Wednesday, January 8, 2014

NYC Radio: Joe Piscopo Hosting Mornings On WNYM

Joe Piscopo
Joe Piscopo is filling in this week as morning host on WNYM 970 AM The Answer.

Piscopo started today and will continue through Friday.  The New Jersey natives and cmedian is filling-in because former morningg host Curtis Sliwa quickly departed last week to returns to WABC 770 AM.  He's again partnered with Ron Kuby.  They replaced Rush Limbaugh in the Noon-3p timeslot.  Limbaugh now airs on WOR 710 AM.

LISTEN-LINE:  Click Here.

Salem Communications has yet to announce a permanent host replace to Sliwa on The Answer.

NYC Radio: Pat Kiernan Keeps Things Light On WABC

Pat Kiernan
Pat Kiernan’s new WABC 770 AM radio show started off Monday like media sherbet, cleansing the listener’s palate between two courses of raw meat, according to media writer David Hinckley at the NYDaily News.

Hinckly writes there’s no way Kiernan, airing from 5 to 6 p.m., won’t sound like a downshift from the high-octane Michael Savage, who precedes him, and Mark Levin, who comes in on his heels.

The NY1 Morning News anchor delivers, however, exactly what the station seems to want: an hour to just chat about what’s going on in New York.

“You won’t hear a lot of political opinions from me,” Kiernan said when the show was announced late last week. “That’s not what the station wants, and it’s not what I do.

“We’ll cover what people are talking about, but not like a news show, with a news wheel. We’ve already got stations to do that.

“We’ll have interviews, some pop culture, news you can use.”

Monday’s show kept to the mission, starting with a long segment on everybody’s No. 1 topic of the day: the wacky weather.

Kiernan recalled temperatures of minus 46 where he grew up in Canada. But he also had meteorologist Bill Evans spend four minutes putting the “polar vortex” into civilian terms.

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Min To Lead Billboard, THR

Janice Min
Guggenheim Media today announced that Janice Min has been tapped to lead Billboard and The Hollywood Reporter as co-president/chief creative officer of the Entertainment Group of Guggenheim Media. In her expanded role, which is effective immediately, Min will be responsible for all editorial direction of the iconic entertainment and music brands.

Min will report directly to Todd Boehly, president of Guggenheim Partners and chairman of Guggenheim Media.

"Janice has proven to be a visionary editor and leader, not only at THR, but throughout her career. In just three years, she has built one of the most powerful brands in entertainment media," Boehly continued. "She has innovated, both in print and digitally, consistently leading the way in not only driving new initiatives, but in breaking some of entertainment's biggest stories. As co-president/chief creative officer of Billboard and The Hollywood Reporter, we are confident she will continue to bring consumers straight into the heart of the entertainment and music industries."

"The combination of Billboard and The Hollywood Reporter under one editorial voice creates a true entertainment super-brand," said Min.

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Called “the bible” by music executives, Billboard has been the music industry’s steadfast trade paper for decades, outlasting all rivals and setting the terms for success through its still closely watched charts. But as the music industry has been cut in half in the last decade, Billboard has shrunk, churning through editors and losing circulation.

In a telephone interview with the NY Times, the 44-year-old Min said she was aware of the challenges that Billboard and the industry it covers were confronting, but said she believed that the publication could find traction through a more visually arresting presentation and broader coverage.

“Music is one of the most powerful mediums around,” she said. “Billboard, because of its charts and coverage, has the credibility and authority to access great stories and the people who are making news. It’s the music industry after all — we should be able to have some fun with that.”

Report: McCartney, Starr May Re-Unite On Letterman


What Beatles fans all been waiting for may actually happen at last, sort of.We can’t have a real Beatles reunion anymore, sadly. But David Letterman’s people, according to showbiz411.com, are working along with CBS to make a partial reunion happen during the first week of February.

Letterman tapes at the Ed Sullivan Theater, where the Beatles made their American debut on February 9, 1964. The plan is that the Letterman show will make the entire week of February 3rd to the 7th a Beatles spectacular. They are talking to Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr about playing at least on one night, probably the Friday– February 7th. That’s the day the group arrived in 1964.

Letterman is on CBS, and so is the Beatles special being taped in Los Angeles on January 27th and airing on CBS on February 9th. That’s the exact day– Sunday the 9th– the group debuted on Ed Sullivan and changed the world.

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Report: Carrie Underwood Tops With Country 12-24s

Radio consultant Jaye Albright blogs that NBC must have done a bit of research of their own before they gave Carrie Underwood some "Dough Re Me" last month.

An early look at just-fielded research conducted by Edison Research for next month’s Country Radio Seminar indicates that Carrie is the most popular artist with young both people in the 12-24 demo who like country music and is also the most popular country artist among all 12-24s.

“Understanding country radio’s next generation of listeners” finds favorable 12-24 ratings for these artists among the young folks who said they like country music:

  • Carrie Underwood:  82%
  • Tim McGraw:  80%
  • Blake Shelton:  78%
  • Luke Bryan:  75%

Among all 12-24's:

  • Carrie Underwood:  48%
  • Kelly Clarkson:  44%
  • Taylor Swift:  43%
  • Tim McGraw:  40%

FSU Radio Team Celebrates Winning BCS TD

Florida State rolled to a huge ratings win in beating Auburn for the national title Monday night.

Nationally, the game averaged 26.1 million viewers, and ESPN won the night among all networks. It was the third largest audience in cable TV history. The  bigger audiences were also for BCS National Championships on ESPN: the 2011 Auburn-Oregon game pulled in 27.3 million and the 2013 Alabama-Notre Dame game attracted 26.4 million.

According to the Orlando Sentinel, in Central Florida, the game on ESPN averaged 575,100 viewers, according to updated ratings. That audience was bigger than those for the most-seen football games last week. The San Francisco-Green Bay wild-card playoff game attracted 527,800 viewers, and UCF's victory over Baylor in the Fiesta Bowl brought in 433,000.

For Monday's game, Birmingham, Ala., posted the biggest rating: a 55.8. The other top markets were Jacksonville (31.1), Knoxville (26.6), Atlanta (25.8), Orlando (24.9) and Tampa-St. Petersburg (24.2).



Auburn football’s play-by-play announcer Rod Bramblett had himself a great year, according to extramustard.si.com, notching perhaps the most memorable call of the decade when he shouted, “They’re not gonna keep ‘em off the field tonight!” following the Tigers improbable victory over Alabama in the Iron Bowl.

But Monday night belonged to Florida State, who has a fantastic radio crew of their own comprised of Gene Deckerhoff and former Florida State fullback William Floyd.

The video, which unfortunately has some audio issues due to the loud stadium, provides a great example of the raw emotion and joy that makes college football one of the most beloved pastimes in the country.

With time winding down and Florida State down by four points to Auburn, Heisman-winner Jameis Winston threw a two-yard touchdown pass to Kelvin Benjamin to give the Seminoles the lead.

R.I.P.: Kansas Broadcaster Ken Willard

Ken Willard
Longtime Hutchinson, KS radio personality and station manager Ken Willard has died in Arizona.

He was 72, according to hutchnews.com.

Willard worked at various stations around Kansas during his long career and retired in Scottsdale.

"Ken and I grew up together," said Dan Deming, Reno County commissioner and former KWBW station manager. "We were second cousins. We both got interested in radio at a very early age and we'd sometimes sneak out of church services to go over to the radio station (next door) to mix with the disc jockeys and learn about things. That's how we both got started."

Willard landed his first part-time radio job while still in high school, said his ex-wife, Gretchen Singh, and had a top 10 radio show on a local station as a teenager.

"He had a great radio voice," she said, "and he was very gregarious."

Willard's first full-time radio job, said John Brennan, sales manager at KWBW radio, was with station KSAL in Salina.

After working several years as a disc jockey, Williad became manager of KWHK radio, which at that time was an AM contemporary music station. He also provided input to the station owners, Deming said, for their operations in Little Rock and Montana.

After leaving the station, Willard worked as a correspondent covering the Kansas Legislature for a number of years, providing his stories to numerous stations around the state.

Willard served several terms as president of the Kansas Broadcasters Association.

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FLASHBACK: Behind The Scenes At 'I Love Lucy'

Eyes of a Generation.com has posted a gem. An ultra rare Behind The Scenes Video from 'I Love Lucy'

It's a rare look Behind The Scenes at "I Love Lucy'" from 1953.  At the start is the arrival of the audience, Ricky's standard (but funny) pre show warmup and the introduction of the cast with a curtain call at the end of this piece.

This is from the unreleased 1953 'I Love Lucy' movie. Except for one well received test screening in Bakersfield, California, the film to be distributed by United Artist, was never released because MGM was almost ready to release 'The Long, Long Trailer' with Lucy and Desi and was afraid the Lucy movie would weaken it.

The film plays out with three first-season episodes edited together into a single story: "The Benefit", "Breaking the Lease", and "The Ballet", with new footage included between episodes to help transition the episodes into one coherent storyline.

The film is framed around a plot involving a young married couple (played by actress Ann Doran and actor Benny Baker) attending the filming of an episode of 'I Love Lucy'. After an opening sequence of Ann Doran and Benny Baker's characters arriving at the studio, there is a brief introduction by the show's announcer, Roy Rowan, as he introduces Desi Arnaz, who speaks to the studio audience and introduces the cast.



January 8 In Radio History

In 1926...Soupy Sales, an American comedian, actor, radio-TV personality and host,  was born.  He was best known for his local and network children's television show, Lunch with Soupy Sales; a series of comedy sketches frequently ending with Sales receiving a pie in the face, which became his trademark.



Sales hosted a midday radio show on WNBC 660 AM in New York from March 1985 to March 1987. His program was between the drive time shifts of Don Imus (morning) and Howard Stern (afternoon), with whom Sales had an acrimonious relationship. An example of this was an incident involving Stern telling listeners that he was cutting the strings in Sales' in-studio piano at 4:05 p.m. on May 1, 1985. On December 21, 2007, Stern revealed this was a stunt staged for "theater of the mind" and to torture Sales; in truth, the piano was never harmed.  Sales' on-air crew included his producer, Ray D'Ariano, newscaster Judy DeAngelis, and pianist Paul Dver, who was also Soupy's manager.

When Soupy's show was not renewed, his time slot would be taken over by D'ariano. Near the end of his contract, Sales lost his temper on the air, and began to speak very frankly about how he felt he had been treated poorly by the station, and how he felt betrayed that D'ariano would be taking over the show. The show went to break after a commercial - Sales was off the air, replaced without comment or explanation by program director Randy Baumgarten. Soupy would not return to the air. He died October 22, 2009 at age 83.

In 1929...the CBS Radio Network purchased WABC in New York City. The WABC calls were once used previously on CBS Radio's New York City outlet, before adopting their current WCBS identity in 1946.



In 1935...Elvis Presley was born. He died Aug. 16, 1977 at 42.


In 1944...Billboard magazine published the first country music chart under the name Juke Box Folk Records. "Pistol Packin' Mama" by Bing Crosby and the Andrews Sisters was its first #1 song.


In 1946...For his 11th birthday, Elvis Presley was taken by his mother to the Tupelo Hardware Company. Instead of the rifle he wanted for a birthday gift, Elvis received his first guitar, priced at $7.75. 

In 1995...Eddie Vedder from "Pearl Jam" played host to a national Radio broadcast called "Self Pollution Radio" which originated from Seattle, Washington.

In 2004...John A. Gambling died at age 73. Gambling worked at WOR 710 AM, New York from 1959 until 1991 when he retired. He suceeded his father, John B. Gambling, who began the show in 1925.

Tuesday, January 7, 2014

More So-So Report Cards For National News

In the second TVNewsCheck survey, a cross-section of news directors at TV stations around the country were asked to grade ABC News, CBS News, CNN, FNC, NBC News, MSNBC, Al Jazeera America and PBS NewsHour on "overall journalistic quality."

Once again, none received an A, four earned Bs, there was one C and three Ds. The findings also indicate a correlation between those grades and how the NDs perceive the organizations’ objectivity.

How would you grade the following national TV news organizations on overall journalistic quality on a four-point grade scale?

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First Performers Announced For Beatles Special


The first performances for "The Night That Changed America: A GRAMMY Salute To The Beatles" were announced today and they include:
  • Four-time GRAMMY winner Annie Lennox and GRAMMY winner Dave Stewart reuniting as Eurythmics for one night only 
  • Fourteen-time GRAMMY winner Alicia Keys and nine-time GRAMMY winner John Legend together in a special performance
  • Three-time GRAMMY-winning group Maroon 5
  • Seven-time GRAMMY winner John Mayer
  • Four-time GRAMMY winner Keith Urban. 
The primetime entertainment special will celebrate the remarkable legacy of the seven-time GRAMMY-winning group the Beatles and their groundbreaking first appearance on "The Ed Sullivan Show."

The show will tape on Monday, Jan. 27, 2014, the day after the 56th Annual GRAMMY Awards, and will be broadcast on the CBS Television Network Sunday, Feb. 9, at  8 p.m. ET/PT — exactly 50 years to the day, date, and time of the original event.

"The Night That Changed America: A GRAMMY Salute To The Beatles" will commemorate the 50th anniversary of one of the most historic moments in music and television. Featuring today's top artists covering songs performed by the Fab Four that momentous evening in 1964 and other Beatles classics through the years, the show also will include footage from that landmark Sunday night, as well as other archival material. In addition, various presenters will help highlight and contextualize the musical, cultural and historical impact of the group and this legendary performance.

The Grammys: Performer's List Grows

Additional performances for the 56th Annual GRAMMY Awards telecast were announced today.

Performers added to the lineup are current GRAMMY nominee Lorde; nominee Katy Perry; eight-time GRAMMY-winning group Metallica with GRAMMY Cultural Ambassador to China Lang Lang; Nile Rodgers (of Chic), nominee Pharrell Williams, and 25-time GRAMMY winner Stevie Wonder joining a previously announced performance by nominees Daft Punk; and nominee Robin Thicke with GRAMMY-winning group Chicago.

This group joins previously announced performances by nominees Kendrick Lamar joined by Imagine Dragons; Pink and Nate Ruess (of Fun.); as well as a special performance featuring Merle Haggard, Kris Kristofferson, Willie Nelson, and current nominee Blake Shelton. Two-time GRAMMY winner LL Cool J returns as host of Music's Biggest Night.

This will be Lorde's first performance on the GRAMMY Awards telecast, and Pharrell Williams' first GRAMMY performance since the 46th GRAMMYs in 2004. Metallica will be performing on the GRAMMY stage for the first time in 23 years; they last performed at the 33rd GRAMMY Awards in 1991. Lang Lang last performed on the 50th GRAMMY Awards telecast in 2008.

Chicago also will be performing on the GRAMMY stage for the first time, and their album The Chicago Transit Authority was inducted into the GRAMMY Hall Of Fame this year. Also performing with Daft Punk are the RAM (Random Access Memories) session players: Chris Caswell, Nathan East, Omar Hakim, and Paul Jackson Jr.

SEE THE FULL LIST OF GRAMMY NOMINEES: Click Here

Music's Biggest Night will take place live on Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014, at Staples Center in Los Angeles and will be broadcast in high-definition TV and 5.1 surround sound on the CBS Television Network from 8–11:30 p.m. (ET/PT). The telecast also will be supported on radio worldwide via WestwoodOne, and covered online at GRAMMY.com and CBS.com. Additional performers, presenters and special segments will be announced soon.

Chicago Radio: Smooth Jazz Added To 101.9 HD2

Chicago’s premier smooth jazz programmer is teaming up with Chicago’s premier radio station group to bring the mellow music format to HD Radio, according to Chicago media blogger Robert Feder.

Rick O’Dell’s SmoothJazzChicago.net will be simulcast on Hubbard Radio’s WTMX 101.9 HD2, the secondary digital audio channel linked with the modern adult contemporary station, starting at noon Tuesday.

WTMX 101.9 FM 54dBu Coverage
O’Dell, who pioneered smooth jazz in Chicago and was its signature voice for more than 25 years at WNUA FM 95.5 and WLFM LP 87.7, launched the site as a free 24/7 streaming digital station in November 2012.

“We are thrilled to partner with Rick and his very high quality programming of ‘Smooth Jazz Chicago’ and look forward to bringing this product to many starved Chicago smooth jazz fans at 101.9 FM HD2,” Greg Solk, senior vice president of programming for Hubbard Radio, said in a statement. “Rick has proven through the years to be a masterful programmer of jazz music and he’s beloved by Chicagoans. Welcome aboard!”

To accommodate “Smooth Jazz Chicago,” Hubbard will move the all-’80s format “Totally ’80s” from WTMX 101.9 HD2 to WILV 100.3 HD2, replacing “The Voice of Russia.” Hubbard’s third station, WDRV FM 97.1, will continue to air “Deep Tracks” on WDRV 97.1 HD2.

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Job Accomplished: Paul Caine Leaving WWOne

Paul Caine
With the sale of WestwoodOne now complete, CEO Paul Caine will be transitioning out this month as WestwoodOne becomes a fully integrated division of Cumulus Media.

"Paul is an extremely talented media executive and did an excellent job of guiding WestwoodOne during a period of change. He positioned the company for future growth and played an instrumental role in driving a constructive transaction which delivered value for his shareholders. We look forward to working with Paul in the next chapter of his impressive career," said Lew Dickey, CEO of Cumulus.

"I am so proud of the team we've built and what we've accomplished at WestwoodOne. In such a short time, we've proven the power of sound and its impact on the future of the audio industry. I am confident that this great momentum will continue under Cumulus and the strong talent and leadership of Lew Dickey," Caine said.