Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Hunter Biden Laptop Source Slaps Twitter With $500M Defamation Suit

John Paul Mac Isaac
The computer repair shop owner tied to the New York Post’s reporting on Hunter Biden sued Twitter on Monday, claiming the tech giant defamed him by incorrectly calling him a “hacker.” The Wrap reports the owner, John Paul Mac Isaac, is seeking at least $500 million in damages.

The lawsuit, filed in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida, says Isaac was forced to close his Delaware shop after Twitter blocked the New York Post’s Hunter Biden reports in October, weeks before Election Day. Twitter claimed the initial report — which said Hunter Biden introduced his dad,  former Vice President and current President-elect Joe Biden, to a “top executive” at a Ukrainian energy company, before pressuring Ukrainian lawmakers to fire a prosecutor looking into the company a year later — was “potentially harmful” and blocked users from reading the story. (The New York Post said the report was based on a hard drive shared by Rudy Guiliani, President Trump’s attorney, containing information from a computer Hunter Biden dropped off at Isaac’s store, dubbed the Mac Shop.)

Twitter also said the report violated its rules against sharing “hacked materials” — which Isaac says unfairly and incorrectly branded him a hacker.

“The term ‘hacker’ is widely viewed as disparaging, particularly when said about someone who owns a computer repair business,” the lawsuit said. “Plaintiff is not a hacker and the information obtained from the computer does not [include] hacked materials because Plaintiff lawfully gained access to the computer, first with the permission of its owner, Biden, and then, after Biden failed to retrieve the hard drive despite Plaintiff’s requests, in accordance with the Mac Shop’s abandoned property policy.

A Twitter rep declined to comment when reached by TheWrap.

R.I.P.: Jack Rosenberg, Revered Chicago Sports Broadcaster

Jack Rosenberg
TV sports pioneer Jack Rosenberg died Sunday at Chicago’s Swedish Hospital. He was 94, reports The Chicago Tribune..

For more than 40 years was an unseen hand in WGN’s sports broadcasts.  Rosenberg played a role in shaping many of today’s coverage conventions and in building WGN’s national reputation through Cubs, White Sox, Bulls, Blackhawks, Bears and local college broadcasts.

“Rosey” — as he was known to co-workers, friends and, through on-air mentions, WGN’s audience — constantly passed to announcers such as Brickhouse, Harry Caray, Lloyd Pettit and Vince Lloyd quickly typed notecards with stats, stories, facts and trivia during games.

“The sound of his typewriter softly clicking behind Jack Brickhouse was the soundtrack of summer for generations of Cubs fans,” tweeted Bob Vorwald, WGN-9′s director of production and the author of “Cubs Forever: Memories from the Men Who Lived Them.”

The National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences’ Chicago/Midwest chapter inducted Rosenberg into its Silver Circle in 2011. WGN-AM added him to its Walk of Fame six years later.

Current Bulls radio announcer Chuck Swirsky, a former WGN-AM 720 sports director who knew Rosenberg for more than 40 years, called him “a great man” and a friend and mentor with a warm personality, exceptional people skills and tremendous wisdom.

“People often refer to Jack as the man with the typewriter in the Cubs booth, but he was so much more than that,” Swirsky said.

“Early in my career, I was struggling learning how to become a leader. I was failing miserably, and it was Jack who nurtured the process with encouragement and direction. I owe him a debt of gratitude. … He was a gentle man who was always a gentleman.”

Rosenberg, a World War II Navy veteran, began at WGN in 1954.

December 29 Radio History


➦In 1891...Thomas A. Edison patented "transmission of signals electrically" (radio).

Wendell Niles, Marilyn Monroe 1952
➦In 1904...one of the prominent announcers of big-time radio & early TV Wendell Niles was born in Twin Valley Minnesota.

Niles worked on such radio shows as The Charlotte Greenwood Show, Hedda Hopper's Hollywood, The Adventures of Philip Marlowe, The Man Called X, The Bob Hope Show, The Burns & Allen Show, The Milton Berle Show and The Chase and Sanborn Hour. On February 15, 1950, Wendell starred in the radio pilot for The Adventures of the Scarlet Cloak along with Gerald Mohr.

Wendell Niles
He began in entertainment by touring in the 1920s with his own orchestra, playing with the Dorsey Brothers and Bix Beiderbecke. In the early 1930s, Niles was an announcer at radio station KOL in Seattle. He moved to Los Angeles, California, in 1935 to join George Burns and Gracie Allen.

He and his brother, Ken, developed one of the first radio dramas, which eventually became Theatre of the Mind.

He toured with Bob Hope during World War II. Among his film credits are Knute Rockne, All American (1940) with Ronald Reagan and Hollywood or Bust (the last Martin & Lewis comedy, 1956) as himself.

Wendell Niles was the announcer for TV's "America's Show Of Surprises"... It Could Be You, and for the Hatos-Hall production Your First Impression. Niles was also the original announcer for Let's Make a Deal during that show's first season in 1963 and 1964; he was later replaced by Jay Stewart.

Niles and his brother, Ken, are the first brothers to have stars on the Hollywood Walk of Fame.

He died March 28 1994 at age 89.

➦In 1945...Sheb Wooley recorded the first commercial record made in Nashville. The song was recorded at the studios of WSM-AM and released by the Bullet label; but it would be 13 years before Wooley would finally score with a big hit (“The Purple People Eater” was #1 for six weeks in 1958.)

WSM is credited with helping shape Nashville into a recording industry capital. Because of WSM's wide reach, musical acts from all across the eastern United States came to Nashville in the early decades of the station's existence, in hopes of getting to perform on WSM.  Over time, as more acts and recording companies came to Nashville, the city became known as the center of the country music industry. Disc jockey David Cobb is credited with first referring to Nashville as "Music City USA", a designation that has since been adopted as the city's official nickname by the local tourism board.

➦In 1945...The mystery voice of "Mr. Hush" was introduced to the audience of the radio show, "Truth or Consequences", which was hosted by Ralph Edwards.

Ralph Edwards
Born in Merino, Colorado,  Edwards worked for KROW Radio in Oakland, California while he was still in high school.  Before graduating from high school in 1931, he worked his way through college at the University of California, Berkeley, earning a B.A. in English in 1935. While there, he worked at every job from janitor to producer at Oakland's KTAB, now KSFO. Failing to get a job as a high school teacher, he worked at KFRC and then hitchhiked across the country to New York, where, he said, "I ate ten-cent ($2 as of 2014),  meals and slept on park benches".

After some part-time announcing jobs, he got his big break in 1938 with a full-time job for the Columbia Broadcasting System on WABC (now WCBS-AM), where he worked with two other young announcers who would become broadcasting fixtures - Mel Allen and Andre Baruch.

It was Edwards who introduced Major Bowes every week on the Original Amateur Hour and Fred Allen on Town Hall Tonight. Edwards perfected a chuckling delivery, sounding as though he was in the midst of telling a very funny story. This "laugh in the voice" technique served him well when 20th Century Fox hired him to narrate the coming-attractions trailers for Laurel and Hardy movies. He later used the conspiratorial chuckle frequently when surprising someone on his programs.

In 1940, Edwards created the game show Truth or Consequences, which aired for 38 years on radio and television. Contestants were asked to perform (often ridiculous) stunts for prizes of cash or merchandise.


➦In 1958...the first radio broadcast from space occurred when the voice of President Dwight D. Eisenhower said, "To all mankind, America's wish for Peace on Earth & Good Will to Men Everywhere".



➦In 1963...Much to the chagrin of the disc jockeys at 50,000-watt 77WABC in New York, the 5,000-watt blowtorch known as WMCA 570 AMand its famed “Good Guys” became the first New York radio station to play the Beatles’ “I Want to Hold Your Hand”. It didn’t take long for WABC to get revenge. WABC played the record an hour later and started calling itself the “official” Beatles station (W-A-Beatle-C).

Throughout the 1960s, WMCA would continue to beat other radio stations on most Beatles' promotions, scoring firsts, causing headaches in particular for rival WABC - most notably when Capitol Records printed a photograph of the "Good Guys" line-up - on the back of a limited edition record sleeve for the single, "I Want to Hold Your Hand" (Side 2: "I Saw Her Standing There"). WMCA's Good Guys were also featured at both of the Beatles' concerts at Shea Stadium, on August 15, 1965 and on August 23, 1966.

WMCA Good Guys: Johnny Dark, Joe O'Brien, Jack Spector, B. Mitchel Reed. Harry Harrison
WABC responded in different ways, scoring a success during the Beatles' second New York visit in August 1964 - when the band stayed at the Delmonico Hotel, rousing thousands of teenage fans into a frenzy - while broadcasting from one floor above the Beatles' rooms.  WABC later went against its own music policies, promising promoter Sid Bernstein that it would play a new group he was handling before any other New York City radio station - if it could get exclusive access to the Beatles. WABC never added records "out of the box" - but it did for Sid Bernstein when it played The Young Rascals' "I Ain't Going To Eat Out My Heart Anymore" - before other radio stations.

Since WABC knew WMCA already had a relationship with the Beatles, with tapes of the group promoting the station - what could WABC do to achieve the same? In August 1965, WABC came up with what it thought was a brilliant idea - issuing "medals" called "The Order of the All-Americans" - tied to its own DJs.  The strategy was to present the medals to each of the Beatles the next time they were in New York. Everything was set. The goal was to get each Beatle to comment on the "medal" - and then to get each to say the station's call letters, "W-A-B-C." These in turn could be used in station IDs and promotions, etc. - thus matching WMCA's success at getting the Beatles to promote WMCA and its Good Guys. But WABC's plan backfired. The station got its interviews, but none of the band's members would utter WABC's call letters. According to Beatles' historian Bruce Spizer, manager Brian Epstein ordered the Beatles to stop "giving away valuable promotional spots to radio stations for free."

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAYS:
  • Jessica Andrews is 37
    Actor Inga Swenson (“Benson”) is 88. 
  • Actor Jon Voight is 82. 
  • Country singer Ed Bruce is 81. 
  • Singer Marianne Faithfull is 74. 
  • Actor Ted Danson is 73. 
  • Singer-actor Yvonne Elliman is 69. 
  • Actor Patricia Clarkson is 61. 
  • Comedian Paula Poundstone is 61. 
  • Guitarist-singer Jim Reid of The Jesus and Mary Chain is 59. 
  • Actor Michael Cudlitz (“The Walking Dead”) is 56. 
  • Singer Dexter Holland of The Offspring is 55. 
  • Actor Jason Gould is 54. 
  • News anchor Ashleigh Banfield is 53. 
  • Director Lilly Wachowski (“The Matrix”) is 53. 
  • Singer-guitarist Glen Phillips (Toad the Wet Sprocket) is 50. 
  • Actor Kevin Weisman (“Alias”) is 50. 
  • Actor Jude Law is 48. 
  • Actor Maria Dizzia (“Orange Is the New Black”) is 46. 
  • Actor Mekhi Phifer is 46. 
  • Actor Shawn Hatosy (“Reckless,” ″The Faculty”) is 45. 
  • Actor Katherine Moennig (“Ray Donovan,” “The L Word”) is 44. 
  • Actor Alison Brie (“Glow,” ″Community”) is 38. 
  • Country singer Jessica Andrews is 37. 
  • Actor Iain de Caestecker (“Marvel’s Agents of S.H.I.E.L.D.”) is 33. 
  • Actor Jane Levy (“Suburgatory”) is 31. 
  • Drummer Danny Wagner of Greta Van Fleet is 22.

Monday, December 28, 2020

NY Post Editorial Urges Trump To End The Nonsense

The Rupert Murdoch-owned conservative New York Post called on outgoing president Donald Trump to concede Sunday night, surprising readers enough that the paper trended on Twitter, reports The Wrap.

The cover of Monday’s metro edition read: “Mr. President…Stop the Insanity.” The editorial, titled “Give it up, Mr. President,” was posted online Sunday evening. It encouraged Trump, who has yet to accept the results of the 2020 election or concede that he lost to President-elect Joe Biden, to leave the White House peacefully and offered tips for how he could preserve his legacy and reputation.

The Post’s editorial board outright accused the president of cheering “for an undemocratic coup.”

It went on, citing specific examples of the “coup” and its failures by the Trump legal team, which has filed dozens of lawsuits in an effort to overturn the election. The editorial even singled out Trump lawyers and allies to criticize by name: “You had every right to investigate the election. But let’s be clear: Those efforts have found nothing. To take just two examples: Your campaign paid $3 million for a recount in two Wisconsin counties, and you lost by 87 more votes. Georgia did two recounts of the state, each time affirming Biden’s win. These ballots were counted by hand, which alone debunks the claims of a Venezuelan vote-manipulating Kraken conspiracy. Sidney Powell is a crazy person. Michael Flynn suggesting martial law is tantamount to treason. It is shameful.”

The Post encouraged the President to abandon baseless reelection claims and told him to instead focus on the two Senate races in Georgia that could flip the Senate.

The editorial ended: “Securing the Senate means securing your legacy. You should use your considerable charm and influence to support the Georgia candidates, mobilizing your voters for them. Focus on their success, not your own grievances, as we head into the final week. If you insist on spending your final days in office threatening to burn it all down, that will be how you are remembered. Not as a revolutionary, but as the anarchist holding the match.”

R.I.P.: Danny Lee, Mr. WXRT, Chicago Radio Trailblazer

Danny Lee
Longtime Chicago radio executive Danny Lee died Saturday.  He had been ill for several years. Lee presided over the rise of two Chicago radio stations that are known across the country

Danny Lee's father, Louie Lee, owned an appliance and electronics store on Chicago's north side. In the mid-1950's, Louie Lee also purchased WSBC-AM, a radio station on the west side of Chicago that featured all ethnic brokered programming. With WSBC-AM being so popular that he had to turn away programs due to lack of airtime, Louie Lee purchased a second radio station in 1958: the little-heard college station WFJL-FM, which Lee changed to WSBC-FM. Those call letters were changed to WXRT-FM in 1964.

In the early 1970's Louie Lee's son Danny began taking over operations of the stations, which were legally owned by the Lee family corporation Diamond Broadcasting. In 1972, WXRT-FM stopped having ethnic programming in the overnight hours and instead experimented with a progressive rock format. That rock format slowly grew, starting earlier in the evening, and then in the afternoons, before finally going 24 hours a day in April 1976, becoming the WXRT-FM that Chicago radio fans know and love still to this day, according to a posting at chicagoradioandmedia.com.

In addition to WSBC-AM and WXRT-FM, Danny Lee and his Diamond Broadcasting also owned the original WSCR-AM (then on 820 AM), Chicago's first all-sports talk station which launched in January 1992.

Lee sold all of the Diamond-owned Chicago stations in the mid-1990s. Westinghouse/Group W purchased WXRT-FM and WSCR-AM for nearly $60 million in 1995. In 1997, Lee/Diamond sold WSBC-AM to Fred Eyechaner's Newsweb Corporation for $5.5 million.

Sinclair Broadcast CEO Betting On Sports Wagering



When Sinclair Broadcast Group acquired 21 regional sports networks from The Walt Disney Co., it transformed its business from being one of the nation’s largest local TV station owners known for its conservative editorial bent into a media conglomerate with a huge stake in sports broadcasting, reports The Baltimore Sun.

It soon began looking for a partner to get in on what some see as the next evolution in media. Fans not only want to watch local and regional sports, Sinclair executives believe, but they want to bet on those games, too.

“Sports betting is going to be part of a bigger mega-trend,” the “gamification” of sports, Sinclair CEO Chris Ripley said during a recent interview.

After talking with sports betting players and gaming operators, Sinclair agreed to a partnership announced in November with casino operator Bally’s.

“In media, this is a scale game,” Ripley said. “If you’re not adding assets and operations, you really should be exiting media, because it is a scale industry at this point with tech coming in. ... We’ve invested heavily in making sure we can be where the consumer is in terms of consumption.”

That has meant investing across platforms in websites, mobile apps and streaming services such as Sinclair’s STIRR. And it means increasingly making the experience interactive. It’s part of a lengthy transformation from earlier days of broadcast when Sinclair started with a single Baltimore TV station.

But embracing sports and gambling doesn’t mean giving up its past and present as a local broadcaster and news provider. It just adds another dimension to the business, one seemingly less political.

“Sports are apolitical, as well as local, and provide a welcome relief from the issues of the day,” Ripley said in a statement. “But, we also remain dedicated to providing our viewers with the vital local and national news coverage they need to make informed decisions every day ... We will continue to be a one-stop shop for our viewers for their choice of news, sports and entertainment.”

Sinclair continues to bet big on sports alongside its local news programming, believing that the future will involve betting on teams and players, made possible as legalized sports gambling spreads across the United States in the wake of a 2018 Supreme Court ruling that reversed a federal statute that had kept it mostly in Nevada.

Sports betting has taken off, growing 27% this year even as overall gambling revenue has plummeted amid COVID-19 casino closures. The gaming association said the latest figures partly reflect strong consumer interest in new legal betting markets in Colorado, Illinois, Michigan and Washington, D.C.

Sinclair and Bally’s plan to incorporate online sports betting technology into all the former Fox regional sports networks, creating an interactive sports gambling experience for viewers.

Dec PPMs Day 3: Orlando, Vegas, Portland + 9 More Markets

Nielsen on Wednesday, December 23, 2020 released the third batch of December 2020 PPM Data for the following markets:


21  Portland OR

23  Charlotte-Gastonia-Rock Hill NC

25  San Antionio, TX

27  Sacramento

28  Salt Lake City-Ogden-Provo UT

29  Pittsburgh

30  Orlando

31  Las Vegas

33  Cincinnati

34  Kansas City

35  Cleveland

36  Columbus OH

Click Here To View Topline Numbers for Subscribing Nielsen Stations

The AM Confidential: Trump Signs Pandemic Relief Bill



After fuming for days that it was "a disgrace," President Donald Trump signed the pandemic relief bill last night, clearing the way for a $600 check to millions of Americans and extended unemployment benefits for millions more. He wanted to boost the checks to $2,000. The bill also will replenish a small-business loan program and help states distribute the coronavirus vaccines.

Not incidentally, the bill also includes general government funding through the remainder of the fiscal year.

Because the president delayed signing the bill from Saturday until Sunday, unemployed Americans probably will not receive the enhanced unemployment payments this week but will have to wait until next week.

In a statement, the president said he was again demanding that Congress consider boosting the payment to Americans to $2,000 and removing various items he considers wasteful from the budget bill.



➤PERSON OF INTEREST' IN NASHVILLE BOMBING IS DEAD: A man named Anthony Quinn Warner, age 63, has been identified as the Nashville bomber after remains found at the scene were matched to him through DNA testing. Warner, of Antioch, Tennessee, was the only person killed by the van explosion in downtown Nashville in the early hours of Christmas morning. According to The Tennessean, Warner had worked in Nashville for many years, sometimes as a burglar alarm specialist and most recently as a computer technician for a local real estate firm.

➤SOLDIER CHARGED IN ROCKFORD MURDERS: Police say Duke Webb, an Army special forces sergeant, was the gunman who killed three people and injured three others in a random shooting spree inside and outside the Don Carter Lanes bowling alley in Rockford, Illinois, on Saturday night. Only a bar and a carryout food service were open at the complex, according to the Rockford Register Star. Webb is in custody. He was on leave from Eglin Air Force Base in Florida, where he is attached to 3rd Battalion, 7th Special Forces Group (Airborne).


➤FAUCI WARNS OF POST-CHRISTMAS SURGE: Dr. Anthony Fauci says he is optimistic about the pace of vaccine distribution, but he warns that next month may be the most challenging yet in the coronavirus pandemic. On CNN's State of the Union yesterday, the nation's top epidemiologist said he feared "a surge upon a surge" of coronavirus infections following Christmas and New Year's gatherings. Last week, a record average of 189,579 new daily COVID-19 infections were recorded in the U.S., and 2,250 deaths, according to a CNBC analysis of data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

➤DON'T FORGET YOUR VACCINE PASSPORT: We all hope to resume our normal activities in 2021, but we may need to get used to carrying a "vaccine passport" in order to do so. Several companies are working on phone apps that will be used to create digital credentials verifying that a person has been vaccinated against COVID-19. The app may be used not just to get on an airplane but to enter a concert venue, a stadium or a movie theater.


➤THAT'S THE WAY THE MONOLITH CRUMBLES: A mysterious 10-foot-tall monolith appeared in a San Francisco park just in time for Christmas. It was just like the spooky monolith that popped up in a remote spot in the Utah desert recently. Others appeared just as suddenly in Romania and in Southern California. But the new one in San Francisco was special. It was made of gingerbread and decorated with white icing and gumdrops. Unfortunately, the cookie, or the monolith, crumbled on Saturday, according to KGO-TV.

➤EXPERTS PREDICT POP SONGS WILL BE SHORTER IN THE FUTURE AS ATTENTION SPAN LENGTH DROPS: By the time 2030 rolls around, experts say pop songs will likely be shorter. Researchers from Samsung found that the attention span of music fans dropped from 12 seconds to eight since the year 2000, so it’s harder than ever for musicians to draw listeners in early while also keeping the song short with the choruses happening early on. Samsung writes in a blog post, “At the end of the decade it’s predicted that the average song will be a maximum of two minutes, putting the old three-minute pop song cliché to rest.” Even today, among the ten most-streamed songs on Spotify, 80 percent are shorter than four minutes. Other research has shown that the length of the average number one song has decreased by nearly 20 percent over the past 20 years.


🏈NFL SCORES -- WEEK 16: 
  • New Orleans Saints 52, Minnesota Vikings 33
  • Tampa Bay Buccaneers 47, Detroit Lions 7
  • San Francisco 49ers 20, Arizona Cardinals 12
  • Miami Dolphins 26, Las Vegas Raiders 25
  • Kansas City Chiefs 17, Atlanta Falcons 14
  • New York Jets 23, Cleveland Browns 16 
  • Pittsburgh Steelers 28, Indianapolis Colts 24 
  • Chicago Bears 41, Jacksonville Jaguars 17
  • Baltimore Ravens 27, New York Giants 13 
  • Cincinnati Bengals 37, Houston Texans 31
  • Seattle Seahawks 20, Los Angeles Rams 9
  • Carolina Panthers 20, Washington Football Team 13
  • Dallas Cowboys 37, Philadelphia Eagles 17 
  • Los Angeles Chargers 19, Denver Broncos 16
  • Green Bay Packers 40, Tennessee Titans 14
Tonight's Monday Night Football game on ESPN:
  • Buffalo Bills at New England Patriots, 8:15 pm ET.

🏈BRADY BOUNCE FOR TAMPA BAY: The Tampa Bay Buccaneers are going to the NFL playoffs for the first time since 2007, thanks to Tom Brady. The quarterback threw for 348 yards and four touchdowns in the first half Saturday, ending in a 47-7 rout of the Detroit Lions. Brady could afford to sit out the second half after breaking a Bucs record of 34 passing touchdowns in a season.


🏈SEAHAWKS CLINCH NFC WEST TITLE: The Seattle Seahawks defeated the Los Angeles Rams 20-9 yesterday to take their first NFC West division title since 2016. They close out the regular season with a game against the San Francisco 49ers in Glendale, Arizona, this Sunday.

🏀TIMBERWOLVES' TOWNS SIDELINED: Minnesota Timberwolves star Karl-Anthony Towns is out indefinitely after dislocating his left wrist during the game against the Utah Jazz on Saturday night. It's the same wrist he fractured last season, but surgery is not expected to be needed.

🏀HOW BAD WAS IT FOR THE CLIPPERS? The Los Angeles Clippers lost so badly to the Dallas Mavericks yesterday that the team set a record for the biggest halftime deficit in an NBA game since the shot-clock era began in the 1954-1955 season, according to Yahoo! Sports. The score at halftime was 77-27. It didn't get better. The final score was 124 Mavericks, 73 Clippers.

🎾FEDERER WILL MISS AUSTRALIAN OPEN: Roger Federer is still in rehab from knee surgery and will not make it to the Australian Open. He hasn't played in a tournament since last January's Australian Open but is hoping for a comeback in late February 2021. The 2021 Australian Open has been pushed back to February 8th.




⚾HALL-OF-FAMER NIEKRO DIES AT 81: Baseball Hall of Fame pitcher Phil Niekro has died at the age of 81. The Atlanta Braves announced his passing yesterday. Niekro's career spanned from 1964 to 1987, including 20 seasons with the Milwaukee/Atlanta Braves. He earned the nickname "Nucksie" for his signature knuckleball.

FBI Says Nashville Bombing Suspect Died In Blast



Anthony Q. Warner, 63, has been identified as the "bomber" in the Christmas day explosion in Nashville by U.S. Attorney Don Cochran.   The Tennessean reports Cochran announced the update to the investigation in a Sunday afternoon news conference. 

"Anthony Warner is the bomber. He was present when the bomb went off, and he perished in the bombing," Cochran said. 


DNA found at the scene was matched to samples taken at another location searched by investigators, Tennessee Bureau of Investigation Director David Rausch said Sunday. The TBI was involved in testing the evidence.

Because they had identified a suspect, investigators said they were able to match samples to a potential family member quickly. 

At this time, officials said there is no indication that anyone outside of Warner was involved in the explosion. Authorities reviewed hours of surveillance footage and they say they only saw Warner.

A motive in the bombing has not been released and is still under investigation according to FBI Special Agent for Public Affairs Doug Korneski. 

Anthony Q Warner
The types of explosives used in the bombing were still under investigation, authorities said. The FBI said Warner wasn’t on the radar of authorities before Friday’s explosion and declined to deem the explosion an act of terrorism.

The Wall Street Journal reports intelligence officials have considered whether an AT&T Inc. switching station that the RV was parked outside of was targeted in the bombing, according to a person briefed on the investigation.

Speaking on CBS’s “Face the Nation” Sunday morning, Nashville Mayor John Cooper said, “To all of us locally, it feels like there has to be some connection with the AT&T facility and the site of the bombing.”

The bombing, which came after a sound system in the RV warned listeners that an explosive was inside, injured at least three people and damaged at least 41 buildings, one of which was destroyed, according to authorities.

The bombing caused damage to the AT&T switching center and knocked out phone and internet service in much of Tennessee, Kentucky and Northern Alabama. The telecom company said Sunday afternoon that it had restored 96% of its wireless network, 60% of business service and 86% of consumer broadband and entertainment services.

Switching centers, also known in the industry as “central offices,” represent vulnerable spots in the country’s telecommunications infrastructure because of the important equipment they house and how close they often are to busy downtown business districts. Many are hulking brick-and-concrete structures built several decades ago when the original AT&T monopoly employed thousands of human operators to route customers’ phone calls.

Digital equipment later replaced those operator banks, but the buildings continued to serve as hubs for hard-to-move fiber optic lines that shuttle data. Access to the buildings is strictly guarded, though their owners have less control of the environment outside those centers.

Physical attacks on those network hubs are unusual. However, telephone-pole wires and cellular towers are frequent targets of intentional attacks. Gunshots and vandalism cause several dozen outages in the U.S. each year, according to Federal Communications Commission reports.

News4Nashville reports a source close to the federal investigation said that among several different tips and angles, agents are investigating whether or not Warner had paranoia that 5G technology was being used to spy on Americans.

A spokeswoman for the FBI said they could not comment because of the pending investigation.

BIA: Radio Versus the Duopoly...The 2x Equation



BIA’s recent forecast for 2021 shows Radio as #5 among the top five ad media for local spending. Mobile (smartphones, tablets) and Online (desktops, laptops) claim the #2 and #3 positions. According to BIA Advisory Service, if one was to combine the spending across these three media categories, radio averages 25.9 percent of that spending in the top 5 markets compared to Google’s 53.6 percent average share of this spending. That means Google wins 2x radio’s share. That means that every percent point of spending radio sellers can win away from Google is like getting a 2 percent share increase of radio spending in the market. That’s the 2x equation.

Can radio sell successfully against the Google-Facebook duopoly in 2021? If they can, they would address the larger market opportunity rather than just selling against other radio stations and potentially tap into a steeper revenue growth curve.

If so, that nice multiplier effect awaits. Across the top five markets, radio’s average share of the Radio+Google+Facebook total spending varies a fair amount. As displayed in the chart below, Dallas (26.9 percent) wins the greatest percentage of combined Radio+Google+Facebook sales and San Francisco (20.4 percent) trails. And of course converting Google dollars to radio dollars means higher margin sales. Winning similar amounts from Facebook spending just sweetens the pie for radio and increases the multiplier effect.




Some markets clearly are stronger radio markets. What’s the secret formula? Crack this code and tap into more radio growth.

Radio sales strategies focused on winning spending away from Google and Facebook dramatically upsize radio’s total addressable market. Going to a client and converting even one percent of their Google spending into more radio spending by showing how they can actually increase ROAS and digital KPIs that way is a huge win for radio. The research is there to back this up. Check out RAB’s study, Radio Drives Search Radio, as one recent example.

TV Ratings: ABC Is Most Watched, Fox, NBC Battered


Fall 2020 was unlike any start of a broadcast season, according to Deadline. With the coronavirus pandemic grounding production for months, ABC, NBC and CBS’ first 2020-21 scripted originals started rolling out a month into the season, while Fox and the CW opted for fall lineups consisting largely of shows already in the can or acquisitions, except for Fox’s sports programming and a new season of The Masked Singer and the final episodes of the CW’s Supernatural.

In a season that already carries an asterisk because of the pandemic, Fox topped the fall ratings in adults 18-49 (1.4 rating) on the strength of Thursday Night Football and The Masked Singer, while NBC, paced by Sunday Night Football and This Is Us, was the most watched network (6.11 million), according to most current season-to-date rating information from Nielsen

Excluding sports and breaking news, ABC, which does not have NFL football on the fall schedule, ranked as the No. 1 network with entertainment programming (1.0 rating) for the first time in 5 years among adults 18-49 – since the 2015-2016 season — and as the top entertainment network in total viewers (5.1 million) for the first time in 20 years – since the 2000-2001 season, at the height of the Who Wants To Be a Millionaire? craze.

All networks were down from fall 2019; ABC’s declines were single-digit in both 19-49 and total viewers; all other broadcasters were off by double digits.

Despite ratings declines, football still dominated fall ratings in 18-49 and total viewers, with NBC’s Sunday Night Football and Fox’s Thursday Night Football ranking as No. 1 and No.2, respectively.

CBS had a strong showing on the list of most watched non-sports fall programs with venerable drama NCIS (12.9 million) at No. 1; 60 Minutes (11.9 million), buoyed by high-profile election-related telecasts and football lead-ins, at No. 2; and FBI (11.0 million) at No. 4. NBC’s This Is Us (11.1 million) took the No. 3 spot.

Meanwhile, Deadline reports the major news networks are touting big ratings gains in 2020, after the coronavirus crisis and the presidential election drove viewers in record numbers to their lineups.

Fox News will finish the year again at top of the news channels in primetime, with an average of 3.6 million viewers, up 45% from the same period the previous year. MSNBC averaged 2.2 million, a boost of 24%. CNN saw an even greater increase, as it was up 85% to average 1.8 million.

Disney+ U.S. Sub Revenue Could Surpass $4B By2022

 

In 2021, the biggest US beneficiary of the streaming bonanza will be Disney, according to eMarketer. 

After a plethora of streaming competitors launched in 2020, Netflix still added a substantial number of subscribers. As impressive as Netflix’s sustained dominance was Disney+’s ability to quickly gain viewers. These developments show there’s room for multiple services to thrive in this fast-growing market.

But no other new US streaming service had a debut like Disney+ did—eMarketer estimates that it will reach 72.4 million US monthly viewers in 2020, its first full year in service. They forecast that more than one-fifth of the U-S population will use Disney+ this year, and in 2024, more than one-third will. So far, other streaming entrants suffered from distribution limitations, confusing branding, or a lack of quality programming. None of these problems have hampered Disney+, which will become the third most popular US streaming service by the end of 2024.

There is still plenty of time for other streamers to gain adoption. But other recent entrants into the streaming wars will struggle to immediately make a dent in the market, according to eMarketer.

During the pandemic, streaming has been one of few successes for The Walt Disney Co., which has suffered with theme parks and theaters sidelined. The company reorganized its media division to further emphasize streaming. While other media conglomerates are also restructuring their businesses to focus more on streaming, Disney’s pivot is particularly consequential because it operates numerous streamers including Hulu, ESPN+, and its upcoming Star service, named after the India-based media company that Disney acquired. This move will further solidify Disney as a streaming leader alongside stalwarts Netflix and Amazon.

Disney+’s success matters to marketers because it represents streaming services becoming more reliant on subscriptions than on advertising.

Report: Square Interested In Acquiring Jay-Z's Tidal Service



Square Inc., the digital-payment company run by Jack Dorsey, has held talks to acquire the music-streaming service Tidal as part of a push to diversify, according to Bloomberg citing a person familiar with the situation.

Dorsey has discussed a potential deal with Jay-Z, the rapper and music mogul who acquired Tidal for $56 million in early 2015, said the person, who asked not to be identified because the talks were private. The negotiations may not result in a transaction.

Tidal, which first launched in 2014, has struggled to keep pace with other streaming services, including Spotify Technology SA and Apple Music. Jay-Z’s own music has been a lure for the platform, but he put his songs back on Spotify last year -- raising questions about the health of Tidal. The closely held service hasn’t reported subscriber figures since saying it had 3 million paying customers in 2016.

Dorsey, meanwhile, has ambitions to build Square into a much broader company made up of stand-alone, complementary services. Square’s two core products, Square Seller and Cash App, already operate somewhat separately within Square Inc., each with its own “lead” on the executive team. It’s believed Dorsey, who spent more than four years on the board of Walt Disney Co., imagines Square will similarly own a collection of businesses under one corporate umbrella.

Tidal’s owners include nearly two dozen high-profile artists, including Beyoncé, Alicia Keys, Coldplay, Madonna, Rihanna and others, according to its website. The service is available in 53 countries and offers more than 60 million songs and 250,000 videos.

Time Is Tight For FCC To 'Trump-Up' Social Media


The FCC has run low on time to adopt an order trimming a liability shield for social media companies, leaving the fate of a request from President Trump in doubt, according to The L-A Times.

Republican FCC Chairman Ajit Pai let slip a Wednesday deadline for setting a vote on the proposal at the next monthly meeting of the agency, which is scheduled for Jan. 13 and is the last before he leaves the commission a week later.

“It appears he has run out of calendar,” said Michael O’Rielly, a former Republican FCC member whose nomination to another term was withdrawn by the White House after O’Rielly voiced doubts about the measure.

FCC proposals not adopted at meetings can be passed with a vote by commissioners behind closed doors. But FCC Democrats oppose the measure and could kill it by delaying the process past the Jan. 20 inauguration of President-elect Joe Biden.

Pai has said little about the topic since Oct. 15 when he announced he planned to move forward with a rulemaking on the legal shield, contained in Section 230 of the Communications Decency Act. Will Wiquist, an FCC spokesman, declined Wednesday to comment on the matter.

Ajit Pai
The Commerce Department, prompted by a Trump order, asked the FCC to offer an interpretation of Section 230 that critics said would leave Facebook Inc., Twitter Inc. and others more vulnerable to litigation for moderating the posts of users.

Pai has a three-member Republican majority until he leaves. He could call a special meeting or simply have FCC staff issue an order, said Andrew Jay Schwartzman of the Benton Institute for Broadband & Society.

An order without a vote by the commissioners wouldn’t carry as much weight before courts as language adopted by a vote, but “even a full FCC declaration might not be given too much weight,” Schwartzman said in an email.

“President Donald Trump’s push for the FCC to make rules about a key liability shield for Twitter, Facebook and Google appears dead, given Chairman Ajit Pai didn’t add the item to a Jan. 13 meeting agenda,” Bloomberg Intelligence analyst Matthew Schettenhelm said in a note Thursday. “With President-elect Joe Biden set to name a new chair in January, the rulemaking won’t advance.”

Pai has said he will leave the FCC on Jan. 20. That would leave the FCC at a 2-to-2 partisan deadlock until the Senate confirms another member selected by Biden. In the meantime, Biden will be able to designate one of the sitting Democrats as chair with control of the agency’s agenda.

Report: Comcast Adding Data Caps For Home Internet


 

A new year means another round of higher TV and Internet prices. Starting Jan. 1, Comcast will hit customers with an extra charge for using too much data, a hike that has become an annual holiday tradition for some of the biggest cable companies, reports FOX Business.

As millions of Americans move online to work from home, stream TV shows or take classes remotely, the Philadelphia-based cable and broadband giant is imposing a 1.2-terabyte data cap to the 39 states where it operates. Comcast, which has 30.1 million total subscribers, told FOX Business that the data cap does not impact 95% of their customers, and unlimited options for more money is part of an offering.

However, the limit can be easily reached for customers who are on daily Zoom meetings and stream shows, according to Fox News’s Brett Larson.

“Of everything you’re doing at home it’s mostly done online,” Larson told FOX Business’ Varney & Company. “And it’s all using up an unknown amount of data that you could end up paying extra for.”

Streaming Netflix’s popular show "The Crown" in 4K resolution takes up an estimated seven gigabytes an hour and 280 gigabytes for the entire season, or over a fourth of a terabyte, according to Larson. Meanwhile, a Zoom call can cost one-and-a-half gigabytes an hour. For two kids taking online classes eight hours a day every week for school tacks on an additional 192 gigabytes each month.

Cord-cutting has reached record highs amid the pandemic, which has sent cable companies scrambling to find new ways to make up for lost revenue.

Other wireless service providers like AT&T, Charter and Verizon do not impose data caps on most of their high-speed Internet services.

Average Person Is A Screen Zombie


 

As millions of Americans sit in quarantine this year, many people probably feel their entire lives are spent staring at a computer screen. It turns out they may be right. A survey finds the average American will spend the equivalent of 44 years looking at some kind of digital screen. Researchers say this number has only increased since the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic.

The OnePoll survey of 2,000 adults, commissioned by Vision Direct, looked at the average amount of time spent on various devices throughout each day. The results reveal the typical American spends four hours and 30 minutes watching TV, four hours and 33 minutes looking at a smartphone, over three hours using a gaming device, and nearly five hours on a laptop.

All together, Americans are spending a whopping 17 hours and nine minutes looking at digital devices each day, according to the study. Over a full year, that adds up to just over 6,259 hours of total screen time. When to stretch that out over the average 60 years Americans live as adults, you’re looking at 44 years of staring at a screen!

Here’s the real shocking discovery — researchers say those figures are all pre-pandemic! The survey claims since COVID began, Americans are spending over 19 hours a day looking at some type of digital gadget during lockdown. Respondents say most of this extra time to due to boredom. More than three in four adults add they would be lost if they didn’t have their devices during the COVID lockdown.

“We’re lucky to have devices that connect us with the outside world,” says Vision Direct’s Benjamin Dumaine in a statement. “A similar pandemic taking place 30 or 40 years ago would have been people coping with the lack of contact in very different ways.”

The survey find it takes less than 10 minutes for the average American to go from waking up to looking at a screen each morning.

December 28 Radio History



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

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

He died Oct. 31 1991 at age 75.


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

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

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

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


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

🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Sienna Miller is 39
    Actor Nichelle Nichols (“Star Trek”) is 88. 
  • Actor Maggie Smith (“Harry Potter”) is 86. 
  • Singer-keyboardist Edgar Winter is 74. 
  • Actor Denzel Washington is 66. 
  • TV personality Gayle King (“CBS This Morning”) is 66. 
  • Drummer Mike McGuire of Shenandoah is 62. 
  • Actor Chad McQueen (the “Karate Kid” films) is 60. 
  • Country singer-guitarist Marty Roe of Diamond Rio is 60. 
  • Actor Malcolm Gets (“Caroline in the City”) is 57. 
  • Political commentator Ana Navarro (“The View”) is 49. 
  • Comedian Seth Meyers (“Late Night with Seth Meyers”) is 47. 
  • Actor Brendan Hines (“Suits,” ″Lie To Me”) is 44. 
  • Actor Joe Manganiello (“True Blood”) is 44. 
  • Actor Vanessa Ferlito (“NCIS: New Orleans”) is 43. 
  • Singer John Legend is 42. 
  • Actor Andre Holland (“Selma”) is 41. 
  • Actor Sienna Miller is 39. 
  • Actor Beau Garrett (“The Good Doctor”) is 38. 
  • Actor Thomas Dekker (“Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles,” “Heroes”) is 33. 
  • Actor Mackenzie Rosman (“7th Heaven”) is 31. 
  • “American Idol” runner-up David Archuleta is 30. 
  • Actor Mary-Charles Jones (“Kevin Can Wait”) is 19. 
  • Actor Miles Brown (“Black-ish”) is 16.