Monday, December 14, 2015

D/FW: KEGL's Russ Martin Robbed At Home


Police are investigating an aggravated robbery that occurred Wednesday night at the home of popular KEGL 97.1 FM PM Drive personality Russ Martin.

According to police, three armed men wearing masks confronted Martin on Wednesday shortly after he arrived home in Stonebriar Creek Estates, a gated community northwest of the Dallas.

The Dallas Morning News reports the men led Martin inside the home, where they held him at gunpoint while they removed valuables from the place, according to police. The suspects fled in Martin’s black 2010 Dodge Challenger.

Martin, who is host of The Russ Martin Show on weekdays on iHeartMedia's "The Eagle" was not injured. Police were called at about 9 p.m.

Martin was apparently duct-taped to a chair by robbers demanding jewelry.

Martin is a big fan of law enforcement and first-responders. His RMN Listeners Foundation supports the families of Dallas-Fort Worth police officers and firefighters who have courageously fallen in the line of duty.

Art Bell Abruptly Ends Radio Show


Longtime paranormal radio host Art Bell blogged during the weekend that he is “going to hang it up” and will not return to the air.

Art Bell
Bell blames a “crazy person” who apparently has been threatening Bell and his family. Shots were fired near his home studio during his live broadcast on October 21 while he was live on air. He has also reported to listeners a couple of other incidents since then where he has felt threatened.

The 70-year-old Bell issued the following statement over on his website, ArtBell.com:
“I am sorry to have to announce this but I will not be on Tonight or any other night, yes I am going to hang it up. Whoever this crazy person is, they are not stopping and it has come to the point that we as a Family do not feel it is worth the risk. 
While I think the person or persons are after me, my Wife and now my Daughter are really scared, the other night after the latest incident my Daughter was off in the corner of her bed scared to death as the Police cars came screaming up. I will not put my Family through this. 
As you all know I dearly love what I do but not at the expense of never ending Terrorism. 
I want to thank those of you who have shown so much support and it has been my joy, short as it has been to have cracked that Mic open for a last time. This was a Family decision. The girls stuck with me and still would but if one of them were harmed because of what I love doing my life would be over."
Keith Rowland, who runs the syndicator for Midnight In the Desert, the Dark Matter Radio Network, stated Sunday that, “I’m obligated to continue feeding the (54) terrestrial affiliate stations for the next 30 days."  He is unsure of the status of the program beyond that.

Apple Music Wins Exclusive Video Deal With Taylor Swift

By Sam Forgione

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Apple Inc won a deal with pop star Taylor Swift to exclusively release a concert video of her recent world tour through its music streaming service, Apple Music, the company and singer said on Sunday.

Taylor Swift
Swift, who celebrated her 26th birthday on Sunday, tweeted a trailer for the "1989 World Tour Live" concert video and said: "Thank you so much for all the birthday wishes. I have a little surprise for you." The video will air on Dec. 20.

The singer also tweeted that an interview discussing the video would be broadcast at 9 a.m. PST (1700 GMT) on Monday on Beats 1, Apple's radio station. Apple officials were not immediately available for comment.

"It sounds like a very, very significant win for Apple," said John Jackson, an analyst at market research firm IDC in Boston. "It's on the order of a coup for Apple inasmuch as we all know that Apple is late to this party and the competition is fierce, the market is heavily subscribed with services."


Jackson cited music streaming services Spotify and Songza as examples of such competitors.

Launched in June, Apple Music is Apple's attempt to carry its dominance of digital music through its iTunes store into the era of music streaming.

Chief Executive Tim Cook said in October the music streaming service had netted more than 6.5 million paid users, and that an additional 8.5 million people were participating in a free trial.

Analysts have predicted that Apple's service will find a strong following because of the vast installed base of iTunes users. But few think the iPhone maker will eclipse other music streaming companies. Spotify, founded in 2006, has over 20 million subscribers and over 75 million active users, according to its website.



Swift said in June she would put her hit album "1989" on Apple Music, days after the tech giant bowed to pressure from Swift and some independent music groups and labels and agreed to pay artists during the free trial period for its music service.

Swift's decision came after she pulled her entire catalog of music from Spotify in November 2014 and refused to offer "1989" on streaming services, saying the business had shrunk the numbers of paid album sales drastically.

She is not the only star challenging the streaming services.

British singer Adele's much-anticipated album "25" was withheld from streaming on digital music services, including Spotify, Apple Music and Deezer.

(Reporting by Sam Forgione; Additional reporting by Julia Love in San Francisco and Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Stephen R. Trousdale and Peter Cooney)

U.S. Investigates Broadcasters In Widening FIFA Case

A sports marketing company that was described in a sweeping indictment this month as retaining contracts because of the "support" of corrupt soccer officials has longstanding ties to the U.S. entertainment company 21st Century Fox, according to securities filings and other government documents.

The description of T&T Sports Marketing Ltd in the indictment signals that U.S. prosecutors have intensified their focus on media companies and what they might have known about any bribes, people familiar with the matter said.

When prosecutors announced their corruption investigation of world soccer's governing body FIFA in May, they spoke in court papers about "an array of broadcasters and advertisers" but otherwise did not specifically address their role.

21st Century Fox listed T&T as a subsidiary last year in a filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. Its investment in the company stretches back to 2002, government documents from the United States and Argentina showed.

Fox had no operational control of T&T, a Fox spokeswoman said. She declined to comment further.

Fox was not named in the indictment and was not accused of any wrongdoing. T&T was also not accused of any wrongdoing.

T&T, which is registered in the Cayman Islands, does not have a listed telephone number and it was unclear if it has employees of its own.

A spokeswoman for the U.S. Attorney's Office in the New York City borough of Brooklyn, where the cases against top soccer officials and entities were brought, declined to comment. A spokeswoman for the FBI also declined to comment.

The Dec. 3 indictment said three executives "affiliated" with T&T bribed at least 15 high-level soccer officials to support the company's exclusive worldwide broadcasting rights for events such as the Copa Libertadores, a major South American club tournament. The three executives were at the time with Argentine sports marketing firm Torneos y Competencias, the indictment said.

One of the three executives, Alejandro Burzaco, the former chairman of Torneos, was indicted for the bribery scheme in the United States in May and pleaded guilty last month. The two others were described in the indictment as co-conspirators but not named. Torneos, a part-owner of T&T with Fox, was not charged.

Rupert Murdoch
The 15 soccer officials have been charged, and two of them pleaded guilty last month.

The indictment does not explain how T&T benefited from retaining the broadcasting contracts. T&T is not a broadcaster itself, but by obtaining broadcasting rights, it could resell them to major broadcasters.

21st Century Fox, which is led by media baron Rupert Murdoch, ended up with the rights to broadcast the Copa Libertadores and other tournaments.

The avalanche of corruption allegations prompted FIFA President Sepp Blatter to say he would resign, only days after being re-elected to a fifth term. Batter has not been charged with a crime, and denies any wrongdoing.

Prosecutors have charged 41 people and entities in a probe of soccer corruption spanning the globe. Soccer bosses from throughout the Americas are among the defendants in a case that prosecutors said involves $200 million in bribes and kickback schemes tied to marketing of major tournaments and matches.

The schemes deprived soccer federations of the full value of broadcasting and marketing rights and had powerful anti-competitive effects, prosecutors said.

POTENTIAL LIABILITY

Media companies could potentially be criminally liable if they benefited from bribery and their employees had knowledge of it or were willfully blind to it, legal experts said. Emails, text messages and other documents, as well as interviews with cooperating witnesses, are typically used to assess what if anything employees knew and when.

Mere ownership in a subsidiary or affiliate involved in bribery would not be enough, however, for prosecutors to charge a major media company. There would need to be evidence the company knew or was willfully blind.

According to the indictment, T&T was owned in part by Argentina's Torneos and in part by "a group of investors that included an affiliate of a major broadcasting company headquartered in the United States whose identity is known to the grand jury." The description does not go beyond that.

Today, only two companies own shares in T&T. A Fox affiliate owns 75 percent and Torneos owns 25 percent, according to Torneos.

Fox's relationship with T&T dates back to 2002, when the company joined forces with Liberty Media Corp and a subsidiary of private equity firm Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst to form a venture called Fox Pan American Sports. As part of the deal, Hicks transferred its 50 percent stake in T&T to the new venture, according to government documents from Argentina. Fox completed its takeover of Fox Pan American Sports in late 2011, according to U.S. securities filings.

A Liberty Media spokeswoman did not respond to questions about the deal. Hicks is defunct.

Satellite-TV company DirecTV also has an interest in T&T, according to a securities filing in February. It owns 40 percent of Torneos, which in turn owns 25 percent of T&T's shares. DirecTV said in August that its $147 million investment in Torneos could be hurt by the ongoing FIFA investigations.

DirecTV is a unit of AT&T Inc, which declined to comment on the case. Torneos also declined to comment.

Fox has chosen the law firm Williams & Connolly to conduct an internal review related to the soccer investigation, people familiar with the matter said. The scope of the review could not be determined. Brendan Sullivan, a partner at the firm who represented Murdoch's News Corp in the British phone-hacking scandal, could not be reached for comment.

(Reporting by Mica Rosenberg and David Ingram in New York; Additional reporting by Mark Hosenball in Washington; Editing by Amy Stevens and Grant McCool)

CNN Adds Christie, Paul to GOP Debate Line-Up

(Reuters) -- U.S. Republican presidential candidates Chris Christie and Rand Paul will be in the prime-time lineup for the party's next presidential debate, CNN said on Sunday.

Donald Trump will hold center stage as the party front-runner on the main stage on Tuesday night in Las Vegas, CNN said, flanked by retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson and Ted Cruz, who took the lead in an Iowa opinion poll on Saturday.

Christie, following a surge in support in the early voting state of New Hampshire, will return to the prime-time debate after being bumped off it for a Fox Business debate last month, CNN said.

Paul kept his spot thanks to a Fox News Iowa poll released Sunday that showed him strong enough in that state, according to CNN. Others on the main stage include Senator Marco Rubio, former Florida Governor Jeb Bush, businesswoman Carly Fiorina and Ohio Governor John Kasich, the network said.


Rand Paul, dipping in the latest opinion polls, had risked being placed with the lower-polling contenders in the large Republican field, which hold an earlier debate.

Report: Radio Most-Used Medium By Millennials


When you think of Millennials and media, the first thing that pops in your head is probably a smartphone.  You probably don’t think of radio when you think of these young people. But probably you should.

According to MediaLife, a  new report from Nielsen finds radio has a wider reach each week among adults 18-34 than any other medium.

The data comes from the measurement company’s first-ever Comparable Metrics Report, which aims to make apples-to-apples comparisons between different media for a better picture of what people are consuming.

It finds that, among 18-34s, 91 percent use terrestrial radio each week.

That’s more even than smartphones, at 82 percent, TV connected devices, at 49 percent, and tablets, at 33 percent. It’s also well ahead of TV, at 76 percent.

The Nielsen study looked at other demographics as well, including people 35-49 and over 50. For all adults and adults 35-49, radio’s weekly reach trumped all other media, though radio and TV were equal at 91 percent among those over 50.

Why does traditional radio continue to resonate with young people, at a time when they have so many options?

Nielsen says in part it’s because the medium has established itself so effectively as the place to find new music, which young people have always been drawn to.

Philly Radio: WPHT, Sid Mark Ink New Siantra Show Deal

Frank, Sid
Philadelphia tradition Sid Mark will continue to be with Talk Radio WPHT 1210 AM for years to come. Mark has signed a contract extension, the station announced on Saturday.

Mark has been with WPHT for 16 years and been playing Sinatra on the radio for 59 years.

“What Frank Sinatra is to music, Sid Mark is to radio,” said David Yadgaroff, Senior Vice President/Market Manager for CBS Radio Philadelphia. “We are so happy to continue the tradition that Sid started 59 years ago.”

“My thanks to the management of WPHT, our sponsors and, of course, my listeners for making this possible,” Sid Mark commented.  “(I) look forward to a big bash for the 60th.”

Mark launched “The Sounds of Sinatra” in Philadelphia 59 years ago. It all began with a call from a listener, who suggested that Mark spin one hour of Frank Sinatra songs. That tradition developed into “Friday with Frank”, as well as “Sunday with Sinatra” which presently airs on 1210 WPHT on Sunday’s from 9-1PM. Now heard on more than 100 radio stations from coast to coast, “The Sounds of Sinatra,” is the only radio program of its kind to have been personally authorized by Frank Sinatra.

Mark and Sinatra developed a personal relationship over 40 years ago. The special friendship Mark shared with Sinatra makes his programming even more special thanks to fascinating insights, personal anecdotes and stories behind the music.

Toledo Radio: ESPN Returns To WLQR

As of 12:01 this morning, ESPN syndicated programming has returned to SportsWLQR 106.5 FM The Ticket.

This means the return of ESPN's drive-time ratings juggernaut Mike & Mike in the Morning and goodbye to CBS's Gio And Jones (Chris Jones and Brian Giannotti).

The switch to ESPN's syndicated radio programming only affects the CBS talk shows, said Andy Stuart, the regional vice president and market manager for Cumulus Media Toledo, which owns WLQR.

The Toledo Blade reports, the station's local shows, The Bob Frantz Afternoon Extravaganza from 3 to 5 p.m., and Drive Time with Mike Miller from 5 to 6 p.m., will continue without changes, as will the Ticket's live broadcasts of Ohio State University football and basketball as well as local high school games.

WLQR 1065. FM (4.8 Kw) Red=Local Coverage
Since WLQR dropped ESPN programming for CBS Sports Radio nearly three years ago there has been a substantial drop in audience — particularly in the morning — just as it has for almost every Cumulus-owned sports talk radio station that made the switch.

"[CBS Sports Radio] never turned out [to be] what we hoped it would be, and after this period of time it was my decision to change it back to ESPN," Stuart said of the decision.

Indy Radio: Emmis Warned Of Stock De-Listing


Emmis Communications Corp. has been warned that it is in danger of being delisted from the Nasdaq Stock Market, the Indianapolis-based media company disclosed Thursday.

According to the Indy Business Journal, Emmis has received a letter from Nasdaq notifying the company that its stock had closed below the exchange’s minimum $1-per-share requirement for 30 straight business days.

According to Nasdaq rules, Emmis has 180 days, or until June 6, to get back in compliance. To do so, Emmis stock must close above $1 per share for 10 straight business days before the end of the 180-day period. If it doesn't, Nasdaq will move to delist the stock.

The stock has fallen 64 percent since closing at $1.87 on the final trading day of 2014. It hit a peak of $2.20 this year on Feb. 23 and Feb. 24.

Without its Nasdaq listing, Emmis shares would be relegated to penny-stock status on the over-the-counter bulletin board or on the pink sheets. Once that happens, shares are harder for investors to buy and sell.

Emmis could avoid that scenario by launching a reverse stock split, a possibility the company said it was considering. A firm that did a one-for-10 reverse stock split, for instance, would give stockholders one share for every 10 they own. At Emmis' current price, a holder of 10 shares would end up with one share worth $6.80.

The situation isn't a new one for the company. Emmis has averted a delisting three times in the last six years. The company was warned about possible delistings in November 2010 and in October 2009, but its stock rebounded both times.

Emmis owns 19 FM and 4 AM radio stations in New York, Los Angeles, St. Louis, Indianapolis, Terre Haute and Austin, Texas. The traditional radio business has struggled in recent years as listeners moved to other entertainment and audio-delivery options.

Radio revenue at Emmis was down 2.6 percent during the first half of this fiscal year, dropping from $92.6 million to $90.2 million.

Fargo Radio: Report..Dan Hammer Joining KFGO

Dan Hammer
Former longtime Fargo-Moorhead television sportscaster and radio voice Dan Hammer is leaving Midco Sports Network to accept a job as a talk radio show host on KFGO 790 AM, multiple sources have confirmed to Forum News Service.

Hammer will take the 2-5 p.m. KFGO time slot previously occupied by Mike McFeely, who left the station last month to return to WDAY 970 AM and The Forum. An official announcement from KFGO on Hammer’s hire is expected soon.

Hammer has served as the primary play-by-play voice for Midco Sports Network events in Grand Forks for the past three-and-a-half years, featuring UND men’s and women’s hockey, football, men’s and women’s basketball and volleyball games.

KFGO 790 AM (5 Kw, DA-Nights)
Midco Sports Network hired Hammer away from Valley News Live in 2012 after landing the UND broadcasting rights. Other candidates for the job were thought to be longtime WDAZ sports anchor Pat Sweeney and longtime UND hockey radio play-by-play man Tim Hennessy.

Hammer previously spent four years with KFGO and sister station KVOX 740 AM The Fan in Fargo. He also spent a number of years as a television sportscaster in Fargo-Moorhead.

Jackson MN Radio: Changes Planned At KKOJ-AM, KUXX-FM


Community First Broadcasting, owner of KKOJ 1190 AM, and KUXX 105.7 FM, both in Jackson, Minnesota, have announced some changes that will be taking in early 2016.

Effective Jan. 4, KUXX-FM Extreme Country 105.7 playing Hot Country Hits featuring artists such as Carrie Underwood, Luke Bryan, Blake Shelton, Keith Urban and more.

KUXX 105.7 FM (25 Kw) Red=Local Coverage
KKOJ-AM music will change to classic hits from the late '60s through the early '80s, with a heavy emphasis on Jackson County news, along with local weather, sports and Linder Farm Network markets.

K249EO 97.7 FM (250 Watts)
A new 24-hour translator K249EO  97.7  FM will be signing on the air in the next couple of weeks. The station will simulcast KKOJ-AM during the daytime. After KKOJ AM signs off for the day, KKOJ FM will continue with its own programming. KKOJ 97.7 FM will be the home to Jackson County Central Huskies and the Minnesota Vikings.

"We are really excited about the acquisition of the Jackson radio stations and growing our family of stations in northwest Iowa and southwest Minnesota. We are blessed to have inherited an amazing and talented staff," Marty Spies, general manager, said. "The only changes in staffing will be to increase the number of employees. "We have hired Chuck Harmer as our new morning show host for the NEW 105.7 Xtreme Country, and we will also be hiring two more media specialists."

Community First Broadcasting, who recently acquired KKOJ and KUXX also owns and operates radio stations in Spirit Lake, Spencer, Storm Lake, Sioux Center and Aberdeen, South Dakota. Community First Broadcasting has its home office in Sioux Falls.

Sabo Media Living Sexy Radio Ink Rep Deal

Hosts Al Spry and Frank Befera have signed with Sabo Media to build their Living Sexy radio show and other business opportunities.

The Orlando-based Living Sexy Radio is a weekly show that builds on the proven relationship format pioneered by Dr. Ruth Westheimer, “Love Lines” and “Passion Phones”.

The hosts are experienced broadcasters who know how to make compelling radio.

“This is a double digit share show for any FM station. The hosts and their cast tell engaging stories about romance. You would hear similar conversations on Wendy Williams' TV show and The View. But this is an up to date, fast movingshow made by radio pros,” comments Sabo.

Living Sexy show host Al Spry commented, "We are delighted to be working with Walter Sabo and Sabo Media in the development of our show and business. We have long admired Walter, who we regard as a legendary innovator in the media business."

Living Sexy Radio also serves a worldwide audience on iTunes, Apple TV, Roku, TuneIn, SHOUTcast, Radionomy, Radiojar, Live365, Alex Bennett’s GABNet, other major online streaming sites, and on the Living Sexy Radio Network (LSRN) at www.LivingSexyRadio.com.

The balance of LSRN consists of a highly-programmed, niched music channel, setting a sexy, fun mood all day, every day, 24/7. The creators are also working with Walter Sabo and Sabo Media to syndicate Living Sexy on terrestrial FM stations in major U.S. markets by the 1st quarter of 2015

Seattle Radio: KIRO-FM Radiothon Raises $512K+

News KIRO 97.3 FM and Treehouse, a nonprofit organization addressing the essential education and enrichment needs of kids in foster care, raised over $512,000 for local foster children during the 27th Annual Holiday Magic Radiothon last week.

The KIRO Radio 97.3 FM Holiday Magic program helps foster kids by raising money to provide
each child in the program with one significant holiday gift along with support for programs and
services throughout the year.

The 2014 Holiday Magic event raised over $512,000 in cash through listener donations, corporate donations, and sponsor matching funds during the 12-hour Radiothon.



“Where would we be as a community without foster families, and without an organization like Treehouse to help kids grow up? It’s KIRO’s privilege to share these stories, to put faces and voices to the foster family life,” Carl Gardner, VP/market manager for Bonneville Seattle, said in a news release. “We’re so grateful to our KIRO listeners, who are always, always unfailingly generous in giving and helping their neighbors.”

Founded in 1988, Treehouse helps 8,000 kids in foster care each year through programs that help them succeed in school, fulfill key material needs, and provide important childhood experiences. The nonprofit has set an ambitious goal that foster youth in King County will graduate from high school at the same rate as their peers with a plan for their future by 2017.

Las Vegas Paper Sold..Buyer Is Mystery

Thursday's sale of the Las Vegas Review-Journal left staffers, and readers, with a lot of questions.

Perhaps foremost among them: Who now owns Nevada's largest newspaper. Answers remain unclear.

The paper reports what is known: News + Media Capital Group LLC — a newly formed Delaware-domiciled company backed by "undisclosed financial backers with expertise in the media industry" — paid $140 million for the Review-Journal and its sister publications.

That's around $38 million more than New Media Investment Group paid for the all of Stephens Media LLC, a national chain of newspapers that included the Review-Journal, eight other dailies and 65 weekly newspapers. The amount points to investors with deep pockets and a perhaps even deeper desire to own Nevada's biggest newspaper even though the paper's revenues, like those of all print publications, have been in decline.

News + Media manager Michael Schroeder has declined to disclose the company's investors, as has Las Vegas Review-Journal Publisher Jason Taylor.

In discussions with employees, Taylor has said only that News + Media has multiple owner/investors, that some are from Las Vegas, and that in face-to-face meetings he has been assured that the group will not meddle in the newspaper's editorial content.

A trio of media watchdogs contacted by the Review-Journal expressed concern over the newspaper's shadowy new owners.

"One of the first thoughts I had was: Nevada is an early primary state. The Review-Journal is the largest newspaper in the state. Was it sold to a player in that event, or people who want to be players?," asked media critic and New York University professor Jay Rosen. "That slightly conspiratorial thought may be way off base. Of course, there is no way to know as long as the ownership remains hidden. That's the point."


Last night something strange came across my screen. I think it qualifies as a mystery. News that the Las Vegas...
Posted by Jay Rosen on Friday, December 11, 2015

Peoria Radio: WPBG Radiothon Raises $539K+


Classic Hits WPBG 93.3 FM The Drive, in Peoria, IL, reports it has raised $539,480 during their 15th annual "The Drive for Miracles" Radiothon.  The event has raised more than $1.5 million since 2001.

The radiothon, staged in the lobby of Children's Hospital of Illinois, was held for two days last week.

Alpha Media SVP/Market Manager, Mike Wild commented, "Behind the scenes, our people have experienced first-hand the amazing work of the Children's Hospital of Illinois. This is a true, from-the-heart commitment for a wonderful cause."

R.I.P.: Former WCBS-FM NYC Sports Reporter Phil Pepe

Phil Pepe
Former WCBS 101.1 FM sportscaster Phil Pepe, a longtime Daily News Yankee beat writer whose career covering New York sports spanned 50 years, died Sunday at the age of 80 at his home in Englewood, N.J..

Pepe covered the Yankees for The News from 1968-1981 and wrote the lead game story for every World Series from 1969-81.

He left the paper in 1989 for WCBS radio, where he did morning sports — including his signature “Pep Talk” — for more than 15 years. He was also the director of broadcasting/radio analyst for the Class-A New Jersey Cardinals of the New York-Penn League for 12 seasons from 1994-2005.

He was the executive director of the New York chapter of the Baseball Writers Association of America for the past 21 years, having also served as the chapter’s chairman in 1975 and 1976. He attended every BBWAA awards dinner since 1962 and ran the event for more than two decades.

After graduating from St. John’s, Pepe joined the New York World Telegram and Sun in 1957 and became the paper’s Yankee beat writer in 1961, the same year Roger Maris broke Babe Ruth’s single-season home run record.

Pepe stayed at the Telegram until it folded in 1966, and then wrote scripts for ABC radio with Howard Cosell.

In addition to his career in newspapers and radio, Pepe was a prolific author, writing close to 50 books with some of sports’ biggest names. He co-wrote Bob Gibson’s autobiography, and wrote books with Mickey Mantle, Whitey Ford, Ken Griffey Sr., Jim Kaat, Gary Carter, Bud Harrelson, Howie Rose and Tim McCarver. His last book was in 2013 on the Yankees’ Core Four.

December 14 Radio History


In 1877...Ernst Werner von Siemens patents the first loudspeaker


In 1908...actor/comedian Morey Amsterdam was born in Chicago.  While he was featured on NBC Radio’s weekend Monitor service in the 50’s & 60’s, and had his own show in the earliest days of the TV era, he will always be best remembered as Buddy Sorrell on The Dick Van Dyke Show.  He died after a heart attack Oct 27, 1996 at age 87.


In 1942...New York City personality, Dave Herman, was born. Most notably heard on WNEW and WXRK.

Dave Herman
Herman began his career at WHTG in Asbury Park, New Jersey, and then moved on to become WMMR's first rock DJ. His show, dubbed The Marconi Experiment, debuted on April 29, 1968. The first song played on the show was "Flying" by The Beatles. He then moved to WABC-FM, which would later become WPLJ.

Most notably, he later became the morning drive time DJ on WNEW FM, where he was the morning host from 1972 to 1982, 1986 to 1991 and then again from 1996 until the station dissolved in 1998. He was one of the station’s best-known voices.  He was included on the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame's list of notable disc jockeys.

In 2013, Herman was arrested at the airport in Saint Croix, U.S. Virgin Islands, after going there from his vacation home in the area. The criminal complaint stated he expected to meet a woman and her six-year-old daughter, who he allegedly believed was being brought for a sexual encounter with him. He was charged with transportation with intent to engage in criminal sexual activity.

Herman died of an aneurysm on May 28, 2014, in Essex County Jail in Newark, NJ, while awaiting trial. He was 78.


In 1953...WWRL 105.1 FM in NYC signed on. Station is now WWPR.


In 1956...Disc jockey Alan Freed's second film, "Don't Knock The Rock," starring Freed, Alan Dale and Patricia Hardy, with performances by Little Richard, Bill Haley and His Comets, Dave Appell and the Applejacks, and the Treniers, opened in U.S. and Canadian movie theaters.


In 1959…Billboard magazine reported that in the wake of the government's payola investigations, the pay-for-play phenomenon was just about finished. One Philadelphia record distributor complained, "You can't even buy the disc jockeys lunch!"




In 1977..."Saturday Night Fever," starring John Travolta and music by the Bee Gees, premiered in New York City.




In 1984...Broadcaster Howard Cosell retired from ABC-TV's "Monday Night Football."

Howard Cosell
Cosell was widely known for his blustery, cocksure personality. Cosell said of himself, "Arrogant, pompous, obnoxious, vain, cruel, verbose, a showoff. There's no question that I'm all of those things." In its obituary for Cosell, The New York Times described Cosell's impact on American sports coverage: "He entered sports broadcasting in the mid-1950s, when the predominant style was unabashed adulation, [and] offered a brassy counterpoint that was first ridiculed, then copied until it became the dominant note of sports broadcasting."

On radio, Cosell did his show, Speaking of Sports on 77 WABC, as well as sports reports and updates for affiliated radio stations around the country; he continued his radio duties even after he became prominent on television. Cosell then became a sports anchor at WABC-TV in New York, where he served in that role from 1961 to 1974. He expanded his commentary beyond sports to a radio show entitled "Speaking of Everything".

Cosell, Ali
Cosell rose to prominence covering boxer Muhammad Ali, starting when he still fought under his birth name, Cassius Clay. The two seemed to be friends despite their very different personalities, and complemented each other in broadcasts. Cosell was one of the first sportscasters to refer to the boxer as Muhammad Ali after he changed his name and supported him when he refused to be inducted into the military.

He was diagnosed with cancer in 1991 and had surgery to remove a cancerous tumor in his chest. He also had several minor strokes, and was diagnosed with heart and kidney disease and Parkinson's. Cosell died in a New York City hospital on April 23, 1995, aged 77, of a cardiac embolism.

He was placed as number one on David J. Halberstam's list of Top 50 All Time Network Television Sports Announcers on Yahoo! Sports. The sports complex at the Hebrew University in Jerusalem is named for Howard and Emmy Cosell. In 2010, Cosell was inducted into the International Boxing Hall of Fame.


John Guedel
In 2001…Radio and television producer (The Adventures of Ozzie & Harriet, People Are Funny, You Bet Your Life) John Guedel died at age 88. According to a 1956 TV Guide story, at one point he was producing 25 half-hour radio and television shows at the same time.

His broadcasting achievements are said to include radio's first singing commercial in 1937, or at least the first one that went beyond a jingle like Jack Benny's famous ''J-E-L-L-O.'' He was also the first to present colorful characters as quiz show contestants, and the first who regularly involved the studio audience in game shows.

He then did a variety of radio work, including writing weekly dramas for a show sponsored by Forest Lawn Memorial Park, a cemetery. While researching President James A. Garfield at the public library for an episode of the show, he pulled down a nearby book on games.

He immediately made the second half of a quiz show he had been hired to produce into a game show called ''Pull Over, Neighbor.'' The first stunt on the show was shoving ice cubes in a contestant's mouth as he sang ''Smiles.''

In 1942 the show became ''People Are Funny,'' and Mr. Linkletter became master of ceremonies. It ran for 19 years on NBC, moving from radio to television in 1954.

Groucho Marx
In 1945 Mr. Guedel helped transform an afternoon variety show Mr. Linkletter had been doing in San Francisco into ''House Party,'' which ran for 25 years on CBS, moving to television in 1952.


On April 27, 1947, Guedel was producing a show sponsored by the Walgreen drugstore chain. Bob Hope and Groucho Marx were supposed to read a script, but Marx started ad-libbing, and Mr. Hope threw his script on the floor and joined in.

Guedel later asked Marx if he could be so spontaneously witty all the time. Marx responded that it would be almost impossible not to be. This resulted in ''You Bet Your Life,'' in which quiz questions were secondary to Marx's verbal jousting.

An example: When a contestant said she was from South Wales, Marx shot back: ''Did you ever meet Jonah? He lived in whales for a while.''



In 2005...Walter A. Schwartz - former GM at Musicradio 77 WABC died.

Walter A. Schwartz
He served as a Lieutenant in the Army Air Corps during World War II and again with the Air Force during the Korean War. Schwartz began his career in radio with WWJ in Detroit and then moved to New York where he became General Manager of WABC. In 1967, Wally was named President of the ABC Radio Network. During his administration, ABC adopted its unique four network programming plan which transformed the organization into the nation's largest and most profitable network.

In 1972 he was named President of ABC Television where he oversaw the ABC Television Network, ABC Sports and ABC Entertainment.  In 1975, he joined the John Blair Company as president of it's television stations and then became President and CEO of Blair Television from which he retired in 1986.


 In 2006…Ahmet Ertegun, co-founder of Atlantic Records, died after a fall at age 83.