Thursday, December 28, 2023

Americans Spend 4+ Hours Daily With Audio


Instead of zooming in to examine a deep cut of data or to look at a particular group of listeners, Edison Research is doing the opposite this week. They have zoomed out to take a larger look at how much time listeners in the U.S. spend with audio daily.

Creators of audio content, as well as advertisers who want to reach consumers, are interested in whether audio is maintaining its place in people’s lives. Edison Research’s Share of Ear® study has been measuring the amount of time the U.S. population 13+ spends listening to audio daily since 2014. At the inception of Share of Ear in 2014, the U.S. population 13+ spent four hours and 17 minutes a day listening to all audio sources.





Follow the bars through the years and you will initially see audio losing some daily minutes, hitting a low of three hours and 44 minutes in 2020. This trend reversed course though in 2021, when daily time spent with audio increased back to over four hours. And according to the latest Share of Ear data from Q3 2023, listeners in the U.S. spend an average of four hours and 11 minutes per day consuming audio content, essentially unchanged from the level of almost a decade ago.

The team at Edison says it’s tough to think of another word here besides resilience. Audio sources remain competitive in the fight for people’s time, despite an overwhelming amount of video choices and changing consumer habits over time. U.S. listeners 13+ still dedicate over a quarter of their waking lives to audio consumption.

Those involved in selling advertisers into the audio space can consider using this dramatic evidence to help convince them to invest more. Audio can deliver enormous reach, frequency, and results.

Fox News Beats MSNBC and CNN Combined In Primetime


During the week of December 18-24, FOX News Channel (FNC) topped CNN and MSNBC combined with weekday primetime viewers for the sixth consecutive week. FNC defeated CNN and MSNBC with Monday-Sunday primetime total viewers. 

In primetime (7-11 PM/ET), FNC earned 1,489,000 viewers and 147,000 in the 25-54 demo commanding all of cable news with viewers and A25-54. In total day (6 AM-6 AM/ET), FNC secured 1,079,000 viewers and 117,000 in the 25-54 demo, delivering 75 of the top 100 cable news telecasts. With cable news share, FNC occupied 47% of primetime viewership and 46% of total day viewership. FNC held a 159% advantage over CNN with total day and a 228% advantage over CNN with primetime, as the struggling network saw its lowest rated week in 23 years.

The Five was the most-watched program in cable news for the week, averaging 2,755,000 viewers (220,000 in the 25-54 demo). At 6 PM/ET, Special Report with Bret Baier secured 2,030,000 viewers and 169,000 with A25-54. The Ingraham Angle won the 7 PM/ET hour with viewers and A25-54 averaging 1,942,000 million viewers and 162,000 in the 25-54 demo. At 8 PM/ET, Jesse Watters Primetime was the most-watched program in primetime, delivering 2,313,000 viewers and 193,000 in the 25-54 demo. At 9 PM/ET, Hannity, which was guest-hosted throughout the week, secured 1,650,000 viewers and 161,000 with 25-54 demo, outpacing MSNBC’s Alex Wagner and Rachel Maddow with viewers and the demo. FOX News @ Night with Trace Gallagher at 11 PM/ET, delivered 935,000 viewers and 126,000 with A25-54.

At 10 PM/ET, FNC’s late-night offering Gutfeld! was the most-watched program with the advertiser coveted 25-54 demo, nabbing 226,000 25-54 demo viewers and 1,819,000 total viewers. Gutfeld! once again topped the broadcast competition including NBC’s The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon (1,362,000 P2+) and NBC’s Late Night with Seth Meyers (847,000 P2+).

FNC’s daytime lineup continued to surpass broadcast programs. America’s Newsroom (weekdays, 9-11 AM/ET; 1,491,000 P2+) Outnumbered (weekdays, 12 PM/ET; 1,502,000 P2+) and The Faulkner Focus (weekdays, 11 AM/ET; 1,447,000 P2+) outranked ABC’s GMA3 (1,323,000 P2+), NBC News Daily (1,232,000 P2+) and CBS’ The Talk (1,213,000 P2+). In the mornings, FOX & Friends won its 148th straight week, securing 1,028,000 viewers and 121,000 with 25-54 demo.

For the weekend, FNC led the cable news competition with viewers in primetime and total day. On Saturday, Cavuto Live (Saturday, 10 AM-12 PM/ET) was the top show of the day with 1,120,000 viewers (154,000 A25-54) while FOX & Friends Weekend (weekends, 6-10 AM/ET) was number two pulling in 1,006,000 viewers and 138,000 A25-54. On Sunday, Maria Bartiromo’s Sunday Morning Futures (Sunday, 10 AM/ET) was the most-watched program of the entire weekend with 1,206,000 viewers and 155,000 A25-54. MediaBuzz (Sunday, 11 AM/ET) followed as the second most-watched program with viewers nabbing 985,000 viewers (101,000 A25-54).

Philly Radio: Ashlyn Sullivan Joins Sports Radio 94 WIP


NBC Sports Philadelphia's Ashlyn Sullivan is jumping into sports talk radio, joining SportsRadio 94 WIP as a part-time host, Philly Business Journal reports.

Sullivan, the host of "Flyers Pregame Live" and "Flyers Postgame Live" on NBC Sports Philadelphia, 

will make her WIP debut from 6 to 10 p.m. Wednesday with co-host Sean Bell, the station announced.

A WIP spokesperson said Sullivan doesn’t have a set schedule and will fill in as needed.

“SO excited to get started!! Being on sports talk radio in the best sports city in the country is a dream - thankful for the opportunity,” Sullivan said in a post on X, formerly Twitter.

In addition to the Flyers pregame and postgame shows, Sullivan contributes to NBC Sports Philadelphia Eagles coverage. She co-hosts the "Birds Huddle" talk show and provides game day reporting for Eagles coverage.

Ashlyn Sullivan
The addition of Sullivan comes a week after SportsRadio 94 WIP afternoon drive co-host Jon Marks left the station, with the longtime staffer saying he wanted to spend more time with his family.

Though Sullivan isn’t replacing Marks, her addition gives WIP more flexibility as the station decides who will fill his spot in the long-term. With WIP's daytime lineup largely set, Sullivan will likely see mostly night and weekend shifts.

Sullivan joined NBC Sports Philadelphia just over a year ago. She replaced former Flyers pregame and postgame host Taryn Hatcher, who moved into more of a utility role for the station.

Prior to her time at NBC Sports Philadelphia, Sullivan was the team reporter and producer for the NFL’s Jacksonville Jaguars, hosting programming on the team’s website, local television affiliates and social media platforms. She was also the in-game video board reporter and in-studio host of a weekly TV show “Jaguars Weekend” seen on FOX30.

Sullivan spent time covering college athletics, soccer and golf, among other sports, and has appeared on CBS Sports Network, ESPN+, NFL Network and the Golf Channel.

Urban One Reports Deep Loss


Urban One reported third quarter net revenue declined 3% to $117.83 million as compared to $121.2 million in 2022. The delayed results reflected lower political advertising, dropping 60%, while the radio division rose 4%.

For the quarter ending September 30, 2023, Urban One reported a decrease in net revenue, dropping to $117.83 million from the previous year’s $121.25 million. Concurrently, total operating expenses surged to $173.94 million, a significant increase from $103.25 million. This was largely due to an $85.45 million impairment charge, a stark rise from the $15.45 million charge in the same period last year.

The final net loss totaled $54.11 million, a deep decline year over year from Q3 2022’s net income of $3.47 million.

Radio was Urban One’s largest revenue contributor, experiencing growth during the quarter. Reach Media, Urban One’s national radio division, also reported positive results, with revenue rising to $11.16 million from the previous year’s $10.07 million.

Taylor Swift Ties Elvis On Billboard's 200 Album List


Heading into the final week of 2023, Taylor Swift has tied Elvis Presley as the solo artist with the most weeks spent at the top of the Billboard 200 albums chart.

The Tennessean reports both artists were born elsewhere but established their stratospheric careers in Tennessee. Presley hails from Tupleo, Mississippi, and is synonymous with Memphis. Swift is from Reading, Pennsylvania, and began her country music career in Nashville.

Swift's albums have spent 67 weeks in the No. 1 spot, according to Billboard (about one year, three months and two weeks).

Billboard discerns between solo artists and bands; the all-time record is held by the Beatles with 132 weeks (about two years, six months and two weeks).

Taylor Swift's 2023 "Eras" tour includes concerts May 19, 20 and 21 at Gillette Stadium in Foxborough.

Three of Swift's albums are in the top 10 on the charts going into 2024: "1989 (Taylor's Version)" holds the top spot, "Midnights" is third, and "Lover" is seventh.

The megastar's Eras Tour will kick back off in Tokyo, Japan, on Feb. 7. She is set to perform 86 shows across the globe in 2024.


Radio History: December 28


➦In 1915
...announcer Dick Joy was born in Putnam, Connecticut.

Starting in local LA radio while a USC journalism student he became the youngest staff announcer in CBS radio history at age 21. On radio he worked on The Danny Kaye Show, The Sad Sack, Vox Pop, The Adventures of Sam Spade, Blue Ribbon Town, Dr. Kildare. Silver Theatre, New Old Gold Show, The Saint, and The Danny Thomas Show.  On TV his assignments included December Bride, Perry Mason, Have Gun – Will Travel, Daktari, Lost in Space, Gomer Pyle U.S.M.C., and Playhouse 90.

He died Oct. 31 1991 at age 75.

➦In 1953...Bob Pittman, CEO of iHeartMedia was born.

The son of a Methodist minister, Pittman was born in Jackson, Mississippi, but raised in Brookhaven and became a radio announcer at the age of 15 to earn money for flying lessons.

He was an announcer in a number of cities and then successfully programmed radio stations in Pittsburgh, Chicago and finally at the NBC flagship station, WNBC-AM, in New York when he was 23 years old. He also produced and co-hosted a music video and news show in 1978 that ran on NBC's O&O Television stations.

He did learn to fly, and has been a pilot for almost 40 years: He now has over 6,000 flight hours; currently holds an Airline Transport Pilot's license for airplanes; and is rated for helicopters and 3 types of jets.

➦In 1981...WEA Records (Warner-Elektra-Atlantic) raised the price of its 45 rpm records from $1.68 to $1.98. The company was the leader of the pack with other labels soon boosting their prices. Within a few years, the 45 rpm record was “boosted” right out of existence by the arrival of the CD.

Gayle King is 69

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAYS:

  • Actor Maggie Smith (TV’s “Downton Abbey,” film’s “Harry Potter”) is 89. 
  • Singer-keyboardist Edgar Winter is 77. 
  • Actor Denzel Washington is 69. 
  • TV personality Gayle King (“CBS This Morning”) is 69. 
  • Drummer Mike McGuire of Shenandoah is 65. 
  • Actor Chad McQueen (the “Karate Kid” films) is 63. 
  • Country singer-guitarist Marty Roe of Diamond Rio is 63. 
  • Actor Malcolm Gets (“Caroline in the City”) is 60. 
  • Political commentator Ana Navarro (“The View”) is 52. 
  • Comedian Seth Meyers (“Late Night With Seth Meyers”) is 50. 
  • Actor Brendan Hines (“Suits,” ″Lie To Me”) is 47. 
  • Actor Joe Manganiello (“True Blood”) is 47. 
  • Actor Vanessa Ferlito (“NCIS: New Orleans”) is 46. 
  • Singer John Legend is 45. 
  • Actor Andre Holland (“Moonlight,” “Selma”) is 44. 
  • Actor Sienna Miller is 42. 
  • Actor Beau Garrett (“The Good Doctor”) is 41. 
  • Actor Thomas Dekker (“Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles,” “Heroes”) is 36. 
  • Actor Mackenzie Rosman (“7th Heaven”) is 34. 
  • “American Idol” runner-up David Archuleta is 33. 
  • Actor Mary-Charles Jones (“Kevin Can Wait”) is 22. 
  • Actor Miles Brown (“black-ish”) is 19.
✞REMEMBRANCES

  • In 2016..Debbie Reynolds, American actress and singer (Singin' In The Rain -"Kathy Selden"; The Unsinkable Molly Brown), dies of a stroke at 84 one day after her daughter Carrie Fisher passed away
  • In 2017..Rose Marie [Mazzetta], American actress, comedienne and singer (The Dick Van Dyke Show - "Sally"; The Doris Day Show), dies at 94
  • In 2018..Christine McGuire, American pop vocalist (McGuire Sisters - "Sincerely"; "Sugartime"), dies at 92
  • In 2018..Ray Sawyer, American singer (Dr Hook), dies at 81
  • In 2019..Carley Ann McCord, American sports reporter (Cox Sports TV; in-game host New Orleans Pelicans, New Orleans Saints), dies in a plane crash at 30
  • In 2021..John Madden Pro Football HOF coach (Oakland Raiders 1969-78; Super Bowl 1976) and sportscaster (16 x Emmy Award winner; CBS, FOX, ABC, NBC; Madden NFL video games), dies at 85
  • In 2022.. Alan Copeland, American Grammy Award-winning arranger, songwriter, and singer (The Modernaires; Your Hit Parade), dies at 96

Wednesday, December 27, 2023

R.I.P.: Tom Smothers Older Half of The Smothers Brothers

Tom and Dick Smothers

Tom Smothers, the older half of the comic folk duo the Smothers Brothers, whose skits and songs on “The Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” in the late 1960s brought political satire and a spirit of youthful irreverence to network television, paving the way for shows like “Saturday Night Live” and “The Daily Show,” died on Tuesday at his home in Santa Rosa, Calif., a city in Sonoma County. He was 86, reports The NY Times..

He died “following a recent battle with cancer,” a spokesman for the National Comedy Center announced on behalf of the family.

The Smothers Brothers made their way to network television as a folk act with a difference. With Tom playing guitar and Dick playing stand-up bass, they spent as much time bickering as singing.

With an innocent expression and a stammering delivery, Tom would try to introduce their songs with a story, only to be picked at by his skeptical brother. As frustration mounted, he would turn, seething, and often deliver a trademark non sequitur: “Mom always liked you best.”

R.I.P.: Tom Foty, Longtime CBS Radio Anchor Dies at 77

Longtime CBS News Radio Washington anchor and reporter Tom Foty (right) died Tuesday at the age of 77.

WTOP reports Foty was a mainstay for CBS News starting in 1998, covering everything from government affairs to international news, according to his colleague Peter King.

“He managed UPI’s Washington bureau, then he became its executive editor,” King said of Foty’s career trajectory.

“But he also parachuted into breaking stories like The Peoples Temple mass suicide in Guyana, and the Three Mile Island nuclear disaster.”


Foty is remembered by colleagues as a “super utility player,” reporting and anchoring whenever needed, with precision and grace.

“It’s impossible to count the ways we’ll miss him,” King said.

R.I.P.: Adam Petlin, Original Fox News Hire Dies at 58

Adam Petlin
Adam Petlin, who joined Fox News weeks after its debut in 1996 and was longtime head of Chicago bureau operations, died on Dec. 23 after a long illness. He was 58, Variety reports.

Petlin was one of the first six field photographers hired for the then-fledging news operation in August 1996. He was quickly promoted to supervisory posts and became part of the core team that built the channel into a cable powerhouse.

Petlin led the first Fox News camera crew to reach the scene at the World Trade Center in lower Manhattan after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. His other career highlights included a trip to Antarctica and the South Pole with former Apollo program astronaut Jim Lovell.

“He was an integral part of the field and production team and a gifted still and television photographer,” Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott wrote in a memo to employees sent on Dec. 24. Scott called Petlin “a natural leader” and “a Fox News original.”

“Adam was also highly regarded by numerous correspondents and anchors that were fortunate enough to have been on location with him on nearly every major news story of the last 27 years,” Scott wrote. “When his former boss Sharri Berg and colleague Scott Wilder visited Adam in the hospital last week, he proudly shared photos of his phenomenal career at Fox which took him cross country and to spots all over the world including a trip to Antarctica and the South Pole on assignment with astronaut Jim Lovell.”

R.I.P.: Matt Napolitano, Fox News Audio Anchor and Reporter, Dies at 33

Matt Napolitano
Matt Napolitano, an anchor and reporter for Fox News Audio, died Dec. 23 in New York City after a short illness. He was 33.

Napolitano had been with Fox News since 2015, starting out as a writer for its Sirius XM channel, Fox News Headlines 24/7. He quickly advanced to serving as a sports reporter for the channel. He left the company for a short period but returned last year for the launch of Fox Audio.

Napolitano worked an anchor and reporter, writing and producing segments for all Fox News audio platforms. He contributed sports-related coverage for Fox Business Network's "Cavuto Coast to Coast" weekday series anchored by Neil Cavuto. He also did voice work for the Fox News Edge service that delivers news coverage and content packages to Fox affiliate stations around the country.

Fox News CEO Suzanne Scott praised his Napolitano for being resourceful and enterprising as a journalist.

"Matt did everything from anchoring to writing and producing for our audio platforms and loved being able to work in the journalism field that he trained for his entire life," Scott wrote in a memo sent Dec. 24 to Fox News employees.

FCC Upholds Station Ownership Limits


The FCC has reaffirmed and toughened its network and TV station ownership limits, saying that despite a proliferation of alternative video options, including streaming video, limits on network and local station ownership remain necessary to promote the public interest goals of competition, localism and viewpoint diversity "given the unique obligations broadcast licensees have as trustees of the public’s airwaves to serve their local communities."

In wrapping up its 2018 review of whether network and local TV station ownership limits and regs are in the public interest, a Democratic majority of commissioners said they were, NextTV.com reports

The 2018 quadrennial review was on hold after a legal challenge by broadcasters, which was generally resolved by a Supreme Court decision two years ago supporting the stations.

One of the legal hold-ups was the court finding that the FCC had not sufficiently explained how its approach to broadcast regulation impacted minority and female ownership. The FCC this week, in upholding the the Local Television Ownership Rule and the Dual Network Rule, as well as the Local Radio Ownership Rule, dismissed that with the explanation that "the record in the current proceeding does not establish concrete, affirmative steps the Commission can or should take with respect to our structural ownership rules to address concerns regarding minority and female ownership."

The FCC did not restore the the rules preventing newspaper/broadcast cross-ownership and radio/TV cross-ownership, which a Republican FCC had eliminated and an appeals court restored before the Supreme Court weighed in on the side of elimination.

"To be clear, at this point only three core rules remain," said FCC Chairwoman Jessica Rosenworcel. "No entity can own all the television stations in a single market, with a case specific request necessary to own more than one of the top four stations. No entity can own all the radio stations in a single market. There is also a restriction on the national combination of two of the four big television networks—ABC, CBS, Fox, and NBC." 

But the FCC is also expanding its definition of audience share that determines what qualifies as a top four station to include the station's streamed multicast channels and low power TVs.

The FCC said it would retain its current numerical limit on station ownership because, despite the presence of streaming sites aplenty, traditional cable and satellite video programmers, "no other source of video programming provides a substitute for broadcast television."

Broadcasters have long argued that the FCC should look at all those as competition, most recently the unregulated streaming sites that have taken a big--and getting bigger--bite out of their audience. And while the FCC said that it was retaining the limits because broadcasters were uniquely licensed to serve the public with valuable news and diverse viewpoints, broadcasters say that the limits make it harder for them to afford to deliver that must-see TV in competition to unregulated video providers.

The FCC retains the prohibition on owning more than one of the top four-rated stations in a market.

The National Association of Broadcasters, which had pushed for eliminating the rules, declined comment.

Google’s Top Trending Searches of 2023


This has been a turbulent year, and that’s reflected in Google’s top trending searches of 2023. The latest annual list reveals that war, shootings, and natural disasters dominated the top trending news searches of the year, both globally and in the US.

As a reminder: Top trending searches do not refer to the most volume, but rather those with the highest spikes this year in comparison to 2022.

Unlike in years past, Google hasn’t released a list of the top trending searches overall. But within the top trending news section, it’s a litany of disasters, both natural and man-made. The War in Israel and Gaza leads the top trending news searches of the year both globally and in the US, and various other items are shared between the two lists. For example, three hurricanes (Hilary, Idealia, and Lee) populate both lists, as do two shootings (Maine, and Nashville).

Within the US, the Maui fire and the Canada wildfires took the 8th and 10th spots, while globally the Turkey earthquake was the third-most trending news search, and the war in Sudan the 10th-most. The only positive news item to make one of the lists was Chandrayaan-3, the Indian Space Research Organisation’s lunar mission, which was in the 9th spot in the global list.

NYTimes Sues Microsoft, ChatGPT Maker OpenAI


The New York Times on Wednesday filed a lawsuit against Microsoft and OpenAI, the company behind popular AI chatbot ChatGPT, accusing the pair of infringing copyright and abusing the newspaper’s intellectual property.

CNBC reports the NYT said in a filing with the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York that it seeks to hold Microsoft and OpenAI to account for the “billions of dollars in statutory and actual damages” it believes it is owed for the “unlawful copying and use of The Times’s uniquely valuable works.”

The newspaper is one of numerous media organizations pursuing compensation from companies behind some of the most advanced general artificial intelligence models, for the alleged usage of their content to train AI programs.

OpenAI is the creator of GPT, a large language model that can produce humanlike content in response to user prompts. It does this thanks to billions of parameters’ worth of data, which is obtained from public web data up until 2021.

This has created a dilemma for media publishers and creators, which are finding their own content being used and reimagined by generative AI models like ChatGPT, Dall-E, Midjourney, and Stable Diffusion. In numerous cases, the content produced by these programs can look similar to the source material.

OpenAI has tried to allay news publishers concerns. In December, the company announced a partnership with Axel Springer — the parent company of Business Insider, Politico, and European outlets Bild and Welt — which would license its content to OpenAI in return for a fee.

The financial terms of the deal weren’t disclosed.

In its lawsuit Wednesday, the Times accused Microsoft and OpenAI of creating a business model based on “mass copyright infringement,” stating that the companies’ AI systems were “used to create multiple reproductions of The Times’s intellectual property for the purpose of creating the GPT models that exploit and, in many cases, retain large portions of the copyrightable expression contained in those works.”

Holiday Retail Sales Grow 3.1%


Shoppers opened their wallets this holiday season as they have for much of 2023, even crowding into shopping malls to scoop up last-minute holiday gifts and discounts in the days before Christmas.

The Wall Street Journal reports U.S. retail sales rose 3.1% from Nov. 1 through Dec. 24, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse, which measures sales in stores and online. The estimate, which isn’t adjusted for inflation, reflects a year marked by rising prices and a strong U.S. job market.

After a busy Thanksgiving and Black Friday weekend, many consumers waited for the last minute to shop, expecting prices to drop and with a full weekend before Christmas. Some analysts estimated Saturday, Dec. 23, was the biggest sales day of the year—topping Black Friday.

“Without concerns about supply or feeling like they will miss deals, they don’t have a reason to spend earlier,” said Marshal Cohen, chief retail industry adviser for Circana. 



Online retail sales increased 6.3% year over year, while in-stores sales rose 2.2%, according to Mastercard SpendingPulse, which excludes automobile purchases and travel services. There were pockets of weakness, with sales of electronics and jewelry declining year over year from Nov. 1 through Dec. 24. The strongest category of growth was in restaurants, as people dined out and menu prices were higher.

Strong spending, especially on travel and dining, helped buoy the U.S. economy in 2023 even as the Federal Reserve pushed up interest rates to the highest levels in more than two decades. Spending eased in some categories, especially appliances and electronics, after many households splurged during the pandemic. 

Retailers have given a mixed reading on the state of their businesses during the critical holiday season. Some stores have logged steady sales while others have cautioned that people are pulling back.