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Tuesday, January 21, 2020
Prince Wrongful Death Case Dismissed
A wrongful death lawsuit filed by Prince’s family members has been quietly dismissed in recent months, suggesting family members have reached settlements with defendants including the Minnesota doctor who saw Prince in the weeks before his death and the Illinois hospital that treated him for an opioid overdose seven days before he died.
The Associated Press reports the dismissals largely close one legal chapter in the superstar’s legacy, even as efforts drag on to value and dispose of his estate once pegged at around $200 million.
Prince was 57 when he died of an accidental fentanyl overdose on April 21, 2016, without leaving a will. No one was criminally charged in his death and the source of the counterfeit pills that killed him remains unknown.
Prince’s heirs filed a wrongful death lawsuit against a slew of defendants in April 2018, alleging they had the duty and opportunity to diagnose and treat Prince’s addiction and prevent his death, but failed to do so.
Meanwhile, Prince’s siblings are still waiting to learn how much his estate is worth. Court filings several months after Prince’s death suggested the estate was worth around $200 million before taxes. More recent filings suggest the estate and Internal Revenue Service have not yet agreed on its value.
Protracted litigation isn’t unusual for big estates, even when there is a will. The fight between pop superstar Michael Jackson’s estate and the IRS over valuing his estate continues in federal tax court, even though he died in 2009.
January 21 Radio History
➦In 1919...actress/radio-TV host Jinx (Eugenia) Falkenburg was born in Barcelona Spain. She was a movie actress & popular model before & during World War II , after which she and her husband Tex McCrary were hosts of “Meet Tex and Jinx” a local radio talk show on WEAF, WNBC they conducted from Peacock Alley in New York’s Waldorf Astoria. They also hosted NBC TV’s At Home show, while she was a regular on TV’s charades show Masquerade Party. She died a month after her husband Aug 27, 2003 at age 84.
➦In 1927...the first opera broadcast on a national Radio network occured. Radio listeners in Chicago, Illinois heard music from Faust.
➦In 1935...WFI-AM in Philadelphia merged with WLIT to become WFIL.
WFIL was formed by a merger of two stations that were launched in 1922. One used the call letters WFI, the other was originally WDAR. Each was owned by a major Philadelphia department store; WFI was operated by Strawbridge and Clothier, while WDAR was run by Lit Brothers.
While operated independently of each other, the two were able to work out amicable share-time agreements (hundreds of other American stations at the time were unable to do so, and frequently engaged in "jamming wars"). Around 1924, WDAR applied for and received the custom call-sign WLIT. By the late 1920s, the two stations were working jointly on various programs, promotions, and sponsorship efforts. In 1935, the two operators agreed to merge with each department store having representation on the new board of directors.
The new call-sign became WFIL, a combination of the two previous identifiers (the fact that the new call letters were close to a phonetic spelling of "Philadelphia" was merely a happy coincidence).
➦In 1938...the legendary deejay known as Wolfman Jack was born Robert Weston Smith in Brooklyn. His unique radio style made him an icon of ’60s radio, broadcasting from XERF, then XERB in Mexico and heard throughout a major part of the U.S.; On TV he was announcer for NBC’s The Midnight Special. He died following a heart attack July 1, 1995 at age 57.
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| Wolfman Jack |
After selling encyclopedias and Fuller brushes door-to-door, Smith attended the National Academy of Broadcasting in Washington, D.C. Graduating in 1960, he began working as "Daddy Jules" at WYOU in Newport News, Virginia. In 1962, he moved to country music station KCIJ 1050 AM in Shreveport, Louisiana as the station manager and morning disc jockey, "Big Smith with the Records". He married Lucy "Lou" Lamb in 1961, and they had two children.
Disc jockey Alan Freed had played a role in the transformation of black rhythm and blues into rock and roll music, and originally called himself the "Moon Dog" after New York City street musician Moondog. Freed both adopted this name and used a recorded howl to give his early broadcasts a unique character. Smith's adaptation of the Moondog theme was to call himself Wolfman Jack and add his own sound effects. The character was based in part on the manner and style of bluesman Howlin' Wolf. It was at KCIJ that he first began to develop his famous alter ego Wolfman Jack.
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| Wolfman Jack played the role of an all-night deejay in 'American Graffiti' |
➦In 1946...“The Fat Man” began its 5-year run on ABC radio. J. Scott Smart, who played the portly detective, weighed in at 270 pounds in real life.
➦In 1978... the soundtrack of “Saturday Night Fever” reached #1 on the album charts — a position it held for the next 24 weeks. It sold over 30 million copies world wide, making it the best selling soundtrack album of all time.
➦In 1984...singer Jackie Wilson died at the age of 49. He had been in a coma since his 1975 heart attack during a concert in New Jersey. His funeral was held in Detroit.
➦In 1997...music industry legend Col. Tom Parker, the immigrant Dutch promoter who guided Elvis Presley to stardom, died in Las Vegas from complications from a stroke. He was 87.
➦In 1998...WNSR 105.1 FM NYC became WBIX “Big 105"
➦In 2005...College DJ, Dave Plotkin, from Rollins College's WPRK-FM in Winter Park, Florida, set a record for the world's longest continuous broadcast by a single DJ. He stayed on the air for 110 hours.
➦In 2006...after 18 years Bob Kingsley (below) gave up his hosting of the syndicated radio show “American Country Countdown.” He was succeeded by singer Kix Brooks of Brooks and Dunn, who is still doing it.
➦In 2010...WWRL 1600 AM dropped “Air America” progressive talk format.
➦In 2013...WRXP 94.7 FM NYC becomes Country “NashFM”, soon changing call letters to WNSH.
Monday, January 20, 2020
OH Radio: Cox Gets More Time Spin-Off Newspapers
Cox Media Group says it has been granted a 60-day extension to continue publishing daily newspapers in Dayton, Hamilton, Middletown and Springfield while looking for a new buyer for the papers, reports wvxu.com.
Apollo Global Management's Terrier Media agreed to pay $3.1-billion last February for Atlanta-based Cox Media Group, which includes WHIO-TV, Dayton's top-rated TV station; news radio WHIO-AM; country music WHKO-FM; classic hits WZLR-FM; the Dayton Daily News, Springfield News-Sun, the Journal-News in Hamilton and Middletown; and Dayton.com.
At the time, the government permitted "cross ownership" of television stations and daily newspapers in the same market. However, a Third Circuit Court of Appeals in October re-instated a 1975 Federal Communications Commission rule banning cross ownership. With the rule back in place, Terrier told the FCC in November it would reduce publishing to three days a week so they would no longer be daily newspapers.
The former Gov. James M. Cox media company has owned the Dayton Daily News and WHIO-AM for 85 years, since 1935 -- adding TV in 1949 -- and was "grandfathered in," or exempt from the rule. The new owners were not.
Cox revealed Thursday for the first time that it was under a deadline ending that day -- Jan. 16 -- "to reduce the newspapers publication from a daily print schedule to three says a week, in order to comply with a recent federal court decision."
Cox said it expects to have a buyer for its three Ohio newspapers by March 16, "a move that will provide a long-term solution," said Rob Rohr, vice president for Cox's Dayton market.
Separating the 121-year-old Dayton Daily News from the WHIO TV/radio news operation won't be easy. Dayton print, broadcast and online journalists work in the same newsroom at 1611 Main St., near the University of Dayton, and share their reporting on the various platforms. The Journal-News has an office on Cincinnati-Dayton Road in Liberty Township near Lakota East High School; the News-Sun has an office at 137 E. Main St. in Springfield.
Survey: Many Americans Love Their Fake News
NewsGuard, a media startup that rates the reliability of news sites, found a sharp increase last month in the popularity of sites that run questionable content, just as the impeachment of President Trump and the Democratic presidential race were heating up.
NewsGuard considers a site unreliable if it trafficks in faked or distorted news, fails to correct mistakes, or doesn’t disclose its political slant or reveal its owners and funders, among other criteria.
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Nearly 10 percent of the online stories followed most closely by readers in the United States in December came from such sites, a 20 percent increase from the previous month. NewGuard said the numbers indicate that the tolerance for fake news may be increasing right along with the intensity of political disputes, reports Boston.com.
NewsGuard tracks the popularity of untrustworthy news sites in four other countries — France, Italy, Germany, and the United Kingdom. Enthusiasm for these sites in the United States far outstrips that of the other countries. The British are especially resistant; news from unreliable sites made up just 1.2 percent of the most-followed stories among British Web surfers.
NewsGuard was founded in 2018 by Brill, founder of the American Lawyer magazine, and Gordon Crovitz, former publisher of The Wall Street Journal. The company uses a team of veteran journalists to evaluate the trustworthiness of Internet sites. They don’t verify individual stories, but rate the journalistic and business practices of the sites that publish them. It also checks whether the site identifies its owners and financial backers, and identifies the people who write the stories
News sites that meet a minimum standard of reliability and transparency get the NewsGuard seal of approval — a green check mark that’s visible to Internet users who install NewsGuard software in their browsers. If they visit a site NewsGuard deems unreliable, they’ll see a red check mark.
NewsGuard found that 9.4 percent of the most shared and liked stories in the United States in December came from red-checked sites. For instance, LifeNews.com, an anti-abortion site, earned a red check mark for posting claims of a link between abortion and breast cancer. According to NewsGuard research, such claims are false. But LifeNews was popular in December, with a higher engagement rate in the United States than the Chicago Tribune, the Detroit Free Press, or the Dallas Morning News.
That doesn’t necessarily mean that more people read LifeNews. It means that a higher percentage of its readers clicked the “like” button or shared stories with their Facebook friends, making it more likely that stories from this site go viral.
LifeNews.com’s editor Steven Ertelt disputed Newsguard’s findings, and asserted that multiple studies since 1957 have found an abortion-breast cancer link.
NewsGuard is finding that medical information, like politics, attracts unreliable publishers. A health food site called Healthy Food House is cited by NewsGuard for repeatedly promoting “potentially dangerous and unproven natural health remedies.” Yet the NewsGuard-NewsWhip survey found that the Healthy Food House website attracts 62 times as much engagement as the website of the Mayo Clinic, one of the nation’s top medical centers.
NBC's Peacock Expected To Be More 'Like Spotify'
Comcast NBCUniversal rolled out details of its new streaming service Peacock late Thursday, tapping its top star talent to lay out the company's grand plan to draw viewers with free subscriptions, premium NBCUniversal content and coverage of the 2020 Summer Olympic Games in Tokyo.
In the two-hour long event — presented on the famed "Saturday Night Live" stage in Studio 8H in 30 Rock — a slate of Comcast executives and celebrities like Tina Fey gave a clearer picture of exactly how the service will work and what content will be available on it when it's released in April.
The Philadelphia media conglomerate is somewhat of a latecomer to the streaming game, with Apple and Disney each rolling out their own respective services late last year. However, HBO Max — AT&T's venture into the space following its acquisition of Time Warner and its media properties like HBO and Warner Bros. — is expected this spring as well.
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| Matt Strauss |
"The channels will become more dynamic the more you use the service, like Spotify," he said.
Users will also be able to access content on-demand and with shows like "The Office," be able to access collected clips of the best of Jim's pranks and highlights of Jim and Pam's love story.
A separate section just for news will provide live, streaming coverage from NBC News' top properties including "The Today Show," CNBC and MSNBC.
The sports section will be packed with Olympics content for the 2020 games, including three daily shows called Tokyo Live, the Tokyo Daily Digest and Tokyo Tonight. The opening ceremony will be streamed live on the platform as well, ahead of its replaying during primetime on linear TV. Kids will also be able to have their own profile on the service and watch specially curated kids content.
Streaming Wars: Marketing Blitz Planned For NBC Peacock
Comcast Corp.’s NBCUniversal is planning an expansive marketing rollout for its coming streaming service, Peacock, including ads on and off its TV networks and websites, cross-promotions with launch sponsors and pay-TV companies that distribute its channels, and a major presence during its coverage of the Olympics this summer, reports The Wall Street Journal.
NBCUniversal’s spending on its Peacock campaign likely will exceed $300 million in its first year, according to a person familiar with the matter. The Wall Street Journal previously reported that NBCUniversal would spend $100 million outside of its own properties and at least double that on its own channels and platforms.
Launch sponsors, which include Unilever PLC, State Farm Mutual Automobile Insurance Co. and Target Corp., have also agreed to promote the streaming service on their websites, in their own media and in stores, the person said.
Sponsors have also committed hundreds of millions of advertising dollars long-term to Peacock, the person said.
The marketing plan for Peacock also includes NBCUniversal’s pay-TV distributors, which have agreed to promote the streaming service in their own marketing efforts, the company said.
Peacock will be available in several tiers, including two different ad-supported options. One will be free for cable customers of Comcast and Cox Communications Inc., but will require others to pay a monthly fee.
Outsted Grammys Chief Gets Security Detail
The case of Deborah Dugan’s ouster as president and chief executive of the Recording Academy has taken two dramatic twists.
The attorney representing Dugan says he has hired a security detail to guard the Los Angeles-based executive, who was placed on administrative leave this week due to "serious concerns" brought to the board of trustees' attention.
"Based upon credible and extremely disturbing information, Deborah Dugan now has 24-hour, round-the-clock security," Bryan Freedman tells The Hollywood Reporter.
Freedman, who also has represented Megyn Kelly and Gabrielle Union, says he has hired security for clients in the past, including Union, whose firing from America’s Got Talent prompted an NBC investigation. But the Dugan case marks the first time Freedman directly heard the threat himself. He says the threat was made on Friday night (Jan. 17) but declined to elaborate further about the nature of the warning or who communicated it.
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| Deborah Dugan |
In an additional twist, Champagne Billecart-Salmon has pulled out as a sponsor of the Grammy Awards, which are broadcast on CBS, and is citing the Recording Academy’s treatment of Dugan as the reason.
"I have worked with Deb Dugan for many years going back to when she was CEO of (Red)," said Geoffrey Loisel, vp Americas Champagne Billecart-Salmon. "She is a person with high ethical standards and has always been the utmost professional in our business dealings. Given what has been reported in the news reports, I feel very uncomfortable continuing to support the Grammys at this time. As a result, Champagne Billecart-Salmon is pulling its sponsorship."
Before she was placed on administrative leave on Jan. 16, Dugan filed a complaint with the Academy’s human resources department in which she raised concerns about voting and financial irregularities, excessive payments to law firms and sexual harassment within the 62-year-old institution, which is a 501(c)(6) tax exempt non-profit organization.
NYC Radio: Skip Dillard Promoted At WBLS, WLIB
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| Skip Dillard |
Graham "Skip" Dillard has served as the Operations Manager and PD for Emmis duo for over 10 years, joining then Inner City in 2008. Previously, he spent almost a year as PD of then CBS Radio's Urban WPGC-FM/Washington, DC. Before that, he was OM for Radio One's 3-station group in Detroit, PD of KBTB-FM (The Beat)/San Francisco and PD of WBLK-FM/Buffalo from 1996-2003.
Dillard's career began at Hampton University's WHOV-FM while a student. He also volunteered at North Carolina A&T State University's WNAA-FM, during the Summers.
Boston Radio: WEEI-FM MLB Red Sox Radio Team Announced
Entercom and WEEI 93.7 FM have announced the new play-by-play broadcast team for Boston Red Sox baseball games on the flagship station for the team. The WEEI Red Sox Radio broadcast team will consist of play-by-play announcer Joe Castiglione, who is entering his 38th season and veteran broadcasters Will Flemming, Sean McDonough and Lou Merloni.
“Last year we had the unique opportunity to rotate different broadcast talents throughout the season, all of whom did an amazing job,” said Mark Hannon, Regional President and Market Manager, Entercom Boston. “This year we are thrilled to have a more permanent and consistent lineup with Will, Sean, and Lou who will join Red Sox Hall of Famer Joe Castiglione to deliver a dynamic broadcast experience for Red Sox fans.”
“Joe Castiglione has been a staple of our radio broadcast for nearly three decades, even surpassing the tenure of legendary Red Sox Hall of Fame broadcaster Ned Martin (1961-1993),” said Sam Kennedy, President and Chief Executive Officer, Boston Red Sox. “We are lucky to have his steady voice take us through another Red Sox season, joined by some of the best sports analysts in the industry.”
Flemming returns for his second season with the WEEI Red Sox Radio Network. Prior to joining WEEI, Flemming served as the play-by-play voice of the Pawtucket Red Sox. Flemming also has experience calling a wide range of sports including college basketball and hockey.
Nationally renowned and Emmy Award-winning McDonough is entering his second season calling games on WEEI’s Red Sox Radio Network. The Hingham, MA native is currently a leading play-by-play voice on ESPN college football broadcasts and previously served as the play-by-play voice of Monday Night Football from 2016 to 2017, as well as the television play-by-play announcer for the Red Sox from 1988-2004.
Merloni began calling games for the WEEI Red Sox Radio Network in 2013. The Framingham, MA native played nine seasons in Major League Baseball, including six with the Red Sox. Merloni has served as a talk show host for WEEI since 2008 and currently serves as a co-host for the station’s afternoon drive show “Ordway, Merloni and Fauria,” weekday afternoons from 2:00 p.m. to 6:00 p.m. ET.
All three broadcasters will join the voice of the Red Sox, Joe Castiglione, as he enters his 38th season behind the mic. Inducted into the Red Sox Hall of Fame in 2014, Castiglione has called over 6,000 Red Sox games including four World Series championships. Castiglione was a 2020 nominee for the prestigious Ford Frick Award by the National Baseball Hall of Fame.
In addition to the main team of Castiglione, McDonough, Flemming and Merloni, broadcasters Jon “Boog” Sciambi and Dave O’ Brien will call select games.
Saginaw Radio: KCQ Tweet Ignites Response
The conversation about the lack of women on country music radio has carried on for years now, but it's particularly active last week, thanks to a tweet from WKCQ 98 KCQ Country in Saginaw, Mich..
After Variety's Chris Willman noted that he heard two songs by female artists in a row on a Los Angeles station, the KCQ Twitter account responded:
Ironically, KCQ was the one sticking its neck out. Their tweet soon racked up tons of critical comments, and eventually reached the likes of country stars Kacey Musgraves and Kelsea Ballerini.
By Thursday afternoon, KCQ had deleted their tweet. But they're only part of the reason why so many are weighing in today on women in country music.
On Wednesday night, TBS' "Full Frontal with Samantha Bee" did a segment on the topic:
After Variety's Chris Willman noted that he heard two songs by female artists in a row on a Los Angeles station, the KCQ Twitter account responded:
Ironically, KCQ was the one sticking its neck out. Their tweet soon racked up tons of critical comments, and eventually reached the likes of country stars Kacey Musgraves and Kelsea Ballerini.
By Thursday afternoon, KCQ had deleted their tweet. But they're only part of the reason why so many are weighing in today on women in country music.
On Wednesday night, TBS' "Full Frontal with Samantha Bee" did a segment on the topic:
Omaha Radio: KQKQ Launches All-Female Morning Show
NRG Media has launched today an all-female morning show on KQKQ-FM in Council Bluffs, Iowa.
The new show "SWEET 98.5 Mornings with Nikki & Laura" will feature existing morning host Nikki Oswald and afternoon drive time personality Laura Blenkush. It marks the only all-female duo morning show in Omaha.
Jay Michaels, Program Director for SWEET 98.5 commented, "Taking two of our highly talented personalities, and pairing them together for an all-female morning show is the obvious move when targeting women".
Nikki joined SWEET 98.5 in the fall of 2018, and was paired with Matt Tompkins who has recently moved over to NRG's THE NEW 101.9 The KEG for his own morning show. Nikki began her career in Norfolk, Nebraska in 2008 where she co-hosted mornings and hosted middays on KQKX-FM, KEXL-FM and News Talk WJAG, then moved to Lincoln, Nebraska and worked for NRG Media's KFGE-FM, KBBK-FM and 1400-AM KLIN prior to joining SWEET 98.5 in Omaha.
Laura has been a programming staple at NRG Media in Omaha since starting as a part-time board operator in 2015. Laura moved into the digital department and then on-air in the summer of 2016 doing middays. Most recently, Laura was doing afternoons from 4-7p.m. on SWEET 98.5.
Shecterle commented, "This is something I've wanted to do for quite a while, and I only had to look inside the building to see the next superstar pairing. I have been in the business for over 30 years, and I feel extremely blessed to have the opportunity to give these women the keys to mornings on SWEET 98.5. It's going to be magical, and Omaha deserves to have an all-female local morning show".
Florence Radio: WYNN Adds DeDe In The Morning
CUMULUS MEDIA announces that Urban radio station WYNN 106.3 FM Florence, SC, has added DeDe in the Morning to the station’s morning lineup.
The morning show stars DeDe McGuire, with co-hosts Lady Jade, Rudy Rush and comedian Michael Shawn, and will air on WYNN Monday through Friday from 5am-10am ET, and on Saturday from 6am-10am ET.
Mike "BigMMike" Bell, WYNN Program Director and Afternoon Host, said: “We are excited to bring a fresh morning show to Florence. As the market leader, it was important that we went with a brand that can be trusted to deliver great entertainment our listeners will love. DeDe is a seasoned vet and I've been a fan of her work for years. From ‘The Mad Minute’ to offering listeners the chance at $1,000 twice each morning, DeDe in the Morning will be huge for us! We're excited to welcome the Queen of Morning Radio back to WYNN.”
The morning show stars DeDe McGuire, with co-hosts Lady Jade, Rudy Rush and comedian Michael Shawn, and will air on WYNN Monday through Friday from 5am-10am ET, and on Saturday from 6am-10am ET.
Mike "BigMMike" Bell, WYNN Program Director and Afternoon Host, said: “We are excited to bring a fresh morning show to Florence. As the market leader, it was important that we went with a brand that can be trusted to deliver great entertainment our listeners will love. DeDe is a seasoned vet and I've been a fan of her work for years. From ‘The Mad Minute’ to offering listeners the chance at $1,000 twice each morning, DeDe in the Morning will be huge for us! We're excited to welcome the Queen of Morning Radio back to WYNN.”Myrtle Beach Radio: WDAI Adds The Breakfast Club
CUMULUS MEDIA announces that Myrtle Beach, SC, radio station WDAI 98.5 KissFM has added The Breakfast Club to the station’s morning lineup.
The highly rated morning show will air on WDAI Monday through Friday from 6am-10am ET, and on Saturday from 10am-1pm ET.
The Breakfast Club stars South Carolina native Charlamagne Tha God, current host of MTV2’s Uncommon Sense & Guy Code; Angela Yee, creator and host of Angela Yee’s Lip Service; and DJ Envy, legendary mixtape master and world-renowned DJ. Each morning, fans of The Breakfast Club tune in to hear DJ Envy, Angela Yee and Charlamagne Tha God’s unrivaled interviews and conversations with celebrities, hip-hop artists and newsmakers such as Kanye West, Hillary Clinton, Jay Z, and Kevin Hart, plus entertainment news and fresh music mixes, along with their signature blend of honesty and humor.
Launched in December 2010, The Breakfast Club was named the No. 1 radio program in the nation by “The Source” magazine. It is also widely regarded as one of the most informative and entertaining morning shows today
Mike "BigMMike" Bell, WDAI-FM Program Director and Afternoon Host, said: “We are excited to bring The Breakfast Club to The Grand Strand. As Myrtle Beach's source for Hip Hop and R&B, what better way to enter a new era than with the World’s Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club? From Yee's Rumors to the team’s groundbreaking interviews, The Breakfast Club has become a force to be reckoned with in today's urban culture. We are ready to wake up Myrtle Beach with Envy, Charlamagne and Yee.”
The highly rated morning show will air on WDAI Monday through Friday from 6am-10am ET, and on Saturday from 10am-1pm ET.
The Breakfast Club stars South Carolina native Charlamagne Tha God, current host of MTV2’s Uncommon Sense & Guy Code; Angela Yee, creator and host of Angela Yee’s Lip Service; and DJ Envy, legendary mixtape master and world-renowned DJ. Each morning, fans of The Breakfast Club tune in to hear DJ Envy, Angela Yee and Charlamagne Tha God’s unrivaled interviews and conversations with celebrities, hip-hop artists and newsmakers such as Kanye West, Hillary Clinton, Jay Z, and Kevin Hart, plus entertainment news and fresh music mixes, along with their signature blend of honesty and humor.
Launched in December 2010, The Breakfast Club was named the No. 1 radio program in the nation by “The Source” magazine. It is also widely regarded as one of the most informative and entertaining morning shows today
Mike "BigMMike" Bell, WDAI-FM Program Director and Afternoon Host, said: “We are excited to bring The Breakfast Club to The Grand Strand. As Myrtle Beach's source for Hip Hop and R&B, what better way to enter a new era than with the World’s Most Dangerous Morning Show, The Breakfast Club? From Yee's Rumors to the team’s groundbreaking interviews, The Breakfast Club has become a force to be reckoned with in today's urban culture. We are ready to wake up Myrtle Beach with Envy, Charlamagne and Yee.”
Analysts Expect Growth Report From Netflix
by Willem Roper, Statista
This week, Netflix will report their Q4 earnings and total annual growth, with the company expecting a rise of 50 cents per share as original content and high subscription rates propel the video service into the new decade.
A growth of 50 cents per share also implies Netflix had a year-over-year growth of 70 percent, beating many estimates.
2019 was filled with new video subscription-based services flooding the market, with big corporations like Disney and Apple carving out their spot to compete with established platforms like Hulu, Amazon Prime and Netflix. Subscription rates have remained steady for most platforms, but many experts believe Netflix’s spot at the top will be at risk in the coming years.
Cracks in Netflix’s dominance are still expected to show with the Q4 earnings announcement. While the total subscriber rate continues to increase, the addition of paid subscribers is projected to be much lower than a year ago. New streaming competitors like Disney+ have also experienced unprecedented growth in their first months of launch, with the Disney app being one of the most downloaded apps of 2019.
For now, Netflix remains the company to beat by a wide margin. According to Statista’s Global Consumer Survey, 85 percent of respondents in the U.S. who pay for digital video content stated they pay for a Netflix subscription. The next closest service was Amazon Prime, trailing Netflix by a large 20 percent.
You will find more infographics at Statista
2020 will be an interesting year for Netflix, where the company can show investors it has either permanently solidified itself as the top video service for years to come or will succumb to larger competitors.
This week, Netflix will report their Q4 earnings and total annual growth, with the company expecting a rise of 50 cents per share as original content and high subscription rates propel the video service into the new decade.
A growth of 50 cents per share also implies Netflix had a year-over-year growth of 70 percent, beating many estimates.
2019 was filled with new video subscription-based services flooding the market, with big corporations like Disney and Apple carving out their spot to compete with established platforms like Hulu, Amazon Prime and Netflix. Subscription rates have remained steady for most platforms, but many experts believe Netflix’s spot at the top will be at risk in the coming years.
Cracks in Netflix’s dominance are still expected to show with the Q4 earnings announcement. While the total subscriber rate continues to increase, the addition of paid subscribers is projected to be much lower than a year ago. New streaming competitors like Disney+ have also experienced unprecedented growth in their first months of launch, with the Disney app being one of the most downloaded apps of 2019.
For now, Netflix remains the company to beat by a wide margin. According to Statista’s Global Consumer Survey, 85 percent of respondents in the U.S. who pay for digital video content stated they pay for a Netflix subscription. The next closest service was Amazon Prime, trailing Netflix by a large 20 percent.
You will find more infographics at Statista
2020 will be an interesting year for Netflix, where the company can show investors it has either permanently solidified itself as the top video service for years to come or will succumb to larger competitors.
Report: Hank Azaria To Quit Voicing Apu on ‘The Simpsons'
Hank Azaria says he has no plans to continue voicing the character of Apu on “The Simpsons,” according to an industry blog. But that isn’t to say the Indian immigrant convenience store owner Azaria brought alive for 30 years won’t live on.
Producers and Fox Broadcasting Co. wouldn’t confirm to The Associated Press Azaria’s exit or an end to Apu, a recurring character that has drawn criticism for reinforcing racial stereotypes. There was no immediate reply Saturday from Azaria’s publicist.
The actor, who is white, indicated Friday to slashfilm.com that there was no resistance to phasing out his voice.
“We all made the decision together,” Azaria said. “We all agreed on it. We all feel like it’s the right thing and (feel) good about it.”
Apu Nahasapeemapetilon runs the Kwik-E-Mart, a popular convenience store in the animated sitcom’s Springfield. Apu is known for his catchphrase, “Thank you, come again.” Azaria’s first turn as Apu came in the first season’s episode “The Telltale Head” in 1990.
Azaria speculated that among options going forward is transitioning Apu’s voice to an Indian actor.
Country Music Stars Raise Millions For St. Jude
Country music stars Lady Antebellum and Brad Paisley joined St. Jude Children's Research Hospital on Saturday to celebrate the 31st anniversary of its Country Cares for St. Jude Kids radio fundraiser that has raised more than $850 million, reports Fox Business Network.
Country music group Lady Antebellum has worked with St. Jude for more than 10 years and received the hospital's 2020 Randy Owens Angel Among Us Award.
"As parents ourselves, being an ambassador for St. Jude over the years has been one of the most gratifying experiences we've had in our career," Lady Antebellum's Hillary Scott said in a statement.
"We've been all around the country and have seen firsthand the important impact St. Jude has on children and families and the heartfelt community they've created. This is one of the highest honors we could receive and we are so thankful to contribute even a tiny part in the amazing efforts made by St. Jude."
Lady Antebellum co-hosted the first St. Jude Presents: Curated to bring together some of the biggest names in music and raise more than $650,000 for the hospital in 2019.
Paisley, who received the award in 2018, performed on Saturday with St. Jude patient and cancer survivor Addie Pratt.
"I can't even put into words how amazing this night has been. Thank you Brad Paisley [and] the country music community for everything you've done for St. Jude," Pratt wrote on Instagram after the event.
Pratt was diagnosed with leukemia during her freshman year of high school, and she's now living cancer-free and attending Ole Miss, WTVA reported. She and Paisley performed "Alive Right Now," a song he wrote about the kids of St. Jude, during his television special "Brad Paisley Thinks He's Special" in December.
January 20 Radio History
➦In 1896...legendary entertainer George Burns was born Nathan Birnbaum in New York City. After a lengthy apprenticeship in vaudeville, in 1932 George & wife Gracie became a long running hit in radio, films & then TV with The George Burns and Gracie Allen Show [“Say goodnight, Gracie.”] On Gracie’s retirement he returned to a solo act, winning an Oscar with The Sunshine Boys, followed by another hit film Oh, God! He died Mar 9, 1996 at age 100.
➦In 1920...A US Patent was for a magnetic amplifier was granted to Ernst Alexanderson. Magnetic amplifiers were important as modulation and control amplifiers in the early development of voice transmission by radio. Also, the ability to control large currents with small control power made magnetic amplifiers useful for control of lighting circuits, for stage lighting and for advertising signs. Saturable reactor amplifiers were used for control of power to industrial furnaces. Magnetic amplifiers are still used in some arc welders
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| Ernst Alexanderson |
He had been employed at General Electric for only a short time when GE received an order from Canadian-born professor and researcher Reginald Fessenden, then working for the US Weather Bureau, for a specialized alternator with much higher frequency than others in existence at that time, for use as a radio transmitter.
Fessenden had been working on the problem of transmitting sound by radio waves, and had concluded that a new type of radio transmitter was needed, a continuous wave transmitter. Designing a machine that would rotate fast enough to produce radio waves proved a formidable challenge. Alexanderson's family were convinced the huge spinning rotors would fly apart and kill him, and he set up a sandbagged bunker from which to test them.
In the summer of 1906 Mr. Alexanderson's first effort, a 50 kHz alternator, was installed in Fessenden's radio station in Brant Rock, Massachusetts. By fall its output had been improved to 500 watts and 75 kHz. On Christmas Eve, 1906, Fessenden made an experimental broadcast of Christmas music, including him playing the violin, that was heard by Navy ships and shore stations down the East Coast as far as Arlington. This is considered the first AM radio entertainment broadcast.
Alexanderson and G.E. continued improving his machine, and the Alexanderson alternator became widely used in high power very low frequency commercial and Naval wireless stations to transmit radiotelegraphy traffic at intercontinental distances, until by the 1930s it was replaced by vacuum tube transmitters.
Alexanderson was also instrumental in the development of television. The first television broadcast in the United States was to his GE Plot home at 1132 Adams Rd, Schenectady, NY, in 1927. In 1928, WRGB then W2XB was started as world's first television station. It broadcast from the General Electric facility in Schenectady, NY. It was popularly known as "WGY Television".
Over his lifetime, Mr. Alexanderson received 345 US patents, the last filed in 1968 at age 89. The inventor and engineer remained active to an advanced age, working as a consultant to GE and RCA in the 1950s. He died in 1975 and was buried at Vale Cemetery in Schenectady, New York.
➦In 1933...."The Lone Ranger" He first appeared in 1933 in a radio show conceived either by WXYZ (Detroit) radio station owner George W. Trendle and by Fran Striker, the show's writer.
The radio series proved to be a hit and spawned a series of books (largely written by Striker), an equally popular television show that ran from 1949 to 1957, comic books, and several movies. The title character was played on the radio show by George Seaton, Earle Graser, and Brace Beemer.
Clayton Moore portrayed the Lone Ranger on television, although during a contract dispute, Moore was replaced temporarily by John Hart, who wore a different style of mask. On the radio, Tonto was played by, among others, John Todd and Roland Parker; and in the television series, by Jay Silverheels, who was a Mohawk from the Six Nations Indian Reserve in Ontario, Canada.
➦In 1954... the National Negro Network was formed. Some 40 radio stations were charter members of America's first black-owned radio network founded by W. Leonard Evans, Jr. The network featured a variety of different programming, including a popular soap opera The Story of Ruby Valentine, which was based on CBS's We Love and Learn and As the Twig is Bent, and starred Juanita Hall, Ruby Dee and Terry Carter. The serial was sponsored by, among others, Philip Morris and Pet Milk. Other short-lived series included The Life of Anna Lewis with Hilda Simms, and It's A Mystery Man with Cab Calloway.
Some shows were produced by Calloway and Ethel Waters. Other fare included broadcasts of symphony concerts from black colleges, and programs hosted by black DJs at affiliate stations.
The network drew up plans for several more series, but—with the TV era exploding—fell apart within a year due to inadequate capital.
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| Peter Tripp |
His career soon suffered a massive downturn when he was involved in the payola scandal of 1960. Like several other disc jockeys (including Alan Freed) he had been playing particular records in return for gifts from record companies. Indicted only weeks after his stunt, it emerged that he had accepted $36,050 in bribes. Despite his claim that he "never took a dime from anyone", he was found guilty on a charge of commercial bribery, receiving a $500 fine and a six-month suspended sentence.
Even his wakeathon record did not endure for long. Other DJs had quickly attempted to beat it (such publicity stunts being common in radio broadcasting at the time) and Dave Hunter, in Jacksonville, Florida, soon claimed success (225 hours). Six years after Tripp's record, it was smashed by high school student Randy Gardner, who lasted 11 days.
After leaving WMGM, Tripp was unable to re-establish himself in the world of radio, drifting from KYA in San Francisco to KGFJ in Los Angeles and finally WOHO in Toledo, Ohio, before quitting the medium in 1967. Returning to L.A., he had more success working in physical fitness sales and marketing. He diversified into freelance motivational speaking, writing and stockbroking before settling into a Palm Springs, California retirement.
Overall he had spent twenty years in broadcasting: he began with WEXL in Royal Oak, Michigan, in 1947 then on to Kansas City, Missouri in 1953 where he worked for KUDL (where he adopted the nickname "The Bald Kid In The Third Row", apparently a description made by a parent upon spotting him among many rows of new-borns in a hospital shortly after his birth) and then WHB (restyling himself as "The Curly-headed Kid In The Third Row"; he was not, in reality, bald) where he pioneered the Top-40 format. It was in 1955 that he landed his ill-fated job with WMGM in New York, presenting "Your Hits of the Week".
Tripp died at the age of 73 following a stroke, leaving two sons and two daughters. His four marriages all ended in divorce
➦In 1964...the first album by The Beatles was released by the Capitol label. The LP, “Meet the Beatles”, became a huge success and was #1 on the charts within a month. The British Invasion had begun.
➦In 1965...Alan Freed, the “Father of Rock ‘n’ Roll”, died in Palm Springs, Calif., of cirrhosis of the liver at age 43. Freed was one of the first radio disc jockeys to program black music, or race music, as it was termed, for white audiences. In the 1950s, Freed, called “Moon Doggy” at WJW Radio in Cleveland, coined the phrase, “rock ‘n’ roll,” before moving to WABC in New York. He was fired by WABC for allegedly accepting payola… making him the scapegoat for what was a widespread practice. Freed, not so incidentally, died nearly penniless after the scandal was exposed.
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| Alan Freed |
He helped bridge the gap of segregation among young teenage Americans, presenting music by African-American artists (rather than cover versions by white artists) on his radio program, and arranging live concerts attended by racially mixed audiences. Freed appeared in several motion pictures as himself.
Initially interred at the Ferncliff Cemetery in Hartsdale, New York, his ashes were moved in 2002 to their present location in Cleveland, Ohio at the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. On August 1, 2014, the Hall of Fame asked Alan Freed's son, Lance Freed, to permanently remove the ashes, which he did. The Freed family later announced the ashes would be interred at Cleveland's Lake View Cemetery
➦In 1996...WPAT 93.1 FM, New York, switched from beautiful music to a English-Spanish format 'Suave'.
➦In 2000.. the FCC created LPFM‘s (Low Powered FM radio stations)., ransmitter power is limited to 100 watts, signals reaching from three to five miles.
➦In 2018...TV weatherman John Coleman, who co-founded The Weather Channel and was the original meteorologist on ABC‘s “Good Morning America” during a six-decade broadcasting career, died at age 83.
He drew anger during the later years of his career (on TV in San Diego) for his doubts that humans caused global warming, which he called a “hoax” and a “scam.”
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