Friday, February 22, 2019

Albert, Micheletti to Call NHL Hat Trick


There’s a rare hockey hat trick happening this weekend and Westwood One and NBC Sports Radio are part of the action. Popular hockey broadcasters Kenny Albert and Joe Micheletti will be calling three NHL games over a 24-hour period (involving five teams) for MSG Networks, Westwood One, and NBC Sports Radio.

Kenny Albert
On Saturday at 1:00 pm ET, the New York Rangers host the New Jersey Devils at Madison Square Garden in New York City. Micheletti, in his 13th season as Rangers in-game analyst on MSG Networks, will be joined in the broadcast booth by play-by-play announcer Sam Rosen.

Albert, now in his 23rd season as the radio voice of the Rangers, will simultaneously call the play-by-play action on ESPN 98.7, the radio home of the Rangers, alongside analyst Dave Maloney.

Joe Micheletti
Following the game, Albert and Micheletti will go straight to Lincoln Financial Field in Philadelphia and team up to broadcast Westwood One/NBC Sports Radio’s national radio coverage of the NHL Stadium Series matchup between the Pittsburgh Penguins and the Philadelphia Flyers on Saturday night at 8:00 pm ET. Albert and Micheletti will be joined onsite by rinkside reporter Kelly Chase and host Steve Mears.

After the game, the duo will then travel down south to Washington, D.C. for MSG Networks’ television and radio broadcast of the New York Rangers/Washington Capitals game on Sunday at 12:30 pm ET at Capital One Arena. Micheletti will be joined again in the booth by Rosen, with Albert on the radio call with Maloney.

“We couldn’t be more excited,” said Albert. “If you love the sport of hockey, it will be a dream weekend. Ernie Banks would be proud. And we definitely won’t forget our scarves and gloves for the Stadium Series game in Philadelphia on Saturday night!”

Albert and Micheletti serve as Westwood One/NBC Sports Radio’s lead NHL broadcast crew and will be on the call together for select playoff games this year, including their fourth straight season calling the Stanley Cup Final.

Sports Betting Startup The Action Network Raises $17.5M

Sports betting media startup The Action Network said on Thursday it has raised $17.5 million of funding from private equity, team owners and media and eSports investors.

Reuters reports the investments come as the sports and media industries try to figure out how to capitalize on the nascent American sports betting market.

A U.S. Supreme Court ruling in May allowed states to legalize, regulate and tax the activity. The decision instantly created a new national market, sparking a rush of activity by states, companies, leagues and others seeking to profit.

Eight states now offer legal sports wagering. At least two more and the District of Columbia have legalized it, and 21 more states have active sports betting legislation to consider.

“We see an incredible opportunity as we focus on securing the necessary approvals in regulated U.S. sports betting jurisdictions as well as those around the world,” The Action Network CEO Patrick Keane in said a statement.

In anticipation of the new market, firm was formed in October 2017 by The Chernin Group, founded by media titan Peter Chernin.

It quickly lured high-profile writers and personalities from sports media giant ESPN Inc., a unit of Walt Disney Co.

David Blitzer, of Harris Blitzer Sports & Entertainment, which owns a stake in the Philadelphia 76ers and New Jersey Devils, is also an investor in The Action Network.

The Chicago Cubs, German esports investor BITKRAFT Esports Ventures GMBH & Co KG and former Twitter Inc. COO Anthony Noto also bought in.

Sportscaster Kevin Burkhardt To Call Some MLB Rays' Games

Kevin Burkhardt
Fox’s Kevin Burkhardt will be part of the Tampa Bay Rays’ TV broadcast team this season, The NYPost reports.

Burkhardt, Fox’s lead MLB host, will call approximately 20 Rays games on Tampa’s regional sports network.

“I think it is the perfect opportunity to add to my workload,” Burkhardt, 44, said.

Dewayne Staats, the former Yankees broadcaster, is the longtime TV voice of the Rays. Staats is not going anywhere, but Burkhardt will take some road games to alleviate Staats’ schedule.

While Burkhardt does NFL and college basketball, he only called a handful of baseball games last season — albeit high-profile ones on Fox on Saturday nights — so this will help keep his craft strong.

A decade and a half ago, Burkhardt was selling cars in his native New Jersey, unsure if he would make it in broadcasting and trying to make ends meet when Eric Spitz, then WFAN’s program director, took a liking to his work and put him on the radio in a full-time role.

Burkhardt’s next big break came when SNY’s Chris Cotter asked off the Mets’ dugout role, paving the way for Burkhardt to land the job, which he probably did as well as anyone has ever done it.

AOC Slams Media For Reporting Where She Lives

AOC rips Media

Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez scolded media outlets for reporting that she lives in a luxury high-rise building in Washington, DC, around the time she and other high-profile Democrats appeared on a hit list compiled by a Maryland man arrested for allegedly planning a mass terror attack, according to The NY Post.

“Journalists are sharing stories about where I live the same day it’s shared that myself + others were targeted by a mass shooter,” the New York Democrat tweeted late Wednesday. “All this paired w/ amplifying unvetted conspiracy theories. It’s reckless, irresponsible & puts people directly in danger. This isn’t a game.”

Court documents show Coast Guard Lt. Christopher Hasson, who was arrested last Friday, drafted a list of politicians and media members whom he was targeting.

The list included Ocasio-Cortez, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and Democratic presidential candidates Sens. Cory Booker and Kamala Harris, among others.

Hasson, who had an arsenal of 15 firearms in his Silver Spring, Md., home, searched on the internet for “Where in DC do Congress live?” and “Best place in D.C. to see Congress people,” according to police officials.

A number of outlets reported in the past week that the freshman lawmaker, whose congressional salary is $174,000, lives in a tony section of the capital in a building where rents range from $2,000 for a studio apartment to more than $5,000 for a three-bedroom.

While most of them did not give an address, they did provide identifying information and photographs about which stores were in the neighborhood and the amenities offered by her complex, which is under construction.

ESPN Adds 'Big Piece' to MLB Coverage

Ryan Howard
Ryan Howard, the former Phillies slugger who officially retired in September, has been hired by ESPN as a baseball analyst.

According to philly.com, terms of the deal were not disclosed, but it’s a multiyear agreement that will position Howard as one of the network’s analysts across many different shows and platforms, including Baseball Tonight, SportsCenter, Get Up!, First Take, and ESPN Radio.

Howard had been talking to ESPN about a role since last year, and has done a handful of television spots on the network over the last few weeks. He also did two days of guest appearances on the MLB Network in January.

Veteran ESPN producer Phil Orlins, who oversees the network’s baseball coverage and its Sunday Night Baseball telecasts, said the three-time All Star already possesses poise and charisma, in addition to knowledge of the game.

Bob Stei Joins Media Staffing Network

Bob Stei
Media Staffing Network (MSN) has hired radio industry professional and recruiting specialist Bob Stei as Account Manager and Recruiter. In his role, Stei will guide a variety of functions for the media staffing and consulting firm.

“Over the past two years, MSN has significantly increased its number of hiring solutions, ranging from placing a wider array of positions across media to developing hands-on and online tools that help media companies hire more effectively, strategically, and proactively,” stated Laurie Kahn, CEO and Founder.

“Bob brings a passion and knowledge about broadcasting and recruiting that will help MSN expand into new areas, such as our ‘0 to 3 Talent Bank,” which puts aspiring talent together with hiring broadcasters,” continued Kahn. “I am thrilled to have someone of Bob’s caliber join our team, and I look forward to working with him to deliver more hiring solutions to our clients.”

Stei, who has been a full-time headhunter and recruiter for over 15 years and an accomplished radio broadcaster, commented, “This is a dream opportunity for me, to combine my passions for the media industry and recruiting. I am excited to join MSN during this period of growth and grateful to Laurie Kahn and Vice President and General Manager Patty Kincaid for putting their faith in me. I can’t wait to get started!”

Stei began his radio career as an intern at WNEW-FM in New York while completing his Bachelor's Degree from Manhattan College. He spent the past six years on-air at WCHR-FM, Toms River, NJ, and WMGK, Philadelphia, PA. Additional on-air stops during his radio career include, WBAB, Long Island; WZZO, Allentown; WRFF, Philadelphia; WCZT Cape May, NJ, and more.

Broadcasters who want to learn more about Media Staffing Network’s placement services and hiring programs can reach Stei at (215) 885-3429 and bob@mediastaffingnetwork.com.

Bill Mayne To Be Honored With CRB President's Award

The Country Radio Broadcasters, Inc. have announced long-time music industry veteran and outgoing Country Radio Broadcasters Executive Director, Bill Mayne, as the recipient of the 2019 CRB President’s Award.

The award will be presented during the Country Radio Hall of Fame Dinner and Awards ceremony, to be held at the Vanderbilt Marriott in Nashville, Tennessee on Wednesday, June 19th at 6 p.m. CDT.

In April of 2018, Mayne announced he would be leaving his post following the 50th Anniversary year of Country Radio Seminar. He is a past board member of the Country Music Association and has served over 35 years on the Academy of Country Music Board of Directors covering every officer roll including Chairman of the Board and Chairman of the Board of Lifting Lives, the charitable arm of the ACM.  Additionally, Mayne was one of the original industry advisory members for the St. Jude Country Cares for Kids Radiothon Program, which has raised over $700 million dollars for St. Jude since 1989 and serves as National VP for MDA. He also is a member of Leadership Music and the Mayor’s Nashville Music Council.

Mayne, who has led the Country Radio Broadcasters/Country Radio Seminar for nearly a decade, has an extensive background in the radio and record industries with senior level experience in Country radio broadcasting, major and independent record labels, artist development, and management.

His extensive and lengthy resume includes radio broadcast programming and management at KZLA/KLAC Los Angeles, KSCS/WBAP Dallas, KASE Austin. During his record label days, Mayne was Sr. VP/General Manager and VP Promotion at Warner Bros Nashville, VP of Promotion and Artist Development at 903 Music and in more recent years and prior to his term at CRB, he was the President and owner of Mayne Entertainment, an artist management company as well as the owner of Mayne Street Consulting, a private entertainment consulting firm providing analysis and guidance to a wide range of clients in the entertainment field.

Country Radio Broadcasters Board President, Kurt Johnson commented, “Over four decades, Bill Mayne has been a fixture on Music Row. He’s had success in Country Radio, promotion, label management, artist management and, for the past ten years, leading Country Radio Broadcasters and Country Radio Seminar.  When you consider the breathtaking span of Bill’s influence on Country, he’s the obvious choice for this year’s President’s Award.”

This year’s Country Radio Hall of Fame event will also honor the “Class of 2019” radio inductees that were recently announced during Country Radio Seminar (CRS). Four off-air broadcasters and two on-air personalities will be honored and are Mac Daniels (KPLX and KSCS/Dallas) formerly KALM, KBOX/Dallas, KPLX, WMXQ/Washington, KASE & KVET/Austin, WYCD/Detroit, iHeartMedia, KSKS/Fresno, and NASH-FM/San Francisco; Bobby Denton (WIVK/Knoxville); Jeff Garrison (KCYY/Cox Media), formerly KKBQ, WESC, WFNQ/Greenville, KMLE/Phoenix, KILT; and Gregg Lindahl (Cox Media) formerly KOMA/Oklahoma City, WSM-AM/FM, WKY, WSOC-A/F/Charlotte, KUPL/Portland, and WKXK/Chicago; representing the off-air category and Charlie Monk (SiriusXM’s “Willie’s Roadhouse”) formerly of WGEA/Geneva, AL, WMTS; and Kyle Cantrell (SiriusXM) formerly WMTS/Murfreesboro, WSM-AM/Nashville, and WKDF/Nashville, representing the on-air category.

The Country Radio Hall of Fame is dedicated to the recognition of those individuals who have made significant contributions to the radio industry over a 20-year period, 15 of which must be in the Country format.  The Country Radio Hall of Fame was founded in 1974 to recognize outstanding individuals working in the broadcasting industry who are promoting the Country radio format.

NAB Announces Finalists For Crystal Radio Awards

The National Association of Broadcasters announced the 50 finalists for the 32nd annual NAB Crystal Radio Awards. Since 1987, the NAB Crystal Radio Awards have recognized radio stations for their outstanding year-round commitment to community service. Winners will be announced and the finalists honored at the We Are Broadcasters Celebration, held Tuesday, April 9 during the 2019 NAB Show in Las Vegas.

The finalists are:

KBFB-FM Dallas, Texas...WHO-AM Des Moines, Iowa...KBHP-FM Bemidji, Minn....WHUB-AM Cookeville, Tenn....KCLY-FM Clay Center, Kan....WHUR-FM Washington, D.C....KCVM-FM Cedar Falls, Iowa...WHYI-FM Miami, Fla....KEEY-FM Minneapolis, Minn...WIL-FM St. Louis, Mo.

KHKS-FM Dallas, Texas...WJJY-FM Baxter, Minn.... KMVP-FM Phoenix, Ariz....WKRQ-FM Cincinnati, Ohio...KNDE-FM College Station, Texas...WKST-FM Pittsburgh, Pa....KNIX-FM Phoenix, Ariz....WKXD-FM Cookeville, Tenn....KRMG-FM Tulsa, Okla....WMBX-FM West Palm Beach, Fla.

KRWM-FM Seattle, Wash....WMGK-FM Philadelphia, Pa....KSL-AM Salt Lake City, Utah...WOWI-FM Norfolk, Va....KSNE-FM Las Vegas, Nev....WPHT-AM Philadelphia, Pa....KSTP-FM St. Paul, Minn....WQHT-FM New York, N.Y....KTCZ-FM Minneapolis, Minn....WRAL-FM Raleigh, N.C.

KTMY-FM St. Paul, Minn....WRLT-FM Nashville, Tenn....KUPL-FM Portland, Ore....WTAM-AM Cleveland, Ohio...KWBG-AM Boone, Iowa...WTKX-FM Mobile, Ala....WBLS-FM New York, N.Y....WTMJ-AM Milwaukee, Wis....WCCO-AM Minneapolis, Minn....WVLI-FM Bourbonnais, Ill

WCFB-FM Orlando, Fla....WWOZ-FM New Orleans, La....WDNS-FM Bowling Green, Ky....WWPR-FM New York, N.Y....WDSY-FM Pittsburgh, Pa....WXXL-FM Orlando, Fla....WDVE-FM Pittsburgh, Pa....WYCT-FM Pensacola, Fla....WGTS-FM Washington, D.C....WZTU-FM Miami, Fla.

Ten Crystal Radio Award recipients will be chosen by a panel of judges representing the broadcast industry, community service organizations and public relations firms. Also at the We Are Broadcasters Celebration, five-time NAB Crystal Radio Award winning station KFOR-AM will receive the Crystal Heritage Award.

A-List of Broadcast Execs, Celebs Set For BFA Golf Outing

The Broadcasters Foundation of America has announced a new time for this year’s Philip J. Lombardo Charity Golf Tournament. Attracting an A-List of broadcast industry executives, the charitable event will begin at 8am PST for registration and breakfast, followed by a shot-gun start at 9am, on Sunday, April 7, at   the Bali Hai Golf Club, in Las Vegas. 

Held during the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) Show, the annual fundraiser is named in honor of the Broadcasters Foundation Chairman Emeritus, Phillip J. Lombardo and raises money to help broadcasters in acute need.

Every year, top-level broadcast industry leaders and celebrities turn out in support of the Foundation’s mission and to enjoy a morning of golf with their colleagues before the NAB kicks into high gear. For more information on purchasing a spot or a foursome, please click here, or contact the Broadcasters Foundation at 212-373-8250 or info@thebfoa.org.

A longtime advocate and supporter of the Broadcasters Foundation, Lombardo served as its Chairman for many years and continues to be active on the Board. He also is a past Joint Board Chairman of the NAB. Lombardo is the founder and Chief Executive Officer of Citadel Communications Company, Ltd., which owns and operates TV stations.

The Broadcasters Foundation has distributed millions of dollars in aid to broadcasters who have lost their livelihood through a catastrophic event, debilitating disease or unforeseen tragedy. Personal donations can be made to the Foundation’s Guardian Fund. Corporate contributions are accepted through the Angel Initiative, and bequests can be made through the Legacy Society. For more information, please visit www.broadcastersfoundation.org, call 212-373-8250, or email info@thebfoa.org.

R.I.P.: Fred Foster, Iconic Nashville Producer

Fred Foster
Fred Foster — a Nashville music legend who helped launch the careers of Dolly Parton and Roy Orbison and founded Monument Records — died Wednesday.

He was 87, according to The Tennessean.

His singular, 60-year career as a producer, songwriter and
label owner was celebrated in grand fashion in 2016, when Foster was inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. That evening, Parton stood on stage and paid tribute to the man who “saw things in me that nobody else did.”

“You started my life with my first record,” she said.

Introducing Parton to the world is just the start of Foster’s accomplishments. He did the same with Kris Kristofferson and Orbison, recognizing each artist’s inimitable gift and bringing it to the forefront of their sound.

“I tried to do the best I could every time,” Foster told The Tennessean in 2016. “I tried to do something time would not be critical of. It’s like Orbison said to me one time, ‘What’s the most important thing we’re going to do?’ I said, ‘We’re going to eliminate every gimmick you come up with. They don’t endure.’”

Foster was born July 26, 1931, in rural North Carolina. At 15, he took over the family farm when his father died. Two years later, he moved to Washington, D.C., where his sister lived. Foster wanted to be anything but a farmer, and he started to write songs.

A member of the Country Music Hall of Fame, Foster was involved in the careers of such greats as Kris Kristofferson, Dolly Parton, Tony Joe White, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, Jeannie Seely, Ray Stevens, Connie Smith, Larry Gatlin, Boots Randolph, Grandpa Jones and Charlie McCoy.

R.I.P.: Nick Cafardo, Boston Globe Sportswriter

Nick Cafardo
Nick Cafardo, the Boston Globe’s nationally recognized and widely respected baseball columnist, died Thursday in Fort Myers, Fla. He was 62.

Cafardo’s love of baseball and commitment to his craft compelled him to report to JetBlue Park, the spring training home of the Red Sox, on one of his rare days off. He was apparently stricken by an embolism at the park, and members of the Sox medical team were unable to revive him, according to boston.com.

Cafardo joined the Globe in 1989, after covering the Sox for the Patriot Ledger. Over the next three decades, he established himself as one of Boston’s most prominent sports reporters. He covered the Patriots for the Globe between stints on the paper’s Sox beat, and he authored the 2002 book, “The Impossible Team: The Worst to First Patriots’ Super Bowl Season.’’

As much as Cafardo enjoyed covering the Patriots, he longed to return to baseball, and for the last 15 years, he traveled the country covering the Sox as well as other major league games for the Globe. He was popular throughout the major leagues and formed close relationships with figures at all levels of the sport, from groundskeepers and clubhouse attendants to players, scouts, managers and team executives.

His Sunday baseball notes column was one of the Globe’s most popular features.

“Nick was one of the best people to ever walk through our doors — generous with his time and insights, immensely knowledgeable, deeply devoted to the Globe,’’ the Globe’s editor, Brian McGrory, said. “He had a view of the Red Sox and the game on a national scale that is virtually unrivaled.

February 22 Radio History



➦In 1857...German physicist Heinrich Hertz  was born (Died January 1, 1894).  He was first to conclusively proved the existence of the electromagnetic waves theorized by James Clerk Maxwell's electromagnetic theory of light. The unit of frequency – cycle per second – was named the "hertz" in his honor.

Heinrich Hertz
The first successful radio transmission was made by David Edward Hughes in 1879, but it would not be conclusively proven to have been electromagnetic waves until the experiments of Hertz in 1886. For the Hertz radio wave transmitter, he used a high-voltage induction coil, a condenser (capacitor, Leyden jar) and a spark gap—whose poles on either side are formed by spheres of 2 cm radius—to cause a spark discharge between the spark gap’s poles oscillating at a frequency determined by the values of the capacitor and the induction coil.

To prove there really was radiation emitted, it had to be detected. Hertz used a piece of copper wire, 1 mm thick, bent into a circle of a diameter of 7.5 cm, with a small brass sphere on one end, and the other end of the wire was pointed, with the point near the sphere. He bought a screw mechanism so that the point could be moved very close to the sphere in a controlled fashion. This "receiver" was designed so that current oscillating back and forth in the wire would have a natural period close to that of the "transmitter" described above. The presence of oscillating charge in the receiver would be signaled by sparks across the (tiny) gap between the point and the sphere (typically, this gap was hundredths of a millimeter).

In more advanced experiments, Hertz measured the velocity of electromagnetic radiation and found it to be the same as light’s velocity. He also showed that the nature of radio waves’ reflection and refraction was the same as those of light and established beyond any doubt that light is a form of electromagnetic radiation obeying the Maxwell equations.

Hertz's experiments triggered broad interest in radio research that eventually produced commercially successful wireless telegraph, audio radio, and later television.

➦In 1907...Radio, TV actor & producer Sheldon Leonard (died: January 11, 1997 at age 89) was born in New York City.

He was part of the cast of voice actors on the Damon Runyon Theatre radio show (1948-1949). He was part of the ensemble cast of the Martin and Lewis radio show. He also appeared frequently on The Adventures of the Saint, often playing gangsters and heavies. Leonard was also a regular on the radio comedy series The Adventures of Maisie in the 1940s. During the 1950s, Leonard provided the voice of lazy fat cat Dodsworth in two Warner Bros. Merrie Melodies cartoons directed by Robert McKimson.

➦In 1910...Radio actor, announcer Ken Roberts was born (Died from pneumonia – June 19, 2009). He was known for his work during the Golden Age of Radio, especially on The Shadow, It Pays to Be Ignorant, Quick as a Flash & Easy Ace, sand for his work announcing the daytime television soap operas The Secret Storm, Texas and Love of Life, each for a two-decade span.

Ken Roberts
His first announcing job was at WMCA in New York lasting three weeks. Next at WLTH in Brooklyn. In an interview for the book The Great American Broadcast, Roberts told Leonard Maltin that he had started at the Brooklyn station in 1930, where his responsibilities included answering phones and sweeping the floors, in addition to on-air roles playing piano and reading poetry.

During the 1930s and 1940s, Roberts' voice appeared widely in live programming to introduce programs, moderate game shows and do live reads for commercials. Despite his Errol Flynn-like good looks and the frequent broadcasts featuring his voice, as often as several times each day, few listeners knew who he was or would have recognized him in public radio historian Jim Cox described Roberts' voice as neither "Yankee, Southern, Western or anything else". It was a voice that didn't "irritate anybody" and that "you just naturally liked to hear", making him "one of the leading lights of radio".  Steve Beverly of The Daily Game Show Fix described Roberts as having "what executives called a golden throat", with a familiar voice that was one of broadcasting's most-recognized anonymous voices. He also found time to narrate dozens of theatrical movie trailers and "intermission" segments for traditional and drive-in theaters during the 1940s and 1950s.

In 1935, Roberts was one of the founders of the American Guild of Radio Announcers and Producers, one of the predecessors of the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists (AFTRA)

➦In 1918...Longtime announcer Dominick George "Don" Pardo was born (Died– August 18, 2014 at age 96). His career spanned more than seven decades.

Don Pardo
Pardo was hired for his first radio position at NBC affiliate WJAR in Providence in 1938.

He joined NBC full-time as an in-house announcer in 1944, remaining on the network staff for 60 years. The radio programs on which he worked as an announcer include Barrie Craig, Confidential Investigator, the sci-fi shows X Minus One and Dimension X. During World War II, Pardo worked as a war reporter for NBC Radio.

For more than 30 years, Pardo was one of the rotating announcers on the KFOG San Francisco radio show "Ten at Ten", appearing at 10 a.m. and in syndication with Dave Morey on KFOG HD Radio.

In the early 1950s, he served as announcer for many of RCA's and NBC's closed-circuit color television demonstrations.

Pardo made his mark on game shows for NBC as the voice of the original The Price Is Right from 1956 until it moved to ABC in 1963. Pardo's next show was Jeopardy!, which he announced from 1964 until the original version of the series ended in 1975. This early version was hosted by Art Fleming. The current syndicated version of Jeopardy! has been hosted by Alex Trebek and since 1984 has been announced by prominent long time announcer, Johnny Gilbert. Pardo also announced New York–based NBC game shows such as Three on a Match, Winning Streak, and Jackpot!, all three of which were Bob Stewart productions.

Pardo squeezed in many other assignments at NBC, including the Macy's Thanksgiving Day Parade (until 1999), WNBC-TV's Live at Five and NBC Nightly News.

Pardo was the on-duty live booth announcer for WNBC-TV in New York and the NBC network on November 22, 1963, and he was the first to announce to NBC viewers that President John F. Kennedy had been shot in Dallas, Texas.

Best remembered as the announcer for the first 39 years of ‘Saturday Night Live,’ he uniquely scored a 70 year career as announcer for NBC Radio & TV. He made weekly flights from his Arizona retirement home to New York to work live on SNL.

WOR's First Control Room
➦In 1922...WOR-AM signed on. WOR began broadcasting on February 22, 1922, using a 500-watt transmitter on 360 meters (833 kc.) from Bamberger's Department Store in Newark, New Jersey. Louis Bamberger's sale of radio sets to consumers explained their affiliation with the station. The WOR call sign was reissued from the U.S. maritime radio service.

The station initially operated limited hours, sharing time with two other stations, WDT and WJY, which also operated on 833 kc. WOR changed frequency to 740 kc. in June 1923 and shared time with WJY until July 1926, when WJY signed off for good and WOR received full use of the frequency. In December 1924, WOR acquired a studio in Manhattan.

On June 17, 1927, as a result of General Order 40, WOR moved to 710 kc., the channel it currently occupies (unlike most stations, it was not affected by NARBA in 1943). Later in 1926, WOR moved from its New York City studio on the 9th floor of Chickering Hall at 27 West 57th Street to 1440 Broadway, two blocks from Times Square.
John B. Gambling 1930

WOR was first a charter member of the CBS Radio Network, being one of the 16 stations that aired the first CBS network program on September 18, 1927.   In partnership with Chicago radio station WGN and Cincinnati radio station WLW, WOR formed the Mutual Broadcasting System in 1934 and became its New York flagship station. Mutual was one of the "Big Four" national radio networks in the United States during the 1930s–1980s.

In 1941, the station changed its city of license from Newark to New York City. However, for all intents and purposes it had been a New York City station since it signed on, and had actually moved its studios across the Hudson two years after signing on.

From the 1930s to the early 1980s, WOR was a free-flowing full-service station.

There was an emphasis on news reports and talk programs, but music was played also, usually a blend of pop standards and adult contemporary tunes.

Election Coverage 1933
WOR played several songs per hour weekday mornings from 6 a.m. to 9 a.m. and again afternoons from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. They also played about a dozen songs per hour on Saturday and Sunday afternoons.

Milton Berle
In ratings books, WOR was classified as a MOR/Talk station rather than a News/Talk station until 1984. From 1983 to about 1985, WOR gradually stopped playing music altogether, evolving into its current talk format.

Past notable hosts were Ed and Pegeen Fitzgerald, Arlene Francis, Patricia McCann, Long John Nebel, Bernard Meltzer, Barry Farber, Jean Shepherd, Bob and Ray, Jack O'Brian, Bob Grant and Gene Klavan.

WOR introduced live, on-air, helicopter traffic reports with pilot reporters "Fearless" Fred Feldman and later George Meade. From 1945 to 1963, Dorothy Kilgallen and her husband Dick Kollmar (1910–1971) co-hosted WOR morning show Breakfast With Dorothy and Dick.

The station was known for its detailed, 15-minute news reports on the hour. Noted newsmen such as Henry Gladstone, Harry Hennessey, John Wingate, Lyle Vann, Peter Roberts, and Roger Skibenes were the backbone of the news department.

Bob and Ray (left)
WOR's most renowned program was morning show Rambling with Gambling, which aired continuously from March 1925 to December 2013 across three generations of hosts: John B. Gambling, John A. Gambling, and John R. Gambling.



➦In 1954…Don McNeill's Breakfast Club began a simulcast on ABC-TV.  The simulcast ended on February 25, 1955 having failed to make a successful transition to TV.

The Breakfast Club was a long-run morning variety show on NBC Blue Network/ABC radio originating in Chicago, Illinois. The radio program ran from June 23, 1933, through December 27, 1968. McNeil's 35½-year run as host remains the longest tenure for an emcee of a network entertainment program, surpassing Johnny Carson (29½ years) on The Tonight Show and Bob Barker (34⅔ years) on The Price Is Right, albeit split between radio and television, whereas the latter two were television only.

The show  combined music with informal talk and jokes often based on topical events. In addition to recurring comedy performers, various vocal groups and soloists, listeners heard sentimental verse, conversations with members of the studio audience and a silent moment of prayer. McNeill is credited as the first performer to make morning talk and variety a viable radio format



➦In 1956...Elvis Presley scored his first number one hit on Billboard's To 100 singles Chart.

➦In 1982... WABC officially confirmed it would be going to an all-talk format that May.

By early 1981, WABC's cumulative audience was down to 2.5 million—rival WNBC, a perennial also-ran, was by this time beating them with 3 million. Fewer people were tuning into WABC, listeners who had switched to FM were not coming back, and, while still moderately successful, the ship was sinking. Jay Clark tried to improve the time-spent-listening.

The airstaff began saying goodbye with a comment here and there from February into May. Finally, on April 30, it was announced that the switch to all-talk would occur on May 10 at noon.  From May 7 to 9, the departing station air-staffers said their goodbyes one last time.

The official music format ended 10:45 p.m. May 9, 1982. The station aired the Yankee game that day at Seattle. From 2 a.m. to 5:30 a.m. they ran the normal Sunday evening public affairs programs pre-empted due to the Yankee game.

Ross & Wilson played their usual 4 songs and the music ended with a tribute show from 9 a.m. to noon May 10 hosted by Ron Lundy & Dan Ingram. Staffers that departed included Ron Lundy, Dan Ingram, Marc Sommers and Peter Bush. Assistant Program Director Jeff Mazzei left for a similar position at WCBS 101.1FM where he would stay for well over 25 years. Marc Sommers also went to WCBS-FM and eventually Ron Lundy and Dan Ingram would join him there. Johnny Donovan and Mike McKay remained at WABC as staff announcers and producers. Mike McKay did not long survive the transition to talk and Johnny Donovan has some 30 years later since retired from WABC.

➦In 2011...William Lorne "Bill" Nimmo died (born June 18, 1917). He was a television and radio personality whose career spanned seven decades.

In 1947, he landed a job as overnight disc jockey at WLW-AM with his distinctive baritone voice. In 1948 Bill became Cincinnati’s first television star on WLWT-TV serving as an announcer, newscaster, and host of various shows.  Nimmo was Johnny Carson’s first sidekick on TV's 'Who Do You Trust' afternoon game show (before Ed McMahon).

In 1991, Nimmo was inducted into the Cincinnati Broadcasting Hall of Fame.

Thursday, February 21, 2019

Chicago Police: Smollett Staged Attack


UPDATE 2/21/2019 1:30PM: actor Jussie Smollett faked a threatening letter and then, a week later, staged a racist, anti-gay attack in downtown Chicago because he was “dissatisfied with his salary” on the “Empire” television show, Chicago police Superintendent Eddie Johnson said Thursday morning.

The Chicago Tribune report Smollett paid two brothers he knew $3,500 to fake the attack in the 300 block of East North Water Street around 2 a.m. Jan. 29, Johnson said, striking him a few times and putting a noose around his neck in front of a camera they erroneously thought caught the act. The superintendent called the scheme “shameful” and wondered how an African-American could set up a racist attack for a “publicity stunt.”

“First, Smollett attempted to gain attention by sending a false letter that relied on racial, homophobic and political language,” Johnson said. “When that didn’t work, Smollett paid $3,500 to stage this attack and drag Chicago’s reputation through he mud in the process. … This stunt was orchestrated by Smollett because he was dissatisfied with his salary. So he concocted a story about being attacked.”


UPDATE 2/21/2019 11 AM:  Accusing him of slapping the city in the face, Chicago police announced Thursday that “Empire” actor Jussie Smollett had been charged with concocting an attack in Streeterville, because “he was dissatisfied with his salary.”

“Smollett took advantage of the pain and anger of racism to promote his career,” Chicago Police Supt. Eddie Johnson said at a news conference Thursday morning. “This publicity stunt was a scar that Chicago didn’t earn, and certainly didn’t deserve.”

Earlier posting....

In little more than three weeks, "Empire" actor Jussie Smollett went from a sympathetic victim of a racist, anti-gay attack to an accused liar whose allegedly staged assault further roiled divisions across the country.

The Chicago Tribune reports the 36-year-old Smollett was charged Wednesday evening with disorderly conduct, a felony, after allegedly filing a false police report about an attack he said occurred as he walked to his apartment building in Streeterville last month. If convicted, he could face probation to three years in prison.

“Like any other citizen, Mr. Smollett enjoys the presumption of innocence," Smollett's attorneys, Todd Pugh and Victor Henderson, said in a statement. "Particularly when there has been an investigation like this one where information, both true and false, has been repeatedly leaked. Given these circumstances, we intend to conduct a thorough investigation and to mount an aggressive defense."

While Chicago police initially launched a hate crime investigation, authorities had recently said they were looking into whether Smollett paid two brothers he knew to stage the attack on Jan. 29. The brothers appeared before a grand jury earlier Wednesday, according to their attorney, Gloria Schmidt.

She did not expect any charges to be filed against her clients, and said authorities did not offer them any deals or immunity. “You don’t need immunity when you have the truth,” she said.

The brothers spent “countless hours” cooperating with police, Schmidt said, and she urged Smollett to come clean as well. “I think that Jussie’s conscience is probably not letting him sleep right now, so I think that he should unload that conscience and just come out and tell the American people what actually happened."



Smollett, who is openly gay, has said he was walking from a Subway sandwich shop to his apartment around 2 a.m. Jan. 29 when two men walked up, yelled racial and homophobic slurs, hit him and wrapped a noose around his neck. Smollett said they also yelled, “This is MAGA country,” referring to President Donald Trump’s campaign slogan.

R.I.P.: Peter Tork, Musician, Member Of The Monkees

Peter Tork (February 13, 1942 – February 21, 2019)
Peter Tork, a blues and folk musician who became a teeny-bopper sensation as a member of the Monkees, the wisecracking, made-for-TV pop group that imitated and briefly outsold the Beatles, died Feb. 21.

He was 77, according to The Washington Post.

The death was announced by his official Facebook page, which did not say where or how he died. Mr. Tork was diagnosed with adenoid cystic carcinoma, a rare cancer affecting his tongue, in 2009.


If the Monkees were a manufactured version of the Beatles, a “prefab four” who auditioned for a rock-and-roll sitcom and were selected more for their long-haired good looks than their musical abilities, Mr. Tork was the group’s Ringo, its lovably goofy supporting player.

On television, he performed as the self-described “dummy” of the group, drawing on a persona he developed while working as a folk musician in Greenwich Village, where he flashed a confused smile whenever his stage banter fell flat. Off-screen, he embraced the Summer of Love, donning moccasins and “love beads” and declaring that “nonverbal, extrasensory communication is at hand” and that “dogmatism is leaving the scene.”

Peter Tork

A versatile multi-instrumentalist, Mr. Tork mostly played bass and keyboard for the Monkees, in addition to singing lead on tracks including “Long Title: Do I Have to Do This All Over Again,” which he wrote for the group’s psychedelic 1968 movie, “Head,” and “Your Auntie Grizelda.”

At age 24, he was also the band’s oldest member when “The Monkees” premiered on NBC in 1966. Not that it mattered: “The emotional age of all of us,” he told the New York Times that year, “is 13.”

Created by producers Bob Rafelson and Bert Schneider, “The Monkees” was designed to replicate the success of “A Hard Day’s Night” and “Help!,” director Richard Lester’s musical comedies about the Beatles.

The band featured Mr. Tork alongside Michael Nesmith, a singer-songwriter who played guitar, and former child actors Micky Dolenz and Davy Jones, who played the drums and sang lead, respectively. Like their British counterparts, the group had a fondness for mischief, resulting in high jinks involving a magical necklace, a monkey’s paw, high-seas pirates and Texas outlaws.



“The Monkees” ran for only two seasons but won an Emmy Award for outstanding comedy and spawned a frenzy of merchandising, record sales and world tours that became known as Monkeemania.