams (8:15 pm ET)

➤TITANS FINED $350K FOR CORONAVIRUS VIOLATIONS: The Tennessee Titans were fined $350,000 this week for violations of the NFL's coronavirus protocols, the NFL Network reported yesterday (October 25th), saying the team was told there'd be, quote, "escalated discipline" if there are further violations. A probe found the Titans didn't follow mask mandates or communicate with players working out away from the team facility. Twenty-four members of the Titans organization tested positive for the coronavirus, leading to the postponement of their Week 4 game against the Pittsburgh Steelers and a delay of their Week 5 game against the Buffalo Bills to a Tuesday.

➤JAGUARS' ARMSTEAD TO MISS SEASON WITH COVID COMPLICATIONS: Jacksonville Jaguars running back Ryquell Armstead is expected to miss the entire NFL season because of complications of Covid-19, ESPN reported yesterday (October 25th). Armstead has been experiencing respiratory issues and has been hospitalized twice since contracting the coronavirus. ESPN said the 23-year-old is expected to return next season.

➤COWBOYS QB DALTON SUFFERS CONCUSSION: Dallas Cowboys quarterback Andy Dalton had to leave in the third quarter of the team's 25-3 loss to the Washington Football Team yesterday (October 25th) after he suffered a concussion when he took a hit to the head from Washington linebacker Jon Bostic as he slid to the ground. Bostic was ejected. Dalton was making his second start replacing starting quarterback Dak Prescott, who's out with a compound fracture and dislocation of his ankle. Rookie Ben DiNucci went in after Dalton's exit. 

Several FOX Anchors Advised To Quarantine


The president of Fox News and several of the network’s top anchors have been advised to quarantine after being exposed to someone on a private flight who later tested positive for the coronavirus, reports The NY Times citing two people with direct knowledge of the situation.

The infected person was on a charter flight to New York from Nashville with a group of network executives, personalities and other staff members who attended the presidential debate on Thursday, according to the people, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss internal network matters.

Everyone on board the plane has been told to get tested and quarantine. It was unclear whether more than one person had tested positive.

Those who were exposed include Jay Wallace, the president of Fox News Media; Bret Baier, the chief political anchor; Martha MacCallum, the anchor of Fox’s 7 p.m. show, “The Story”; and Dana Perino and Juan Williams, two hosts of “The Five.”

Fox has been faster than other cable news and broadcast networks to resume in-studio programming. And it has had one of the largest in-person footprints of the news organizations that covered the presidential and vice-presidential debates. Several Fox shows are now regularly broadcast from its Midtown Manhattan headquarters, while others are done remotely, as is more common among competitors like CNN and MSNBC.

The anchors who were affected are expected to host their shows from home for the time being.

Report: Apollo Investors Revolt Over Ties to Epstein


Over the last week, Leon Black’s giant investment firm, Apollo Global Management Inc., has confronted one question after another about his decades-long relationship with convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein, reports The L-A Times.

First, his own board ordered an external review prompted by Black himself. Then a Pennsylvania pension fund paused new investments — and the state of Connecticut has done the same. One major consultant — a gatekeeper to $160 billion of investor commitments — has urged clients to hold off, and another is considering taking similar action.

Clients who for years enjoyed some of the best returns on Wall Street are reconsidering their ties to Apollo amid renewed scrutiny over Epstein, spurred by a New York Times report last week and given fresh attention from an unsealed deposition of Epstein associate Ghislaine Maxwell.

Investors distancing themselves from the firm show how serious the issue has become for Black and his general partners. Some clients aren’t convinced that the review, which will be handled by law firm Dechert LLP, will be enough to clear Black’s name, according to people familiar with the matter.

A freeze in new money could hurt Apollo at a time when it’s trying to raise $20 billion for several new funds. The pandemic-spurred turmoil in the credit markets is a prime investing opportunity for the firm, which is known for buying struggling businesses. Apollo is seeking to take advantage of market dislocations as well as invest in private debt, people with knowledge of the matter said in April.

Black’s growing troubles reflect the changing politics of the investing world, where major funds have become more sensitive to environmental, social and governance matters. The new focus means that even the prospect of lucrative returns may not be enough of a lure in the midst of a scandal.

Though Black had already faced pressure in the immediate aftermath of Epstein’s arrest last year, investor angst was rekindled by a New York Times report that he had wired at least $50 million to Epstein after Epstein’s 2008 conviction for procuring a minor for prostitution. The article didn’t accuse Black of breaking the law. Apollo shares have fallen about 12% since the story was published Oct. 12.

Last November, the FCC approved equity firm Apollo Global Management LLC’s takeover of TV and radio stations owned by Cox Enterprises Inc. and Northwest Broadcasting. The “Cox Media Group” name lives on as the “doing business as” brand.

The FCC approved the transactions, totaling almost $3.5 billion, sought by Apollo-controlled Terrier Media Buyer Inc.

eMarketer: 3 Key Trends Shaping Worldwide Media Landscape



eMarketer has released an update Global Media Intelligence Report for 2020, a detailed look at internet users’ engagement with digital and traditional media in 42 major markets, produced in collaboration with Starcom and GlobalWebIndex.

1. Ownership of PCs and Tablets Is Declining in Many Countries

Smartphones are consolidating their position as the primary digital device worldwide, and as a result, larger-screen devices may appear destined for a secondary role. 

Between H1 2019 and H1 2020, ownership of desktops, laptops, and/or tablets declined most sharply in developing markets, including Brazil, China, Egypt, and India—all countries where the focus has long been on mobile devices and services. But the same trend appeared to a lesser degree in several other countries too, including France, Russia, Sweden, and the US. 

That said, PC and tablet penetration remains consistently higher among older, affluent internet users—a top target audience for many marketers. In addition, many consumers have spent more time with PCs since the pandemic began. In the US, for example, 43% of internet users polled by GlobalWebIndex in May 2020 said their laptop time had increased, and 24% reported spending more time on a desktop.


As a result, advertising on desktops and laptops will still contribute significantly to digital ad spending overall. And digital ad spending—unlike outlays on traditional media—is set to climb this year despite the massive market impact of the pandemic. eMarketer estimates that digital ad spending worldwide will rise 2.4% this year to $332.84 billion.


In 2020, digital ad spending worldwide will make up 54.1% of total media ad spending, per eMarketer’s forecast.


2. Digital Video Continues to Close the Gap with Broadcast TV

In many parts of the world, the share of internet users watching digital video, either free or paid-for, now equals or surpasses the share watching live TV. In particular, GlobalWebIndex found sizable increases in penetration of subscription video-on-demand (SVOD) in many markets. These increases were likely due in part to expanded offerings from Netflix and other providers, but SVOD also seems to have benefited from consumers’ desire for quality entertainment while stuck at home.

That data confirms eMarketer’s own forecasts of steady growth in subscription video viewing. For instance, we expect the number of people in Western Europe who use subscription over-the-top (OTT) video services to jump 15.6% this year—with even greater gains in the EU-4 countries.

In North America, Netflix alone is forecast to have more than 185 million users in 2020.


3. The Pandemic Is Likely Hastening the Decline of Print Media 

Print audiences aren’t shrinking everywhere, but print newspapers and magazines did register many of the most dramatic decreases in media engagement this year. In South Africa, for example, the share of internet users who’d read a print newspaper in the month prior to polling fell almost 10 percentage points, and magazine penetration plunged 17 percentage points. Significant drops were also seen in Colombia, Hong Kong, and Romania, among others.

The Apps Americans Can't Live Without

by Martin Armstrong, Statista

Most smartphone users have at least one app which they couldn't live without, be it for their favorite social media platform or perhaps messaging. 

Survey data from Audience Project shows that for Americans, Facebook is at the top of this list for the most people and is the app most commonly cited as one they could least do without. Closely linked, Instagram is in second place, while Gmail makes up the top three "essential" apps on mobile.

Infographic: The Apps Americans Can't Live Without | Statista You will find more infographics at Statista

The Epoch Times: NYTimes 'Investigation' Light on Facts, Heavy on Bias


The New York Times on Oct. 25 published a front page article about an eight month 'invesitgation' by tech columnist Kevin Roose about The Epoch Times.

According to The Epoch Times, instead of a fair portrayal Roose resorts to factual errors, innuendo, and misrepresentations in an attempt to smear a competing media outlet.

Furthermore, previous social media comments made by Roose and NY Times media columnist Ben Smith (who contributed to Roose’s article) about The Epoch Times, in which they appear to discuss a collective effort against The Epoch Times, raise questions about the intent behind this article.

NY Times Intertional Edition 10/26/20
At the heart of the article is the NY Times’ apparent discontent with the fact that The Epoch Times has become—in the NY Times’ own words— “one of the country’s most powerful digital publishers.” The article could easily have been written as a success story of a group of Chinese Americans who cherish their First Amendment rights and have succeeded in growing a large independent media outlet.

Instead, Roose relies on words such as “secretive” and attempts to tie us to an unrelated outlet, in order to call into question the quality of The Epoch Times award-winning journalism.

Roose takes particular issue with our critical position on the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) and its ongoing human rights abuses. He downplays accounts of the abuses taking place, claiming they “veer into exaggeration.” This unusual defense and appeasement of the CCP is morally questionable. For years, the NY Times has sought expanded access to the Chinese market and accepted millions in advertising revenue from Chinese state-owned media entities.

Roose included a number of glaring factual errors, despite having been informed of their inaccuracy before publishing, according to The Epoch Times.

For example, Roose writes that “perhaps the most audacious experiment was a new right-wing politics site called America Daily.”

The Epoch Times has no connection with this media organization, as was pointed out to Roose in response to his questions via email.

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FCC Sets Symposium On Accessing Capital For Ownership


The FCC has announced a symposium on Media Ownership and Sustainability on November 6, 2020, from 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m., EST. The symposium will examine access to capital for small and diverse broadcasters. 

The event will be convened virtually via WebEx and will be available to the public streaming via the Internet at www.fcc.gov/live. The symposium will feature broadcasters and lenders discussing how to obtain financing for broadcast station transactions in today’s challenging financial circumstances, as well as experts discussing the history of the previous broadcast tax certificate policy and the potential for a new tax certificate policy to increase broadcast ownership diversity. The symposium will also include presentations from Nielsen Global Media on ratings measurements for multi-ethnic broadcast stations, and a discussion of how small and diverse broadcasters can attract increased advertising revenue. Finally, Congressional staff members will provide updates on pending legislation intended to increase diverse media ownership.

Open captioning will be provided for this event. Other reasonable accommodations for people with disabilities are available upon request. Requests for such accommodations should be submitted via e-mail to fcc504@fcc.gov or by calling the Consumer & Governmental Affairs Bureau at (202) 418-0530 (voice), (202) 418-0432 (TTY).  

More information about the ACDDE is available at https://www.fcc.gov/advisory-committeediversity-and-digital-enpowerment. You may also contact Jamila Bess Johnson, the Designated Federal Officer for the Advisory Committee on Diversity and Digital Empowerment, at (202) 418-2608, or Jamila-Bess.Johnson@fcc.gov, or Julie Saulnier, Deputy Designated Federal Officer, at (202) 418-1598, or Julie.Saulnier@fcc.gov; or Jamile Kadre, Deputy Designated Federal Officer, at (202) 418-2245 or Jamile.Kadre@fcc.gov. 

R.I.P.: Jerry Jeff Walker, Texas Music Scene Influencer

Jerry Jeff Walker (March 16, 1942 – October 23, 2020)

Jerry Jeff Walker, perhaps most noted around the world as the man who penned pop and country hit “Mr. Bojangles” has died at the age of 78, reports dfw.cbslocal.com.  According to the Associated Press, family spokesman John T. Davis said Walker died Friday, October 23 of cancer.

“He had battled throat cancer for many years, and some other health issues, the cause death was cancer,” Davis said Saturday.

“The last time I’ll play here,” a quote from Jerry Jeff’s, “Too Old To Change” album released in 1979. He uttered the line prior to recording the title track on that album. “I can’t say I’ve been sorry, about anything I’ve ran off to see,” another lyric from that song. Both seem a bit prophetic in how Walker lived his life. And how he left it.

Although, when Walker was diagnosed with throat cancer in 2017 he was quoted as saying, “I guess I took my singing for granted, and now I don’t.” Walker was speaking to the Austin American Statesman in 2018 and told them he was undergoing chemotherapy and radiation.

North Texas country music radio personality Mark “Hawkeye” Louis of 96.3 KSCS reacted to the loss of Walker.

“The Texas Music Scene exists today because of the groundwork that Jerry Jeff Walker laid back in the 70s. The fact that his fans span all generations is a testament to his talent as a songwriter and a performer. It is a sad day for Texas,” Hawkeye said.


Jerry Jeff Walker was not a native Texan, but as he was often quoted, he “got here as quick” as he could. He had his roots in New York’s Greenwich Village folk scene in the 1960s and he was a founding member of the band Circus Maximus – that according to the Associated press. He moved to Texas in the 1970s and in 1972 had his first hit with his version of the Guy Clark song “L.A. Freeway.”

It was shortly thereafter that Jerry Jeff Walker helped inspire the new Cosmic Cowboy Texas music scene.

October 26 Radio History






➦In 1935...Frances Gumm, a talented twelve-year-old sang on Wallace Beery’s NBC radio show. The young girl would soon be in pictures and at the top of stardom. It would be only four years before the renamed Judy Garland captured the hearts of moviegoers as Dorothy in The Wizard of Oz



➦In 1940...Hazelwood Broadcasting put WLOF 1230 AM on the air (We-Love-Orlando-Florida).

It would be Orlando's second radio station. WLOF began broadcasting at 6:30AM with 250 watts of power and radius of 50 miles.

The studios and offices were located on the mezzanine floor of the Angebilt Hotel. The station was an affiliate of the National Broadcasting Co. (NBC), switching to Mutual in 1947.

Also, The station was moved to 950 kHz in 1947 and power was increased to 5,000 Watts.



➦In 1965...The Beatles receive Members of the British Empire (MBE) medals from Queen Elizabeth II in a ceremony staged at Buckingham Palace. It is the first such honor ever given to a rock band, causing many former recipients, many distinguished military personnel, to return their medals in disgust. According to John, the group is so nervous beforehand that it gets high on marijuana in a palace bathroom; during the ceremony, when Her Majesty asks the group how long it's been together, Ringo.


➦In 1968...Having been fired from WOR-FM, Legendary DJ Murray The K moves across town in New York, again becoming one of the WMCA 570 AM "Good Guys" working a weekend shift.


➦In 1990...CBS founder & CEO William S. Paley died at age 89 after a heart attack and kidney failure.

William S. Paley - 1937
Paley's father Samuel Paley was a Jewish immigrant from Ukraine who ran a cigar company. As the company became increasingly successful, Paley became a millionaire, and moved his family to Philadelphia in the early 1920s. In 1927, Paley's father, brother-in-law and some business partners bought a struggling Philadelphia-based radio network of 16 station called the Columbia Phonographic Broadcasting System.  Samuel Paley's intention was to use his acquisition as an advertising medium for promoting the family's cigar business, which included the La Palina brand. Within a year, under William's leadership, cigar sales had more than doubled, and, in 1928, the Paley family secured majority ownership of the network from their partners. Within a decade, William S. Paley had expanded the network to 114 affiliate stations.

Paley quickly grasped the earnings potential of radio and recognized that good programming was the key to selling advertising time and, in turn, bringing in profits to the network and to affiliate owners. Before Paley, most businessmen viewed stations as stand-alone local outlets or, in other words, as the broadcast equivalent of local newspapers. Individual stations originally bought programming from the network and, thus, were considered the network's clients.

Paley changed broadcasting's business model not only by developing successful and lucrative broadcast programming but also by viewing the advertisers as the most significant element of the broadcasting equation. Paley provided network programming to affiliate stations at a nominal cost, thereby ensuring the widest possible distribution for both the programming and the advertising. The advertisers then became the network's primary clients and, because of the wider distribution brought by the growing network, Paley was able to charge more for the ad time. Affiliates were required to carry programming offered by the network for part of the broadcast day, receiving a portion of the network's fees from advertising revenue. At other times in the broadcast day, affiliates were free to offer local programming and sell advertising time locally.

Paley's recognition of how to harness the potential reach of broadcasting was the key to his growing CBS from a tiny chain of stations into what was eventually one of the world's dominant communication empires. During his prime, Paley was described as having an uncanny sense for popular taste and exploiting that insight to build the CBS network. As war clouds darkened over Europe in the late 1930s, Paley recognized Americans' desire for news coverage of the coming war and built the CBS news division into a dominant force just as he had previously built the network's entertainment division.

Ed Walker, Willard Scott
➦In 2015...Longtime Washington, DC radio personality/Radio Hall of Famer Ed Walker, whose 60-year broadcasting career included co-hosting "The Joy Boys" with Willard Scott until 1972, died of cancer at 83. (Read More Here)

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Actor Jaclyn Smith (“Charlie’s Angels”) is 75. 
  • “Wheel of Fortune” host Pat Sajak is 74. 
  • Musician Bootsy Collins is 69. 
  • Actor James Pickens Jr. (“Grey’s Anatomy”) is 68. 
  • Musician David Was of Was (Not Was) is 68. 
  • Guitarist Keith Strickland of The B-52′s is 67. 
  • Natalie Merchant is 57
    Actor Lauren Tewes (“The Love Boat”) is 67. 
  • Actor D.W. Moffett (“Chicago Med”) is 66. 
  • Actor Rita Wilson is 64. 
  • Actor Patrick Breen (“Madam Secretary”) is 60. 
  • Actor Dylan McDermott (“The Practice”) is 59. 
  • Actor Cary Elwes is 58. 
  • Singer Natalie Merchant is 57. 
  • Actor Steve Valentine (“Crossing Jordan”) is 54. 
  • Country singer Keith Urban is 53. 
  • Actor Tom Cavanagh (“The Flash,” ″Ed”) is 52. 
  • Actor Rosemarie DeWitt (“The United States of Tara”) is 49. 
  • Actor Anthony Rapp (“Rent”) is 49. 
  • Writer-actor Seth McFarlane (“Family Guy”) is 47. 
  • TV host Paula Faris (“The View”) is 45. 
  • Actor Florence Kasumba (“Black Panther”) is 44. 
  • Actor Jon Heder (“Blades of Glory,” ″Napoleon Dynamite”) is 43. 
  • Singer Mark Barry of BBMak is 42. 
  • Actor Folake Olowofoyeku (“Bob Hearts Abishola”) is 37. 
  • Rapper Schoolboy Q is 34. 
  • Actor Beulah Koale (“Hawaii Five-0”) is 29.