Tuesday, May 26, 2020

Trump's Controversial Tweets Will Remain On Twitter

Twitter's Jack Dorsey
Twitter’s policy carve-out for world leaders is facing another test with President Donald Trump’s latest tweets resurrecting baseless claims that MSNBC host Joe Scarborough should be investigated for the death of his former staffer.

Earlier this month, Trump tweeted questions about when an investigation would be opened into the “Cold Case” of “Psycho Joe Scarborough.”

According to CNBC,  the unfounded accusation refers to the death in 2001 of Lori Klausutis, who was working for Scarborough when he was a Republican congressman for Florida. At the time, the medical examiner concluded Klausutis, 28, had fainted due to an undiagnosed heart condition and hit her head on the way down, finding no evidence of foul play.

Scarborough was in Washington, D.C., when Klausutis died in his district office in Fort Walton Beach, Florida.


Trump’s tweets revived a baseless theory that Scarborough was allegedly involved in Klausutis’ death. On Thursday, her widower, Timothy Klausutis, wrote to Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey requesting the company delete Trump’s tweets referencing those claims.

Twitter Inc said on Tuesday it would take no action at this time on tweets from President Trump about the 2001 death of a former congressional staff member, after her widower asked the company to remove them for furthering false claims.

In a letter to Twitter’s chief executive Jack Dorsey that was published by the New York Times, Timothy J. Klausutis asked that the company remove a tweet by the president “alluding to the repeatedly debunked falsehood that my wife was murdered by her boss, former U.S. Rep. Joe Scarborough.”

A Twitter spokeswoman said the tweets would remain.

“We are deeply sorry about the pain these statements, and the attention they are drawing, are causing the family,” the spokeswoman said in a statement when asked about the president’s tweets on Scarborough, now an MSNBC television host with whom Trump has brawled.

TWH Press Secretary Doubles Down On Press Accusations

Fox & Friends Brian Kilmeade, Kayleigh McEnany
White House press secretary Kayleigh McEnany is defending her wild rant against reporters in the briefing room from last Friday, in which she accused the press corps of wanting to see houses of worship stay closed, and blasted them for not asking questions about the Michael Flynn case.

Appearing on Fox & Friends Tuesday morning, the press secretary claimed she was not questioning the religious beliefs of the press corps when she said, “Boy, it is interesting to be in a room that desperately wants to see these churches and houses of worship stay closed.”

Comments start at the :40 Mark:


“Many of our journalists are great men and women of faith — and differing faiths whether it be the Jewish faith, Christian faith, the Muslim faith,” McEnany said. “What I was saying is I was asked 11 questions as to why churches would be allowed to reopen. It was a bit peculiar to be asked these 11 questions in a row. And for the onus and the focus to be solely to be on why churches are essential, I’ve never been asked why a liquor store was essential. So I was merely pointing that out.”

The CDC has warned of increased risk for coronavirus transmission at worship services due to the size of gatherings and difficulty to maintain social distance. Liquor stores are widely seen by health experts to pose far less risk as patrons generally have an easier time social distancing.

McEnany went on stand by her scolding of the press for not asking “the real questions” of former President Barack Obama in relation to the Michael Flynn case.

The Rundown: TWH Has A Plan B For Testing

The Trump administration has delivered a new plan for coronavirus testing to Congress that puts most of the responsibility on states, but says the federal government will provide 100 million testing swabs and 100 million tubes of viral transport media.

The plan said the states must each set up their own testing program, which will include contact tracing, and the federal government will, quote, "ensure that States have the collection supplies that they need through December 2020."

It advises states to aim to test a minimum of two percent of their populations in May and June. Congressional Democrats criticized the plan Monday, charging, "President Trump’s national testing strategy is to deny the truth that there aren’t enough tests and supplies, reject responsibility and dump the burden onto the states."

A ban on non-American travelers from Brazil coming into the country because of its high number of confirmed coronavirus cases, second only to the U.S., is going into effect late today, two days earlier than had been said on Sunday when the travel ban was announced.

California said yesterday that churches can resume holding in-person services, but the number of worshippers has to be kept to less than 100 people and they should wear masks, avoid sharing prayer books and not use collection plates.

In other developments:
  • Death Toll Over 98,000: The number of people who've died in the U.S. was more than 98,200 as of last night, according to Johns Hopkins University's count, and there were more than 1,662,000 confirmed cases.
  • NYSE Trading Floor to Reopen: The New York Stock Exchange will reopen its trading floor today (May 26th) after two months, but with restrictions. Only 25 percent of the usual number of traders will be allowed on the floor, and they must wear masks, avoid taking public transportation, and follow social distancing guidelines, with Plexiglass barriers set up to help separate them. No visitors will be allowed, and media organizations that usually broadcast from the floor aren't allowed back yet.
  • Vaccine Now May Have Lower Chance of Being Proven Effective: The University of Oxford's promising potential vaccine may now have a lower chance of being proven effective because of the success in reducing the spread of the coronavirus in the U.K. due to social distancing. Professor Adrian Hill, director of the University's Jenner Institute, told The Telegraph that what was an 80 percent chance of proving success is now down to 50 percent. The problem isn't about the vaccine itself. Instead, the issue is that the spread of the virus in the U.K. might be too low to test effectively if the vaccine protects against getting it.
➤TRUMP, BIDEN MARK MEMORIAL DAY, BIDEN'S FIRST IN-PERSON APPEARANCE IN TWO MONTHS: President Trump and former Vice President Joe Biden, the presumptive Democratic presidential nominee, both publicly marked Memorial Day on Monday, Biden in his first in-person appearance in more than two months as he's been following stay-at-home guidelines amid the pandemic.


Trump appeared at Arlington National Cemetery, where presidents usually lay a wreath on Memorial Day at the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier. Because of the pandemic, Trump touched and saluted a wreath already in place. He then went to the Fort McHenry National Monument in Baltimore and spoke there, including praising the tens of thousands of service members and National Guard members involved in the fight against the coronavirus.

Biden and his wife, Jill Biden, laid a wreath at a veterans park near his Delaware home, a visit that wasn't announced ahead of time. Both were wearing black face masks. He said afterward, "Never forget the sacrifices that these men and women made. Never, ever forget." Biden has been campaigning from home, doing TV and online appearances.


➤POLICE MANHUNT FOR UCONN STUDENT IN KILLING OF TWO PEOPLE: Police are looking for a 23-year-old University of Connecticut student in connection with the murder of two people. Peter Manfredonia is suspected of killing a 62-year-old man, Ted DeMers, with what police described as a "edged weapon" and seriously injuring a neighbor who tried to help on Friday in the town of Willington. DeMers was driving down a street when he saw a man suspected of being Manfredonia on foot wearing a motorcycle helmet and stopped to speak to him. The man got into his car and fatally attacked him. Manfredonia is also suspected in the killing on Sunday of a 23-year-old male acquaintance, Nicholas J. Eisle, who was found dead in his home in the town of Derby. He then kidnapped another person, stole a car from Eisle's home, and drove to New Jersey, where he freed the captive and abandoned the vehicle. He fled to Pennsylvania, and he was last seen on foot in East Stroudsburg. An attorney for Manfredonia's family, Michael Dolan, last night urged him to turn himself in, saying, "It's time to surrender. You have your parents and your sisters and your family's entire support. So Peter, from your parents, who love you, please turn yourself in." Dolan also revealed that Manfredonia has struggled with mental issues over the past several years and had sought help.

➤EWING OUT OF HOSPITAL, RECOVERING FROM CORONAVIRUS: NBA great Patrick Ewing, who's currently Georgetown's basketball coach, is out of the hospital and now recovering at home from the coronavirus, his son, Patrick Ewing Jr., said Monday. The 57-year-old Ewing announced Friday that he'd tested positive for the virus and was being treated at a hospital. The Hall of Famer was taken by the New York Knicks with the Number 1 overall pick in the 1985 draft, and went on to play 17 seasons in the NBA, 15 of them with the Knicks. He has been head coach at Georgetown, his alma mater, since 2017.

➤BUSCH WINS XFINITY SERIES RACE IN CHARLOTTE: Kyle Busch drove past Austin Cindric on the final lap of overtime last night for an Xfinity Series win at Charlotte Motor Speedway in North Carolina, the 97th of his career. Busch has won 210 races across NASCAR’s top three series, the most of any driver. As with all NASCAR races since it returned from its 10-week coronavirus shutdown on May 17th, there were no fans in the stands.

➤NHL EYEING EARLY JUNE FOR 'PHASE 2' OF RESTART, ALLOWING SMALL GROUP WORKOUTS: The NHL said in a memo Monday that it's aiming to begin Phase 2 of return to play from its coronavirus shutdown in early June, which will allow practice rinks to open and players to have small, voluntary group workouts. The on-ice sessions would be noncontact and involve up to six players, who'd be expected to main physical distancing at all time. They wouldn't have to wear masks while on the ice or excercising. Phase 1, which is ongoing, advised players to self-quarantine. The final two phases, which would be the opening of training camps and a return to play, weren't mentioned in the memo.

➤NEARLY SIX MILLION WATCH WOODS-MANNING VS. MICKELSON-BRADY GOLF MATCH: Turner Sports announced Monday that an average of 5.8 million people across four of its networks -- TNT, TBS, truTV and HLN -- watched the charity golf match Sunday that teamed up golf and NFL greats Tiger Woods, Phil Mickelson, Peyton Manning and Tom Brady, making it the most-watched golf telecast in cable TV history. The team of Woods and Manning beat Mickelson and Brady in The Match: Champions for Charity, which raised $20 million for coronavirus relief. The PGA Tour is set to return in two weeks.

FM Music Listeners Want To Know About Pandemic Hot Spots

NuVoodoo Research has been tracking concern about the coronavirus since March 9 – more than two months. Each day sees a sample of at least 2,000 persons 16-54 nationwide. It’s a ton of data. Their team updates the tracking information on our website every day and is adding new results all the time. You can view the latest or subscribe for updates at nuvoodoo.com/covid-19-media-data/.


Even with concern levels starting to slowly decline in parts of the country, many people remain vigilant about the potential for new outbreaks. The data still shows over 60% of music radio listeners still want regular updates on the coronavirus situation where they live. Of course, it’s critical to ensure that the information is fresh and relevant. Information that’s even one day old or feels irrelevant to listeners will satisfy no one and end up inviting tune out – definitely NOT what you want.

NuVoodoo continues to ask respondents what coronavirus-related programming they want on the FM music stations they listen to most. We weren’t surprised by the results from nearly 2,200 respondents, ages 16-54 last week that placed the potential for breaking news about medical advancements at the top of the ranking. And, of course, there’s on-going concern for the possibility of fresh outbreaks.


Given a choice of which expert to get voicers from, these data show stronger interest in announcements from medical experts than government officials. At the same time, music that will make them feel good is in strong demand – along with commercial-free hours. Finally, NuVoodoo notes very strong interest in contesting to help pay bills; reminiscent of what we’d seen in our initial NuVoodoo Ratings Prospects Studies back in 2011, as people were still digging out from the Great Recession.

To get you caught up with the playbook that they see evolving, NuVoodoo has updated the information from their April webinar and posted a fresh video that you can find at nuvoodoo.com/webinars – you’ll get all the important information in about 15 minutes.

TV Ratings: ABC Evening News On Top For Season, May Sweeps

For the first time in 24 years, “World News Tonight”  is  America’s  No. 1 newscast in Total Viewers, Adults 25-54 and Adults 18-49 during the broadcast season —since the 1995-1996 season.

During the 2019-20 broadcast season, “World News Tonight” (9.648 million, 1.957 million and 1.331 million) outperformed NBC Nightly News” (8.586 million, 1.886 million and 1.318 million) by 1.062 million Total Viewers, by 71,000 Adults 25-54 and by 13,000 Adults 18-49, based on Most Current Data from Nielsen Media Research.

According to an ABC press release, “World News Tonight” ranked No. 1 in Total Viewers for the 4th season in a row, doubling its lead over “NBC Nightly News” from last season  (+100% - 1.062 million vs. 532,000) to its largest season lead in 24 years—since the 1995-1996 season. “World News Tonight”  beat “CBS Evening News” (6.074 million) by 3.574 million, posting its biggest Total Viewer season advantage in at least 28 years  (since at least the start of Nielsen electronic database in the 1991-1992 season).

In addition, “World News Tonight” finished No. 1 for the season in Adults 25-54, leading NBC by its largest news demo margin (+71,000 - 1.957 million vs. 1.886 million) in 24 years and taking the top spot for the first time in 12 years—since the 1995-1996 and the 2007-2008 seasons, respectively. “World News Tonight” also outdelivered NBC in Adults 18-49 (+13,000 - 1.331 million vs. 1.318 million) for the first time in 24 years—since the 1995-1996 season.

World News Tonight” also improved in Total Viewers  (+814,000/+9% - 9.648 million vs. 8.834 million),  Adults 25-54  (+145,000/+8% - 1.957 million vs. 1.812 million)  and Adults 18-49  (+115,000/+9% - 1.331 million vs. 1.216 million)  compared to the 2018-19 season.   In fact, “World News Tonight” saw its most-watched season in 16 years and strongest Adults 25-54 performance in 5 years –  since the 2003-2004 and the 2014-2015 seasons, respectively.


May 2020 Sweep

ABC News’ “World News Tonight with David Muir” won the May 2020 sweep across the board for the first time in 13 years (since May 2007): Total Viewers (10.221 million), Adults 25-54 (2.026 million) and Adults 18-49 (1.361 million), based on Most Current Data from Nielsen Media Research. “World News Tonight’s” win marked its 15th consecutive sweep victory in Total Viewers and 6th straight win in Adults 25-54 – since November 2016 and February 2019, respectively

“World News Tonight” beat “NBC Nightly News” (9.176 million and 1.941 million, respectively) increasing its May sweep leads year to year in Total Viewers (+29% - 1.045 million vs. 810,000) and Adults 25-54 (+4150% - 85,000 vs. 2,000) to its largest during the month in 24 years and 13 years, respectively – since May 1996 and May 2007, respectively. In addition, “World News Tonight” won the May sweep in Adults 18-49 for the first time in 5 years, leading NBC by its largest lead in 13 years (+35,000 – 1.361 vs. 1.326 million) – since May 2015 and May 2007, respectively.

“World News Tonight” posted gains on the year-ago May sweep (8.285 million, 1.602 million and 1.074 million, respectively for May 2019) in Total Viewers (+23%/+1.936 million), Adults 25-54 (+26%/+424,000) and Adults 18-49 (+27%/+287,000). “World News Tonight” turned on its largest overall audience during a May sweep in 24 years and strongest Adults 25-54 performance in 9 years – since May 1996 and May 2011, respectively.

For the 3rd sweep in a row, “World News Tonight” grew from the previous sweep (10.221 million, 2.026 million and 1.361 million, respectively for November 2019) in Total Viewers (+11%/+1.003 million), Adults 25-54 (+12%/+212,000) and Adults 18-49 (+15%/+176,000), drawing its largest overall sweep audience in over 16 years – since February 2004.

“World News” beat CBS’ “Evening News” (6.401 million, 1.131 million and 790,000, respectively) by 3.820 million Total Viewers, by 895,000 Adults 25-54 and by 571,000 Adults 18-49 during the May 2020 sweep, seeing its largest overall viewer advantage during any sweep in at least 28 years  (since at least the start of Nielsen electronic database in the 1991-1992 season).

Biden's Radio Comments On Blackness Simmered During Weekend

Charlamagne tha God — WWPR 105.1 FM NYC radio host to whom presumptive Democratic nominee Joe Biden notoriously said Friday, “If you have a problem figuring out whether you’re voting for me or Trump, then you ain’t black” — warned that Democrats will face a “voter depression” problem in November, thanks to their likely presidential nominee. According to PJ Media, he said the best apology is pro-black policies and it’s time for black voters to put the burden on Democrats to win their votes, not take them for granted.

“Well, on top of possible Russian interference and voter suppression, Dems have to worry about voter depression, and that’s people staying home on Election Day because they just aren’t enthused by the candidate,” Charlamagne tha God told MSNBC host Joy Reid. “You can’t act like this is most important election ever, but run a campaign from your basement, and you know, not make some real policy commitments to the black community, you know, and not listen to some of the demands that the black community [is] making.”



Charlamagne tha God argued that Biden “has to do something that energizes his campaign, that brings some actual enthusiasm to his campaign, so those 4.4 million Obama voters who stayed home in 2016, more than a third of them black, you know, don’t do that this year. You got to make them come out.”

The “you ain’t black” comment may become a serious deterrent to bolstering black turnout, however. Biden rushed to offer a halfhearted apology, but Charlamagne tha God said he didn’t put much stock in it.

“I don’t even care about the words, and the lip service and the apology is cool, but the best apology is actually a black agenda. They got to make some real policy commitments to black people,” he said.

Meanwhile, Fox News reports CNN, which often dedicates wall-to-wall coverage for any latest controversy from President Trump, virtually avoided covering Joe Biden's "you ain't black" remarks Friday morning that sparked backlash throughout the day.

Fox News and MSNBC covered the dust-up throughout the day. ABC News, CBS News and NBC News all addressed the controversy on their evening programs.

However, CNN's lack of coverage throughout the day was called out by critics.


George Washington University law professor Jonathan Turley pointed out the "crickets" coming from CNN. In the afternoon, Republican National Committee (RNC) Chairwoman Ronna McDaniel called out the network for going hours without mentioning the controversy.

And the Wasington Times reports Charlamagne tha God, whose real name is Lenard Larry McKelvey, said elevating Minnesota Senator Amy Klobuchar onto the Democratic presidential ticket would be akin to committing political "suicide."

"I think that would be suicide for Joe Biden's campaign. If he did that, especially at this moment, after the comments that he made ... He would be a fool not to put a black woman as his running mate."

Klobuchar, who is considered a top contender in the race to join Biden on the 2020 ticket, is currently being vetted by Biden's campaign team along with several other high-profile female Democrats.

On Sunday, President Donald Trump suggested that presumptive Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden has lost his mental acuity, saying he “doesn’t know he’s alive.”

“Biden doesn’t know, I mean, he doesn’t know he’s alive,” Trump told 'Full Measure' hosted by Sharyl Attkinsson on WJLA-TV in D-C.

NYC Radio: WFAN Tweaks Line-Up


Entercom's Sports WFAN 660 AM / 101.9 FM is tweaking its on-air line-up, effiective today.

Jerry Recco and Al Dukes will be heard from 5 to 6 a.m. and Mike Francesa from 6 to 7 p.m. as part of a revised lineup for WFAN effective May 26.  The 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. portion of the daily lineup will be unchanged.

Newsday reports Mark Chernoff, senior vice president for Entercom New York, the parent company of WFAN, said the idea was to provide listeners with "a sense of normalcy and comfort" from familiar voices during the COVID-19 interruption of most live sports.

"By extending the programming time of our trusted hosts, we aim to provide fans with more of the compelling sports and entertainment content they want as they navigate the changes and await the return of live events," Chernoff said in a statement.


Recco and Dukes had their show expanded from 20 minutes to an hour, and Francesa from 30 minutes to an hour.

As part of the new weekday lineup John Jastremski will be heard from 7 to 11 p.m., Steve Somers from 11 p.m. to 3 a.m. and Amy Lawrence from 3 to 5 a.m.

As a result, Francesa’s 5 to 6 p.m. hour, which has been heard exclusively on Radio.com since January, will go on hiatus.

The changes – and the others on the station – will be in place through June, in hopes that the Yankees return to action in July, allowing the station returns to its normal routine.

Francesa said he told the station he preferred to start his show on WFAN, so it was agreed that he would appear from 6 to 7 p.m. on both WFAN and Radio.com until live sports return in earnest.

He will continue to do his Sunday morning show, heard on both WFAN and CBS Sports Radio, until July.

San Diego Radio: The Mightier 1090 Hopes To Return In July

The return of radio station XEPRS 1090 AM, already rebranded as “The Mightier 1090,” could occur as soon as the Fourth of July to coincide with the resumption of Major League Baseball, according to advertising agency president Bill Hagen, the station’s major investor.

“We would love to return to the airwaves at the same time as baseball,” Hagen told the Times of San Diego.

Previously known as “The Mighty 1090,” 1090-AM has been off the air since April 2019, after a dispute over leasing fees for the Tijuana-based signal transmitter. The Mighty 1090, a fixture in the market since its founding in 2003, was operated by Broadcast Company of the Americas, which is now out of business.

Hagen, owner of Out The Window Advertising, based in Flagstaff, AZ, said he has secured a five-year lease of the 1090-AM frequency from Andreas Bichara Assad of Interamericana de Radio in Rosarito, the Mexico-based signal tower operator.

Hagen said. “Things have taken longer than first anticipated because of the challenging circumstances in the world due to the coronavirus. But, everything is positive. We’re on track.”

Hagen said he’s been reviewing proposals for studio locations and equipment usage. He’s also said he’s been inundated with programming pitches.

“We want to be more about just sports talk 24/7,” he said. “Yes, sports will be part of the mix, but not all of it. Instead, we will also focus on lifestyle programming.”

Since word has spread about “lifestyle programming” options, Hagen said hundreds of personalities have contacted him. “There is a ton of interest in the station,” he said.

However, the station’s anchor personality, said Hagen, will be Scott Kaplan, who spent 16 years at The Mighty 1090. “Scott is the all-star of sports radio in San Diego and Southern California,” Hagen said. “We couldn’t be happier that we came to an agreement with Scott.”

The San Diego radio market currently includes two other sports-talk stations, including KWFN 97.3-FM “The Fan,” operated by Entercom Communications, and KLSD 1360-AM XTRA Fox Sports San Diego, operated by iHeart San Diego.

SiriusXM Radio: 19 Sports Stations Can Be A Challenge

When you oversee 19 sports stations, radio programming is a daily challenge. During a pandemic, it can become like throwing a no-hitter, scoring a hat trick and winning a NASCAR race all in one. according to the AP's Joe Reedy.

Just ask Steve Cohen, SiriusXM’s senior vice president for sports, whose company broadcasts everything from baseball to hockey to soccer to football to golf to, well, you get the idea.

Cohen and his team had to devise plans for the 19 sports channels SiriusXM radio produces. Some stations have kept their programming lineup in the two months since the pandemic halted sports. Other channels taped shows that ended up airing in their normal time slots. Regardless, some quick thinking for the short and long terms was needed.

“We were totally reinventing how we do things,” says Cohen, who has been in sports broadcasting for more than three decades. “We quickly had to identify which channels needed to stay live and what was most important, while taking into account the safety of our staff.

“The day everything was postponed, we knew we were going to be challenged. Our goal throughout has been what we could do to be entertaining.”

With so much uncertainty surrounding the sports world, SiriusXM’s on-air talent needed to adjust their roles. Cohen says what has pleased him most is their transition into being talk show hosts. With a base of longtime subscribers and regular callers, keeping a daily routine was important.

“They have had to talk about Netflix and what they are doing to take care of themselves. It has been great to hear that because we are all going through this together,” Cohen says.

Even though most of the hosts already were doing shows out of their homes, they had to make some adjustments with producers having to work remotely.

The Mad Dog Sports Radio and NFL Radio channels — two of SiriusXM’s most popular sports outlets — were able to run close to normal because of NFL free agency and the draft. Mad Dog Sports Radio also maintained its lineup and was able to delve into other topics throughout the sports world.

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Portland ME Radio: Kirshbaum Files Formal Complaint Against Saga

Randi Kirshbaum
Longtime Portland, ME radio personality Randi Kirshbaum has formally filed a complaint for wrongful termination after she was let go by the Portland Radio Group. Kirshbaum says she was terminated because she was fearful of returning to the office due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

Kirshbaum had worked there for 38 years, WMTW-TV8 reports.

Kirshbaum has a medical condition that heightens the danger if she gets COVID-19. It could even be fatal, she says.

Chris Forgy, senior vice president of operations at Saga Communications, which owns Portland Radio Group, said Kirshbaum was not fired, but rather laid off after she rejected a lesser position to do her radio show from home at lesser pay.

In addition to her on-air shifts for country station WPOR 101.9 and adult-alternative station 98.9 WCLZ 98.9, Kirshbaum was the brand manager for WMGX Coast 93.1.

Forgy claims Kirshbaum needed to be inside the building to perform her job adequately.

"We need to have leadership in the building. You don't lead from a bedroom in your slippers," Forgy said.

In a statement to WMTW, David Webbert of Johnson, Webbert & Young, LLP said he is representing Kirshbaum, calling Forgy's position "corporate arrogance at its worst."

Webbert added "Saga is wrong to think it can force an employee to risk her life on its say so even when her doctor disagrees and it has no medical expert at all. Saga is wrong to think that the Maine’s Whistleblower’s Protection Act and the Maine Human Rights Act and the federal Americans With Disabilities Act don’t apply to it. Saga think they are above the law and that workers like Randi have no rights unless Saga agrees. And they are wrong about that. Employees in Maine do have basic human rights, including the right not to die because their employer want them to do something that is unsafe."

Report: Spotify, Amazon, Apple Betting Big On Podcasts


If there was any remaining doubt that Spotify is extremely serious about podcasts, last week the Swedish streaming company that already spent more than half a billion dollars in the past two years to acquire Gimlet Media, Anchor, Parcast, and The Ringer added an exclusive deal with Joe Rogan reportedly worth $100 million, according to Daniel Roberts at Yahoo Finance.

According to Edison Research’s 2020 Infinite Dial report, 37% of the U.S. population now listens to a podcast at least once a month, or 104 million people. That’s a large number, though not enormous, and the number of weekly podcast listeners is far lower: 68 million. Although the biggest podcasts have laundry lists of brand sponsors (Rogan’s include 23andme, Blue Apron, Square’s Cash App, Casper, Dollar Shave Club, Postmates and Quibi), the industry still generates less than $1 billion in ad sales per year.

But look at the growth rate, writes Roberts.   The number of monthly podcast listeners jumped 16% in the last year. And the number has more than doubled since 2015. Meanwhile, weekly listeners are extremely engaged: the average weekly listener listens to six podcasts per week. And the demographics are squarely in the sweet spot advertisers want: half of monthly podcast listeners are between ages 12 and 34.

Edison’s report also notes that 169 million Americans listen to some form of “online audio” each week, a much larger number than the weekly or monthly podcast listeners, and podcast bulls are banking that many of those “online audio” listeners (think music streaming, music videos on YouTube, or streaming radio) will become podcast listeners.

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Radio, TV Host Larry King Signs $5M Podcast Deal


86-year-old Larry King, whose career has spanned more than six decades in radio and TV, is set to host “The Millionth Question,” an entertainment and celebrity interview podcast, reports Variety.

Targeted for a mid-June debut, the hour-long podcast will feature guests across pop culture, sports, music and comedy. The podcast’s title is a nod to King’s lengthy track record as an interviewer: The ex-CNN host estimates he’s conducted more than 60,000 interviews.

“The chance to take [the podcast interview show] beyond the world of politics is intriguing to me,” King told Variety. He said he had a stroke last year, “but I’m OK now – as long as I’m alert and inquisitive, why not?”

King is teaming up to launch the podcast with Chance King (Larry’s 21-year-old son with his seventh wife, Shawn Southwick) and former variety-theater impresario Jeff Beacher under the duo’s newly formed 4Forty4 Media banner. “I jumped at the chance when Jeff and Chance approached me,” Larry King said.

King is guaranteed $5 million under a multiyear contract with 4Forty4, according to Beacher, who declined to go into specifics of how the deal is structured. Produced by Beacher and Chance King, “The Millionth Question” is slated for an initial 11-episode run.

One of the first guests on “Millionth Question” will be Mariah Carey (a pal of Beacher’s), according to King; however, a rep for Carey said she is not confirmed to participate. “We’ll go after celebrities of all kinds, including in this pandemic,” said King, mentioning his “old friend” Dr. Anthony Fauci, who’s become a household name during the COVID-19 crisis.

Amazon’s Audible To Chase Spotify in Podcasts


In recent months, Audible, the audiobook service owned by Amazon.com Inc., has been meeting with talent agencies and producers to discuss acquiring potential new podcast projects—or, in the terminology that Audible prefers, “Audible Originals.”

Bloomberg reports Audible is offering anywhere from a few hundred thousand dollars to a few million dollars per show, according to people familiar with the matter, more than every competitor except Spotify Technology SA.

So far, Audible has already purchased shows from documentary producer John Battsek, as well as from comedians Kevin Hart and Tiffany Haddish. The acquisitions by the dominant audiobook service in the U.S. are part of a new, multimillion-dollar shopping spree, designed to establish Audible as a more enticing destination for podcast fans and to fend off growing audio-storytelling competition, particularly from Spotify. 

Audible has been funding original series for years now, but after starting with programs from well-known authors, the company is now prioritizing celebrity hosts and shows that can help broaden its audience beyond the avid audiobook listener.

“People aren’t listening to podcasts on Audible, and Amazon wants them to,” said Donald Albright, who runs Tenderfoot.TV, a boutique podcasting company that has done business with Audible in the past.

Audible is also considering changes to its business model. Under the current system, each month subscribers pay $14.95 and receive credits for one book and two original shows. Now the company is debating selling original shows individually so that customers don’t need to be subscribers to listen, said the people, who asked not to be identified while discussing terms of private business deals. Audible has also explored the possibility of rolling out a lower-priced plan that would offer access to originals but not books. None of these plans have been set, and the company declined to comment for this story.

Audible’s big push into the booming audio genre has confused some producers and podcast networks because it is happening at the same time that Amazon Music, a separate division of the e-commerce giant, is also ramping up its investment in podcasts.

Amazon Music will add podcasts to its app in the coming months, according to people familiar with the matter. Amazon has been talking with producers and networks about hosting their shows within its app, though they have yet to finalize many deals. Amazon Music is the third- or fourth-largest paid music service, trailing Spotify, Apple Inc.’s Apple Music and, depending on the metric, Alphabet Inc.’s YouTube Music. The service has been popular among people with smart speakers that rely on Amazon’s voice assistant Alexa and among an older, less urban demographic than the market leaders. A spokesperson for Amazon Music declined to comment.

Flawed Data Hampers Hi-Speed Internet Network

Spurred by the coronavirus pandemic, federal policy makers are pushing to spend billions of dollars to close gaps in America’s high-speed internet network.

But the Wall Street Journal reports, there is one big obstacle: Government officials say they don’t have a clear picture of where service gaps exist, meaning parts of the country will be left out when it is time to distribute the funds.

While the Federal Communications Commission estimates more than 94% of Americans—or about 309 million people—have access to high-speed internet services, it acknowledges that number is based on flawed data from internet-service providers.

The FCC requires these companies to report that they serve a census block if they can reach even a single home or business there. That means if one of your neighbors has a broadband connection, the FCC might count your house as having broadband, too—even if the local internet-service provider can’t reach you.

Jessica Rosenworcel
Citing concerns about the data, FCC Commissioner Jessica Rosenworcel wants to delay plans to auction $16 billion to internet-service providers this October to upgrade broadband infrastructure in rural areas.

As a Democrat on the Republican-controlled commission, Rosenworcel is unlikely to prevail. FCC Chairman Ajit Pai says even with the data problems, the auction will benefit many communities and should move forward on schedule.

The flawed service data has persisted through multiple administrations. Twenty years ago, when the FCC began collecting the broadband data, it was designed as a big-picture tool for monitoring the market for voice and internet service, said Carol Mattey, a telecom consultant and former FCC official. “It was never intended at its inception to be the tool for deciding which areas got funding,” she said.

Congress passed a law earlier this year ordering the FCC to start collecting better data. But the law removed the agency’s preferred funding source for the work and didn’t appropriate new funding.

Lawmakers say they want to get the FCC the money it needs. The HEROES Act, House Democrats’ pandemic-response bill passed on May 15, would give the agency $24 million to improve broadband data. The bill would also speed up funding to some areas.

Separately, House Democrats have proposed an additional $80 billion for broadband infrastructure. The GOP-controlled Senate hasn’t taken up any of the proposals.

Not Funny: Man Arrested For Grabbing Reporter During Live Shot


A Chicago man has been arrested after physically disturbing a WGN-TV 9 reports during a live broadcast.

Gaynor Hall
According to Mediaite, WGN’s Gaynor Hall delivered a report Saturday from Shorewood, IL about the damages that the local area sustained from a recent windstorm. However, as Hall was giving the lead-in for her prepared news package, a man ran into the shot, grabbed onto Hall and shouted “f*ck her right in the pussy” at the camera.

From there, the station quickly moved into Hall’s package, and they offered an apology to viewers for the bad language. The station assured viewers that Hall was “fine,” but she spoke about her distress from the ordeal while announcing on Facebook that the man was arrested.

“It was not funny,” Hall said to the man. “You violated my personal space. You grabbed me. You scared me. Was it worth it?”

R.I.P.: William J. Small, Longtime Radio TV Broadcaster

Longtime broadcast news executive William J. Small, who led CBS News' Washington coverage during the civil rights movement, Vietnam War and Watergate and was later president of NBC News and United Press International, died Sunday, CBS News said.

Bill Small
He was 93, USAToday reports.

Small, whose career spanned from overseeing the news operation at a small radio station to testifying in Congress about press freedom, died in a New York hospital after a brief illness unrelated to the coronavirus, the network said.

During a six-decade career, Small supervised, guided and in some cases hired generations of some of the best-known reporters and anchors in television news, among them: Dan Rather, Eric Sevareid, Daniel Schorr, Connie Chung, Diane Sawyer, “60 Minutes” correspondents Ed Bradley and Lesley Stahl and “Face the Nation” anchor Bob Schieffer.

Small hired the current CBS News president, Susan Zirinsky, to her first job at the network when she was 20. She remembered Small as a “hero to journalism” and said, "every one of us carries Bill Small’s legacy with us — it’s the core to who we are as journalists.”

Small, born in 1926 in Chicago, broke into broadcasting after fighting in the Army in World War II, including stints as news director at WLS-AM in Chicago and WHAS-TV in Louisville. Less than a year after he arrived, the Kentucky station was honored in 1957 as the nation's top news operation by the organization that is now known as the Radio Television Digital News Association.

Impressed by Small's work in Louisville, CBS executives hired him in 1962 to be assistant news director of the network's Washington bureau. He was promoted to bureau director within a year and "put together a TV News bureau the likes of which Washington had never known,” reporter Roger Mudd wrote in his 2009 book, “The Place to Be: Washington, CBS, and the Glory Days of Television News.”


Early in his tenure, Small presided over the network's coverage of the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy, scrambling cameras to the White House and Capitol Hill and turning a station wagon into a makeshift broadcast truck so they could get live pictures from Vice President Lyndon Johnson’s home.

May 26 Radio History



Al Jolson - 1938
➦In 1886..iconic performer Al Jolson born Asa Yoelson (Died at age 64 - October 23, 1950) was a Russian-born American singer, comedian, and actor. At the peak of his career, he was dubbed "The World's Greatest Entertainer".  In the 1920s, Jolson was America's most famous and highest-paid entertainer.

Although best remembered today as the star of the first talking picture, The Jazz Singer (1927), he starred in a series of successful musical films during the 1930s. After the attack on Pearl Harbor, he was the first star to entertain troops overseas during World War II.

After a period of inactivity, his stardom returned with The Jolson Story (1946), for which Larry Parks played Jolson, with the singer dubbing for Parks. The formula was repeated in a sequel, Jolson Sings Again (1949). In 1950, he again became the first star to entertain GIs on active service in the Korean War, performing 42 shows in 16 days. He died weeks after returning to the U.S., partly owing to the physical exertion of performing. Defense Secretary George Marshall posthumously awarded him the Medal for Merit.

➦In 1903...Canadian radio pioneer Reginald Fessenden was granted a patent for the liquid barretter microphone.

➦In 1920...singer Peggy Lee, whose real name is Norma Delores Egstrom, was born in Jamestown, North Dakota.

She was among the few singers who can handle any type of song — pop, ballad, country, rhythm-and-blues or jazz. Benny Goodman gave her her stage name when she performed with his band from 1941 to ’43. Lee went out on her own after marrying Goodman’s guitarist, Dave Barbour. Her hit records included “Manana (mahn-YAH’-nah),” ”Fever” — a cover of Little Willie John’s r-and-b song — and ”Is That All There Is?” Peggy Lee died of a heart attack January 21st, 2002. She was 81.

Jimmie Rodgers
➦In 1933...Jimmie Rodgers, the “Father of Country Music,” died of tuberculosis in New York City at age 35, just two days after making his final recording.

He was so ill during his final recording sessions that he had to rest between takes on a cot.  Jimmie Rodgers recorded his first million-seller “T for Texas,” also known as “Blue Yodel,” in 1927, becoming country music’s first superstar. He never appeared on any major radio show or played the Grand Ole Opry. But he, Hank Williams and songwriter-publisher Fred Rose were the first to be elected to the Country Music Hall of Fame in 1961.

➦In 1940...CBS Radio first presented “Invitation to Learning”.  The 30-minute Sunday morning program that featured a discussion of great books, with Lyman Bryson as host, continued for 15 years.

Joe Kelly
➦In 1959...Chicago-based radio host Joe Kelly, who MC’d the WLS National Barn Dance & NBC’s Quiz Kids (1940-53), died at age 57.

➦In 1962...the original version of “Twist and Shout,” by the Isley Brothers, was released. The song was revived two years later by the Beatles.

➦In 1971...Don McLean was in New York to record his soon-to-be iconic signature song “American Pie.”

➦In 1989...Radio stations staged 30 seconds of silence at 7:42 AM (EST), to honor Radio.

➦In 1993...Radio dramatist, Carleton Morse, best known for "One Man's Family", died at age 91.

"One Man's Family" centered on a family in the well-to-do Sea Cliff area of San Francisco, overlooking the Golden Gate Bridge. The tribulations of its main characters, Fanny, Henry and Jack Barbour, dominated the national airwaves from the time the show began in 1932 until it went off the air in 1959 after 3,256 episodes.

He covered radio and police news for The Sacramento Union before moving to San Francisco, where he worked for several newspapers, including The Call, The Bulletin and The Chronicle. He took a writing job at NBC in 1929 and went on to became a legendary radio pioneer.

At its peak, "One Man's Family" rivaled "Amos 'n' Andy" in popularity.

Dan Daniel - WCBS-FM
➦In 1996...Dan Daniel started at Oldies WCBS 101.1 FM NYC

He started as a disc jockey at age seventeen on Armed Forces Radio with the US Navy. His first commercial job was at KXYZ in Houston in 1955 and he then worked at WDGY in Minneapolis before moving to WMCA in 1961.

His first broadcast at WMCA was on August 18, 1961. He started on the graveyard shift overnight but from 1962 to 1968 he played the top 40 hits from 4 pm to 7 pm. The station produced a survey of the current sales in New York record stores and Dandy Dan gave the countdown of the week's best sellers every Wednesday in this late afternoon slot.

From 1968 to 1970, he did the early morning drive-to-work slot before leaving WMCA after nearly nine years; his final broadcast was on 11 July 1970.

Dan was heard coast-to-coast on NBC Radio's "Monitor" in the summer of 1973.

He subsequently worked on WYNY-FM where he hosted the mid-day slot and later morning and afternoon drives. He then did a stint at WHN playing country music before returning to WYNY-FM. Finally, he moved to WCBS-FM in 1996. He retired from WCBS on December 31, 2002.

Daniel died on June 21, 2016 after falling in his home the previous day. He was 81

➦In 2010...Radio and TV personality Art Linkletter died at the age of 97.

Art Linkletter
Although he earned a degree in teaching, Linkletter worked as a radio announcer at KGB in San Diego. Radio paid better than teaching, and Linkletter directed radio programs for fairs and expositions in the mid-1930s.

In the 1940s Linkletter lived in San Francisco and worked in radio.  In the 1940s, Linkletter worked in Hollywood with John Guedel on their pioneering radio show, People Are Funny, which employed audience participation, contests and gags. The series served as a prototype for future radio and television game shows. People Are Funny became a television show in 1954 and ran until 1961.

Other early television shows Linkletter worked on included Life With Linkletter with his son Jack (1969–1970) and Hollywood Talent Scouts (1965–1966). He acted in two movies, People Are Funny (1946) and Champagne for Caesar (1950).

Linkletter declined the opportunity offered by his friend Walt Disney to build and operate the Disneyland Hotel due to Linkletter's doubts about the park's prospects. But, out of friendship for Disney, Linkletter volunteered his experience as a live program broadcaster to help organize ABC's coverage of the Disneyland opening in 1955.

with Walt Disney
Besides being an on-air host, he recruited his two co-hosts: Ronald Reagan and Bob Cummings. The park opening experience convinced Linkletter Disneyland was going to be a huge success. When Disney asked what he could do to show his gratitude for the broadcast's role in the successful launching of the park, Linkletter asked for Disneyland's camera and film concession for its first ten years, to which Disney readily agreed. This turned out to be very lucrative.  He appeared for two stints of two weeks each, as a guest host of The Tonight Show in 1962 between Jack Paar's departure and Johnny Carson's arrival as its new host.

In the 1950s, Linkletter became a major investor in and promoter of the hula hoop.

Elisabeth Harnois is 41
HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Sportscaster Brent Musburger is 81. 
  • Drummer Garry Peterson of The Guess Who is 75. 
  • Singer Stevie Nicks is 72. 
  • Actor Philip Michael Thomas (“Miami Vice”) is 71. 
  • Actress Pam Grier is 71. 
  • Country singer Hank Williams Jr. is 71. 
  • Actress Margaret Colin is 62. 
  • Singer Dave Robbins (BlackHawk) is 61. 
  • Actor Doug Hutchison (“The Green Mile”) is 60. 
  • Actress Genie Francis (“General Hospital”) is 58. 
  • Comedian Bobcat Goldthwait is 58. 
  • Singer Lenny Kravitz is 56. 
  • Actress Helena Bonham Carter is 54. 
  • Drummer Phillip Rhodes of The Gin Blossoms is 52. 
  • Actor Joseph Fiennes (“Shakespeare in Love”) is 50. 
  • Singer Joey Kibble of Take 6 is 49. 
  • “South Park” co-creator Matt Stone is 49. 
  • Singer Lauryn Hill is 45. 
  • Bassist Nathan Cochran of MercyMe is 42. 
  • Actress Elisabeth Harnois (“CSI”) is 41. 
  • Actor Hrach Titizian (“Homeland”) is 41.