Tuesday, March 9, 2021

March 9 Radio History



KJR Transmitter 1927
➦In 1922...KJR-AM, Seattle, Washington, signed-on.

According to John Schneider at The Radio Historian: KJR, begun by amateur radio operator Vincent I. Kraft, was the first radio station to be licensed in the Pacific Northwest.

Vincent I. Kraft
After World War I, the civilian radio stations that had been ordered closed during the war were allowed to reopen.  One was Vincent I. Kraft’s amateur station 7AC in Seattle.  Kraft operated a small radio parts store in downtown Seattle, and in his spare time played with a small 5 Watt deForest Wireless telephone transmitter, transmitting from his home at E. 68th Street and 19th NE.  An antenna hung from a 90 foot tower in the back yard.

He soon applied for and received the experimental license 7XC for “wireless telephone” transmission.  He moved a phonograph and a piano into the garage adjoining his home, and tacked carpeting on the walls to improve the acoustics.  7XC went on the air on 1110 kc. starting in 1919, transmitting voice and music programs.  He played phonograph records, coaxed a local piano teacher into performing, and asked a neighbor boy to play the violin.  There was no regular schedule.  Every so often he would get a call from one of the few people that had a crystal radio set in Seattle, and he would turn on the transmitter and broadcast so they could demonstrate the new "wireless" to their friends.

In 1921, the U.S. Department of Commerce created a new class of license for radio broadcasting stations. At the same time, a new law was issued that prohibited amateur stations from broadcasting music.  So Kraft immediately applied for and received the license KJR, and transferred his 7XC operations to this new license.  Unlike its amateur station predecessor, KJR operated on a regular schedule of several hours per day, 3 days a week.

Beginning in the 1950s and lasting until 1982, KJR was a pioneer Top 40 radio station owned by entertainer Danny Kaye and Lester Smith, "Kaye/Smith Enterprises".

In the 1960s, under the programming guidance of Pat O'Day, the station was top rated in Seattle and well known for introducing the Pacific Northwest to many recording stars such as Jimi Hendrix, the Beatles, Merrilee Rush & The Turnabouts and the Ventures.  Today, the call letters are used by KJR-FM, which broadcasts a format that includes many of the songs and shows (including original American Top 40 shows from the 1970s) from that era.



Gary Lockwood was THE big morning show on Seattle radio in the 1980's as AM radio was fading out in Seattle. KJR was playing Oldies then.

KJR would switch to soft adult contemporary in 1982. In 1988, the station shifted to oldies, playing the music that had made the station famous throughout the 1960s and 1970s.

KJR's shift to sports programming was a gradual evolution starting in 1989, when the station added some sports-themed shows in mid-days and afternoons. The rest of the music programming would be phased out in September 1991.

On November 4, 2011, at 7 AM, KJR began simulcasting on 102.9 FM, replacing country-formatted KNBQ. This ended on June 13, 2013, when KNBQ (now KYNW) reverted to an Adult top 40 format. During this time, Clear Channel did not transfer the KJR-FM calls from 95.7 to 102.9, instead co-branding the station as "Sports Radio 950 AM and 102.9 FM KJR".

A collection of some of the country's greatest air personalities entertained Seattle listeners like Larry Lujack, Scotty Brink, Norm Gregory, Burl Barer, Pat O'Day, Eric Chase, Bob Shannon, "World Famous" Tom Murphy, Bobby Simon, Jerry Kaye, "Emperor" Lee Smith, Lan Roberts, Robert O. Smith, Charlie Brown, Bwana Johnny, Matt Riedy, Marion Seymour, Sky Walker, Tracy Mitchell, and Bob Brooks. Gary "Lockjock" Lockwood, a.k.a. L.J., was the disk jockey who had the longest tenure on the "Mighty Channel 95," from 1976-1991.


➦In 1925....WHBC Canton, OH signed-on. The original license for the station was granted on February 13, 1925 to Father Edward P. Graham and the St. John Catholic Church. WHBC began broadcasting at 1180 kHz with 100 watts. It was the first Catholic radio station on the air in the U.S., as WLWL in New York was not licensed until August 1925. By the middle of 1927 the station had moved to 1270 kHz. Broadcasting had moved to 1200 kHz by the middle of 1930.

In 1936 the station was sold to secular interests, when it was purchased by Brush-Moore Newspapers, then owners of Canton's newspaper, The Repository. The station was sold in 1939 to a business group consisting of the Vodrey family of East Liverpool and the Boyd family of Portsmouth. The families organized ownership of the station under the name of the Ohio Broadcasting Company. They obtained approval to increase power to 250 watts daytime, while maintaining 100 watts at night.

On March 29, 1941, when most stations in the U.S. changed frequencies due to the NARBA, WHBC moved from 1200 to 1230 kHz. It moved to its present frequency of 1480 kHz on June 4, 1944, when WGAR AM in Cleveland moved from 1480 to 1220. The station obtained an FM license in 1948 and established WHBC-FM on 94.1 MHz which still operates using those call letters.

In September 1947, WHBC's power increased from 1 kW to 5 kW. today, the station powers at 15 Kw-D and 5 Kw-N.

On September 26, 1967, the ownership was reorganized as WHBC, Inc., which changed its name to Beaverkettle Company on September 13, 1972. The Vodreys purchased WFIR in Roanoke, Virginia in 1969; they sold the station eight years later. In June 2000, the family-owned Beaverkettle Company sold WHBC and WHBC-FM to NextMedia for more than $42M ending 61 years of Vodrey family ownership of the stations.

On March 26, 2007, WHBC ended its long-running Full Service format in favor of a full-time news/talk format, eliminating its remaining oldies-formatted dayparts. The station also broadcasts a show resurrected, a staple from the '60s and '70s called Tradio, where listeners can call in and sell items for sale.

NextMedia sold WHBC and their 32 other radio stations to Digity, LLC for $85 million; the transaction was consummated on February 10, 2014.  Effective February 25, 2016, Digity and its 124 radio stations were acquired by Alpha Media for $264 million.

As of 2015, the majority of WHBC's schedule has shifted to sports oriented programming, though on weekdays there is still general news/talk programming, including a local morning drive show hosted by longtime WHBC personality Pam Cook.

The station is one of about 40 stations in the country that have split site transmitters—one site for daytime broadcasting and a different site for nighttime broadcasting. WHBC's daytime transmitter is located northeast of Canton off Diamond Street near Middlebranch Road. WHBC's night-time transmitter is located southwest of Canton off Gooding Street near the intersection of Sherman Church Avenue and Fohl Street.


➦In 1945...'Those Websters' debuted. It was a CBS Radio sit comedy series starring Willard Waterman and Constance Crowder as George and Jane Webster. The program was launched in New York and then moved to Chicago for a short spell before finishing its run from Hollywood.

The series replaced That Brewster Boy (1941–45), which starred a teenaged Dick York. Several Brewster cast members continued on with Those Websters, and the two situation comedies were quite similar.  Those riotous Websters were heard Friday evenings at 9:30pm on CBS from March 9, 1945 to February 22, 1946 with Quaker Oats as the sponsor. On March 3, 1946, the series moved to Mutual where it aired Sundays at 6pm until August 22, 1948.


➦In 1982...Rex Marshall died from an apparent heart attack at age 64 (Born Marshall Bingeman Shantz, Jr. January 10, 1919).  He was an actor, television announcer, and a radio personality for 46 years. His career began in Boston, Massachusetts as a reporter for a radio station and ended in White River Junction as the owner of his own radio station.

Marshall started his career as an announcer for a Boston radio station in 1937.

Marshall's most memorable role was as the host and announcer of the anthology television drama series Suspense from 1949–1954. He was also remembered as an announcer on the radio, spokesman for the Reynolds Aluminum Company for 25 years and as the spokesman for the Maxwell House coffee brand.  In 1948, Marshall was the first staff announcer for WPIX-TV NYC.




➦In 1996...George Burns died at age 100 (Born Nathan Birnbaum January 20, 1896). He was a comedian, actor, singer, and writer. He was one of the few entertainers whose career successfully spanned vaudeville, radio, film and television. His arched eyebrow and cigar-smoke punctuation became familiar trademarks for over three quarters of a century. He and his wife, Gracie Allen, appeared on radio, television, and film as the comedy duo Burns and Allen.

At age 79, Burns had a sudden career revival as an amiable, beloved and unusually active comedy elder statesman in the 1975 film The Sunshine Boys, for which he won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor. Burns, who became a centenarian in 1996, continued to work until just weeks before his death of cardiac arrest at his home in Beverly Hills.

Burns and Allen first made it to radio as the comedy relief for bandleader Guy Lombardo, which did not always sit well with Lombardo's home audience. In his later memoir, The Third Time Around, Burns revealed a college fraternity's protest letter, complaining that they resented their weekly dance parties with their girl friends listening to "Thirty Minutes of the Sweetest Music This Side of Heaven" had to be broken into by the droll vaudeville team.

In time, though, Burns and Allen found their own show and radio audience, first airing on February 15, 1932 and concentrating on their classic stage routines plus sketch comedy in which the Burns and Allen style was woven into different little scenes, not unlike the short films they made in Hollywood. They were also good for a clever publicity stunt, none more so than the hunt for Gracie's missing brother, a hunt that included Gracie turning up on other radio shows searching for him as well.


➦In 2005...Final "Dan Rather Reporting" radio segment aired on the CBS News Radio Network. He also left as anchor of TV’s CBS Evening News on the same date in 1981 Dan Rather became primary anchorman of CBS-TV News.


➦In 2012...Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band performed a special concert at Harlem’s Apollo Theater to celebrate the ten-year anniversary of satellite radio. The show aired live on Sirius XM’s all-Springsteen channel E Street Radio.


🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Brittany Snow is 35
    Singer Lloyd Price is 88. 
  • Actor Joyce Van Patten is 87. 
  • Country singer Mickey Gilley is 85. 
  • Actor Trish Van Devere is 80. 
  • Singer John Cale (The Velvet Underground) is 79. 
  • Singer Mark Lindsay of Paul Revere and the Raiders is 79. 
  • TV anchor Charles Gibson is 78. 
  • Guitarist Robin Trower (Procol Harum) is 76. 
  • Singer Jeffrey Osborne is 73. 
  • Guitarist Jimmie Fadden of The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band is 73. 
  • Actor Linda Fiorentino (“Men In Black”) is 63. 
  • Actor Tom Amandes (“Eli Stone,” ″Parenthood”) is 62. 
  • Guitarist Rusty Hendrix of Confederate Railroad is 61. 
  • Actor Juliette Binoche (“Chocolat,” ″The English Patient”) is 57. 
  • Bassist Robert Sledge of Ben Folds Five is 53. 
  • Drummer Shannon Leto of 30 Seconds To Mars is 51. 
  • Rapper C-Murder (aka C-Miller) is 50. 
  • Actor Emmanuel Lewis (“Webster”) is 50. 
  • Actor Jean Louisa Kelly (“Yes, Dear,” ″Mr. Holland’s Opus”) is 49. 
  • Actor Kerr Smith (“Life Unexpected,” ″Dawson’s Creek”) is 49. 
  • Actor Oscar Isaac (“Star Wars: The Force Awakens”) is 42. 
  • Comedian Jordan Klepper (“The Daily Show”) is 42. 
  • Rapper Chingy is 41. 
  • Actor Matthew Gray Gubler (“Criminal Minds”) is 41. 
  • Guitarist Chad Gilbert of New Found Glory is 40. 
  • Keyboardist Ben Tanner of Alabama Shakes is 38. 
  • Actor Brittany Snow (“American Dreams,” ″Hairspray”) is 35. 
  • Rapper Bow Wow is 34. 
  • Rapper YG is 31. 
  • Actor Luis Armand Garcia (“George Lopez”) is 29. 
  • Actor Cierra Ramirez (“The Fosters”) is 26.

Monday, March 8, 2021

D-C Radio: RIP...Peter Deibler, Former Host Of Kane Morning Show

Peter Deibler
Peter Deibler, known to thousands of morning drive time WIHT Hot 99.5 FM radio listeners as "Kane", passed away after a long illness on Friday, March 6th at the Shady Grove Adventist Medical Center in suburban Maryland.

His death was announced by  the law firm Joseph, Greenwald & Laake, P.A.

"The Kane Show" hit the FM dial in the Washington area in 2006. For years, it has been among the DMV's most-listened-to morning radio programs, playing the latest hits and popular segments. Kane routinely discussed being a father to his two daughters, Sam and Sophie, endearing him to his many listeners.

The Kane show, that also aired on Top 40 stations in Baltimore, Louisville, and Tampa, originated from the iHeartRadio studios located in the DC metropolitan area.

Deibler was host of the Kane Show for 14 years until April of 2020. His exit from the show came four years after he was arrested for assault in connection with an incident involving his estranged wife.

The Deibler's divorce hit a crescendo in May 2016, when Natasha filed second-degree assault charges against Peter. Natasha claimed the radio host tossed her against a wall at his luxury, high-rise apartment in North Bethesda.

Natasha was picking up the couple's two young daughters at the time of the incident, and reportedly suffered a sprained knee, head injury, bruises, and a black eye. In court, both accused each other of substance abuse and unspecified erratic behavior. Prosecutors ultimately dropped the criminal case, which has since been expunged from public court records.

Philly Radio: Tim Herbster Named Brand Manager for WBEB, WOGL

Tim Herbster
Entercom has announced the appointment of Tim Herbster as Director of Music Programming and Brand Manager of AC WBEB B101.1 and Classic Hits WOGL 98.1 FM in Philadelphia.

“I am so excited to welcome Tim to our Philadelphia team,” said David Yadgaroff, Senior Vice President and Market Manager, Entercom Philadelphia. “The combination of his vast experience, passion for creating great content and winning attitude will make such a positive impact on these iconic brands.”

"I’m thrilled to return to my home state of Pennsylvania and join the talented Entercom Philadelphia team,” said Herbster. “Having programmed and been on the air in Philadelphia earlier in my career, I know the listener engagement is like no other market. The same passion that runs deep for their favorite sports teams can be found in their radio station selection as well. The WBEB, WOGL, and WTDY brands are not just radio stations, they are franchises. Serving and entertaining the Philadelphia community is in their DNA and comes out of the speakers between every song. I'm also very excited to bring “Most Requested Live” back to the city where it was born – Saturday nights on 96.5 TDY. Thank you to David Yadgaroff, Jeff Sottolano and Pat Paxton for the confidence and opportunity to come home.”

Veteran personality and programmer Tim "Romeo" Herbster’s career in radio began as a DJ at the age of 15 in Pennsylvania and later led him to Nashville, Salt Lake City, Detroit, and New York City. He started his programming journey in Paris in 2009, made his way to Philadelphia, back to New York, and then to Portland, Oregon, where he most recently served as the Senior Vice President of Programming for iHeartMedia’s Pacific Northwest region. 

He currently hosts the uniquely interactive radio show, “Most Requested Live with Romeo,” which can be heard on over 170 stations across North America.

Sports Talker Pat McAfee Happy Skip Bayless Got New Deal


Pat McAfee was quite excited to hear about Skip Bayless’ new deal with Fox Sports.

The NY Post’s Andrew Marchand reported that Bayless recently agreed to a four-year, $32 million deal to remain with the company. Bayless’ show “Undisputed” on FS1 is currently the No. 2 sports program on YouTube (42 million total views) behind McAfee’s “The Pat McAfee Show,” which was the most-watched sports show on YouTube in January (54 million total views).

“With Skip being a part of the second-largest sports show every single day, behind one other show, if you look at basically all analytics,” McAfee said on his show Friday. “This is great f–king news.” 

McAfee, the former Colts punter who left Barstool Sports in August 2018, has a show on Chris Russo’s “Mad Dog Sports Radio” channel on SiriusXM. The show featured exclusive and often headline-generating interviews with Packers quarterback Aaron Rodgers throughout the 2020 NFL season.

During the past two seasons, McAfee worked as a guest commentator on ESPN’s “College GameDay.” McAfee has said he’s currently negotiating with the network on a another deal with a limited number of dates, but “it would take a lot more than $8 million a year to get us exclusively to ESPN, so I’m not even in that conversation.”

And though he likes owning his business, Bayless’ contract certainly gives McAfee something to think about.

“We are in a much different time than we were (Thursday),” McAfee said. 

National Contesting - Revisited

In NuVoodoo Ratings Prospects Study 17, fielded at the beginning of this year, participants were asked a trio of questions. First, NuVoodoo Research wanted to know if respondents were aware national group contesting. Then, among those aware of group contests, they wanted to know how they feel about them. Anticipating that some reactions would be negative, we wanted to drill down and find out more.

Out of a sample of 3,329 respondents 14-54 across all PPM markets, they learned that 56% of the respondents had no idea group contesting is going on. Awareness is much higher, however, among the smaller subsets who test through as likely to accept a meter or return a diary – the “PPM Yes” and “Diary Yes” breakouts, where 35% and 30% are unaware of group contests. Awareness is even higher among the even smaller subsets of likely ratings participants who listen to broadcast radio at least an hour a day – the “PPM 60” and “Diary 60” breakouts, where only about 20% are unaware of group contests.






Among the 44% aware of group contesting in the overall sample, most think group contests are good (24% shown in teal in the chart), another 13% don’t care (in gold) and only 7% overall think group contests are bad. The percentages who say group contests are bad get smaller among those likely to participate in the ratings – and diminish even further among heavy listeners within the likely ratings participants (just 3% apiece among the “PPM 60” and “Diary 60” subsets).

When drilled down to the 7% cohort that thinks group contests are bad, the reasons are about as you’d expect – most think it diminishes their odds of winning or that local stations should only serve the local community. But that’s not the real problem brought about with group contesting.






The real problem is the perception that most contests are rigged. It’s a pernicious perception that continues to rise. If people think they don’t have a chance of winning, they’re unlikely to participate – meaning they won’t alter their behavior as imagined in the contest design. We believe this misperception shows up when there are lots of contest promos and solicitations on radio as an overall medium, but not as many segments or promos celebrating contest winners.






Bottom line: if you’re running a group contest, lean into it – big prizes and lots of chances to win are big positives. But you need to build winner promos and use your website, social media channels and digital media so contest-actives know your contest is legitimate. With call-in-to-win games out of favor, make sure you follow up to get audio and video from winners. And, of course, make sure you know how state and local regulations impact your ability to celebrate winners from stations outside your market.

If you’re competing with a group contest, make sure you promote heavily that your winners are all local and your prizes are a stimulus to the local community. Use every local tag you can think of when building winner promos: where the winner works (especially if it’s a company with lots of local employees), the part of town where they live, if they’re frontline workers, etc.

NuVoodoo goes over these results and much more in our recent webinar, “How to Get Your Ratings from Here to Vaccinated.” A recording of the webinar is available at nuvoodoo.com/webinars.

Bloomberg Radio Marks 1-Year Anniversary of Pandemic

Key Networks
, a next generation syndication company serving the radio industry, and Bloomberg Radio, the leading provider of radio business news in the U.S., announce that Bloomberg will debut a special daily series, “A Year Like No Other” that examines how the COVID-19 pandemic has changed life and business in America. “A Year Like No Other” will draw upon Bloomberg’s vast resources to provide radio listeners with daily glimpses of what has changed over the past year, how it has changed, and whether it will ever again be the same.

Every weekday beginning March 15, Bloomberg will take a look at a different industry or way of life that underwent a monumental change in the past year due to COVID-19. From restaurants to supermarkets, from airline travel to working from home, the last 12 months have been a year like no other. The series will begin with a deep dive, spending 3-5 minutes exploring the year overall. Subsequent installments will run 60-seconds each. The special series is available to all Bloomberg Radio affiliates.

Topics to be covered in the series include:
  • How restaurants pivoted to delivery
  • Family fun centers get hit hard; rely on reservations to survive
  • Small retailers increase their online presence
  • Travel agencies struggle; now, they’re preparing for a surge
  • Companies branch out from their core offerings
  • Home shopping forever changed
  • Unexpected demand disrupts the supply chain
  • A push to make new outdoor spaces permanent
  • The push for racial justice amid the pandemic boosts business for Black-owned enterprises
  • Alcohol
  • How post-pandemic office life will look
  • Sports betting wins
  • Businesses ask for flexibility from their landlords
  • Movie theaters pivot from new releases to private showings of “the classics”
  • Newspapers accelerate the pivot to online-only
“The series will showcase the range of Bloomberg’s business journalism and our wide reporting on the COVID-19 pandemic and its effects,” said Al Mayers, Global Head of Bloomberg Television and Radio. “We look forward to bringing this new content marking the past year to our audience.”

Dennis Green, Chief Revenue Officer, Key Networks, noted: “Bloomberg’s news team has once again produced content for our affiliates that provides an in-depth look at a story that impacts listeners across the country. This is the type of service and information that Bloomberg affiliates receive 24/7, 365 that is second to none.”

For more information and to get Bloomberg Radio for your station, contact Dennis Green, Chief Revenue Officer, Key Networks, at 844.KEY.NETS or dennis@keynetworks.com.

For advertisers and sponsors, contact Deidra Hoye, SVP, Ad Sales, Key Networks, at 310.739.8015 or deidra@keynetworks.com.

Wake-Up Call: Cuomo Refuses To Resign

➤TWO TOP N.Y. LAWMAKERS TURN AGAINST CUOMO, HE REFUSES TO RESIGN: New York's two top Democratic lawmakers turned against embattled Democratic Governor Andrew Cuomo on Sunday as further charges of sexual harassment emerged. Senate Majority Leader Andrea Stewart-Cousins said Cuomo should resign, becoming the first senior Democrat in the state to say so, and while Assembly Speaker Carl Heastie didn't come out and say the same, he said in a statement, "it is time for the Governor to seriously consider whether he can effectively meet the needs of the people of New York." But Cuomo said during a press conference yesterday that it would be, quote, "anti-democratic" for him to step down, saying, "There is no way I resign." 

Two more women who'd worked for Cuomo accused him Saturday of inappropriate behavior, after three other woman previously accused him. Karen Hinton, a former press aide to Cuomo when he served as the federal housing secretary under President Bill Clinton, told the Washington Post that after a hotel room interaction when they were trying to mend issues they'd had Cuomo gave her a hug as she got up to leave that was, quote, "very long, too long, too tight, too intimate." She called it not sexual harassment, but a "power play" for "manipulation and control." The other woman, Ana Liss, who was a policy and operations aide from 2013 to 2015, told the Wall Street Journal Cuomo had called her "sweetheart," asked if she had a boyfriend, touched her on her lower back during an event, and once kissed her hand.

MORE THAN 58.8 MILLION AMERICANS HAVE GOTTEN AT LEAST ONE DOSE OF COVID VACCINE: As the vaccine effort continues to ramp up across the country, passing more than two million vaccinations daily in recent days, more than 58.8 million Americans had received at least one dose of a Covid vaccine as of yesterday, according to CNN. About 30.6 million people -- or about 9.2 percent of the U.S. population -- have gotten two doses and are fully vaccinated. As the race between vaccinations and the coronavirus variants that are spreading continues, CNN cited Dr. Peter Hotez, the dean of the National School of Tropical Medicine at Baylor College, as saying the good news is that all three vaccines being used in the U.S. -- Pfizer's Moderna's and Johnson & Johnson's -- "work really well" against the U.K. variant, which is spreading the most so far and is more contagious.

➤HOUSE TO TAKE UP $1.9 TRILLION COVID PLAN AFTER PASSED BY SENATE:
Final passage in the House of President Biden's $1.9 trillion Covid-19 relief plan is expected on Tuesday after it was passed in the Senate on Saturday on a party-line vote. However, there could potentially be some pushback from progressive Democrats unhappy about a federal $15-an-hour minimum wage being removed from the package, as well as unemployment benefits being reduced. A central part of the bill is sending $1,400 to most Americans, and it also includes money for Covid vaccines and testing, aid to state and local governments, help for schools and the airline industry, and more.

➤JURY SELECTION BEGINS TODAY IN TRIAL OF OFFICER CHARGED IN GEORGE FLOYD'S DEATH: Jury selection will begin today in the trial of Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer charged with second-degree murder in the death of George Floyd last May. Video showing Chauvin, who is while, with his knee on the neck of Floyd, who was Black, for nearly nine minutes as Floyd repeatedly said that he couldn't breathe sparked weeks of protests across the country against racial injustice and police brutality. Three other officers involved in the incident will go on trial in August on charges of aiding and abetting second-degree murder. All four were fired after Floyd's death.

The Daily Mail Online 3/8/21



➤MEGHAN MARKLE AND PRINCE HARRY TELL ALL:  Meghan Markle and Prince Harry sat down with Oprah Winfrey for a much-anticipated, much-teased interview at 8 p.m. on CBS. The interview proved to be as filled with drama as many expected, touching on the racist reception Meghan got inside and outside the Palace, and how the constant criticism and harassment challenged both Meghan and Harry’s mental health and ultimately forced them to step away from royal life.

As many royal watchers know, Harry and Meghan announced on Instagram that they were stepping down from their royal roles in January of 2020. Under terms brokered by the palace, the couple had to step back from royal duties, drop their His and Her Royal Highness titles and would no longer receive funds for royal duties.

Among the wildest revelations from the interview: Meghan had to learn how to curtsy five minutes before meeting the Queen; Kate Middleton made Meghan cry the week before their wedding, as opposed to the opposite which was widely reported; Meghan and Harry got married in secret before their televised wedding; Meghan says the Queen has always been “warm” to her; Royals were worried about how dark her and Harry’s son Archie would be; a serious mental health crisis and the lack of Royal support led to them leaving; Meghan and Harry are happy and living a “really fulfilling” life in California; they are having a girl this summer, their second child; Harry and Meghan told the Queen and his father, Prince Charles, that they were leaving their senior royal roles before they announced it in public.
 

Going into the momentous interview, the Palace adhered to its standard protocol of not commenting on speculation surrounding royals. They did, however, announce that they were investigating allegations that Meghan bullied members of her staff. The claims were made anonymously in a British newspaper; the Sussexes said, through a spokesperson, that the report was “a calculated smear campaign” in response to their expected revelations.

QUEEN’S PERSPECTIVE

Queen Elizabeth, 94, attempted to share a softer side of the royal family ahead of the interview. Hours before their talk, she paid tribute to the heroes who came together in response to COVID-19. “Over the coming week, as we celebrate the friendship, spirit of unity and achievements of the Commonwealth, we have an opportunity to reflect on a time like no other," the Queen said at the start of her speech. "The testing times experienced by so many have led to a deeper appreciation of the mutual support and spiritual sustenance we enjoy by being connected to others."

The Queen also expressed hope that "we shall maintain this renewed sense of closeness and community."

"Looking forward, relationships with others across the Commonwealth will remain important, as we strive to deliver a common future that is sustainable and more secure, so that the nationals and neighborhoods in which we live, wherever they are located, become healthier and happier places for all," she said.


POLL...ONLY 18 PERCENT OF AMERICANS NOW SUPPORT CALLS TO 'DEFUND THE POLICE': 
Only 18 percent of Americans now support calls to "defund the police," according to a new Ipsos/USA Today poll, which has fallen since last August, after a summer of protests against racial injustice and police brutality in the wake of George Floyd's death at the hands of Minneapolis police. While whites and Republicans were significantly more likely to oppose defunding the police, only 28 percent of Blacks and 34 percent of Democrats were in favor of it. There have been two different views of what defund the police means. When asked if police should be eliminated, one view of it, 67 overall said no, including a majority of Blacks and Democrats. But when asked if they favored the other view, in which some police funding would instead go to social services, so others with more targeted training could respond to things like calls for a mental health crisis or to interact with a homeless person, the numbers were a little more favorable. A majority of 57 percent was still against it, but 43 percent supported it.

➤STUDY...AN UNSTABLE WORKING LIFE AFFECTS THE FUTURE MENTAL HEALTH OF YOUNG PEOPLE:  Transitioning from school into the working life isn’t easy. A new study by researchers in Spain finds that a precarious, unstable initiation by young people into working life is associated with poorer future mental health. The scientists found, for example, that people with a more stable working life (increasing job stability) tended to take fewer days off work due to mental disorders than people who had a more unstable working life. They also found that having worked in large companies at the start of their working life was associated with better mental health later on.




🏀TEAM LEBRON WINS ALL-STAR GAME OVER TEAM DURANT: Team LeBron James won the NBA All-Star Game in Atlanta last night, defeating Team Kevin Durant 170-150, with LeBron now 4-0 in All-Star games since the top vote-getters in each conference began picking their team members the last four years. Giannis Antetokounmpo, who was on LeBron's team, was the game’s MVP, going 16 of 16 for 35 points, the most baskets without a miss in All-Star Game history. LeBron himself played less than 13 minutes and scored just four points. On the other side, Durant didn't play because of a hamstring injury, and the leading scorer for his team was Bradley Beal. The stands were mostly empty due to the coronavirus, and two players, Joel Embiid and Ben Simmons of the Philadelphia 76ers, were scratched from the game because a barber who gave them haircuts tested positive for Covid. Embiid, who was supposed to be a starter on Durant's team, was replaced by New Orleans’ Zion Williamson. Simmons was a reserve player.

Three-Point, Skills and Slam Dunk: Because of the pandemic precautions, the three-point shot, skills and slam dunk competitions were all held last night, the first two before the game and the latter during halftime. Golden State's Stephen Curry won the three-point contest, Indiana's Domantas Sabonis won the Skills Challenge, and Portland's Anfernee Simons was the winner of the Slam Dunk Contest.

🏀GRIFFIN AGREES TO DEAL WITH NETS: Blake Griffin has agreed to a deal to join the Brooklyn Nets for the rest of the season, his agent told ESPN last night. The six-time All-Star cleared waivers last night after agreeing to a buyout on the remaining $56.5 million left on his contract with the Detroit Pistons Friday. The 31-year-old had been with Detroit since January 2018, after being traded by the L.A. Clippers less than one season into a five-year deal.

➤NASCAR'S LARSON GETS FIRST WIN SINCE RETURNING FROM SUSPENSION: NASCAR driver Kyle Larson won the Penzoil 400 at Las Vegas Motor Speedway on Sunday (March 7th), earning his first victory since coming back from a nearly year-long suspension for using a racial slur during an online race last April. It was just Larson's fourth race for Hendrick Motorsports, who picked him up after he lost nearly all his sponsors and was dropped by Chip Ganassi Racing following last year's incident.

🏌DECHAMBEAU WINS ARNOLD PALMER INVITATIONAL: American Bryson DeChambeau won the Arnold Palmer Invitational at Bay Hill Golf Course in Orlando, Florida, yesterday (March 7th), getting a one-shot victory over England's Lee Westwood. He finished with an 11-under 277. DeChambeau became the first player this season with multiple victories, to go along with his U.S. Open title in September.

Report: Nexstar's Sean Compton Faces Rebellion At NewsNation


Last summer, a staff of more than 150 people started putting together “NewsNation,” a three-hour prime-time cable news show that was billed as a throwback to the just-the-facts news programs of TV’s golden age. Unlike the prime-time shows on CNN, Fox News and MSNBC filled with partisan monologues and fiery discussions, “NewsNation” would serve up unbiased news reports in a straightforward manner.

Sean Compton
The show made its debut in September on WGN America, a Chicago cable channel available in roughly 75 million households across the country. Its development was overseen by Sean Compton, a top executive at Nexstar Media Group, which owns WGN America. He laid out the show’s mission in a January 2020 statement: “We consistently hear from viewers who are seeking straight-ahead, unbiased news reporting that is grounded in fact, not opinion,” Compton said. “‘News Nation’ will deliver exactly that.”

But now, six months after its debut, “NewsNation” has abysmal ratings and disaffected staff members who say it has not lived up to Compton’s billing, reports The NY Times.

To lead the newsroom, Compton hired Jennifer Lyons and Sandy Pudar, two well-regarded veterans of the Chicago station WGN-TV. In recent weeks, the news director and managing editor have resigned. Six people at the network, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to reveal internal discussions, said “NewsNation” has increasingly become a venue for right-wing views.

The unrest at the channel’s flagship newscast started in earnest last month, when an industry publication reported that Bill Shine, a former Fox News co-president and Trump administration official, had been working since June as a “NewsNation” consultant. Until the article appeared, the staff did not know about his involvement, the six people said.

Several staff members said the secrecy around the hiring of Shine caused many people at “NewsNation” to question whether Compton had been sincere in his pledge to deliver “straight-ahead” coverage, or if he had planned all along to create what one person at the show called “a mini Fox News.” Compton declined to comment.

Compton, 47, had his first success in radio, having spent 18 years as a high-level executive at Clear Channel Radio and Premiere Radio Networks.

Ms. Pudar, the news director, resigned abruptly on Feb. 2. The next day, FTV Live, a cable industry website, broke the news of Shine’s involvement in “NewsNation,” further inflaming the staff, according to six people at the show.

Shine is a onetime lieutenant to Roger E. Ailes, the network’s late chairman, who was ousted in 2016 after facing accusations of sexual harassment. Shine himself was pushed out of Fox News in 2017, after he was accused in lawsuits of enabling Ailes’s behavior. The next year he joined the Trump administration as its communications head. He did not respond to requests for comment.

NYC Radio: 77WABC Launching New Show In Former Rush Time Slot


Newsmax TV host Greg Kelly has landed a daytime radio show at John Catsimatidis’  77 WABC, Page Six at The NY Post is reporting.

Kelly’s show will debut Tuesday March 9 at 1 p.m. and feature “the latest breaking news and opinion, and expert perspective on current events,” the station said in a statement.

Kelly joins the lineup after 77 WABC Radio recently added such political voices as former National Economic Council director Larry Kudlow and former GOP Rep. Peter King.

We also reported this week that Catsimatidis — who also hosts a show on the station he owns through Red Apple Media — is now considering a run for New York governor. 

The station’s Curtis Sliwa is also running for mayor. Outside the political sphere, hosts at 77 WABC also include former “SNL” star Joe Piscopo, ’70s pop star Tony Orlando, fashion designer Joseph Abboud.

NYC Radio: 77WABC Owner Thinking Of Running For Governor

John Catsimatidis

Businessman, Owner and CEO of Red Apple Media Group John Catsimatidis is eyeing a run to potentially become the 57th Governor to lead New York State, according to a posting on the 77WABC Website.

In an exclusive interview with the New York Post Page Six, the owner of 77WABC Radio says “I have no agenda other than loving New York and wanting to fix it.  I’m being torn apart because I want New York to be fixed,” said Catsimatidis during the interview.

Catsimatidis was initially considering a run for New York City Mayor, but according to Page Six, political consultants and advisors have told the billionaire he should aspire for higher political office — running on a “Republican – Liberal” platform.

“I haven’t ruled anything out yet,” said John Catsimatidis during the interview.

The interest in holding office in Albany comes as Governor Andrew Cuomo has been under political whiplash over the last several weeks — surrounding a federal probe into his Administration’s handling of COVID deaths in nursing homes, three women alleging sexual harassment, and recent reports his top aides allegedly re-wrote reports to lower the amount of COVID deaths in nursing homes.

When asked about the fate of Governor Andrew Cuomo, Castimatidis has this to say: “It’s a 50-50 sitation with him; he’s historically a survivor and it could go either way,” said Catsimatidis.   “The fact is we need equal justice for all.”

John Catsimatidis also stated in the interview his consideration for the Gubernatorial Race in 2022 would give him another year to move his business assets and interest to his family.

Catsimatidis also told The Post he would step down from his hosting duties on 77WABC Radio, which include his weekday evening show “Cats At Night” and his Sunday morning show “Cats Roundtable” if he were to hold office.

Catsimatidis says he would be willing to spend $100 million of his own funds, according to the Page Six article, for the race.

CNN's Lefty Media Pundit Ignores Cuomo's Troubles

NY Post 3/7/21

CNN’s left-wing pundit Brian Stelter, who once hailed the "leadership" of Democratic New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, did not devote a single minute of his Sunday morning program, "Reliable Sources" to the growing scandal surrounding the embattled governor.

Instead, FOX News reports Stelter devoted time to providing free publicity to "Room Rater," a Twitter account created early in the COVID pandemic that uses a 1-10 scale to rate rooms seen in interviews on TV.

Stelter’s hard-hitting coverage of "Room Rater" coincided with two Democratic New York state lawmakers withdrawing their support for Governor Cuomo over allegations of sexual harassment and undercounting COVID-19 deaths in nursing homes.

But just when you thought that was enough to no longer 'rely' on CNN to cover facts... more evidence is coming to light. 

On Saturday, another woman who worked for Cuomo publicly accused him of inappropriate behavior, on the heels of other allegations in recent weeks.

The woman, Ana Liss, told The Wall Street Journal in a story published Saturday that when she worked as a policy aide to the governor between 2013 and 2015, Cuomo called her "sweetheart," kissed her hand and asked personal questions including whether she had a boyfriend.

Karen Hinton, a former press aide to Cuomo when he served as the federal housing secretary under President Bill Clinton, detailed an uncomfortable hotel room interaction she also had with Cuomo in a story published Saturday in The Washington Post. Hinton, said that as she got up to leave, he gave her a hug that was "very long, too long, too tight, too intimate."

Meanwhile, The Wrap reports Fox News “MediaBuzz” host Howard Kurtz called out CNN and MSNBC for their handling of the growing scandals surrounding New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo, accusing them of downplaying accusations of sexual harassment and falsifying COVID-19 nursing home death counts until the story became too big to ignore.

“What a dramatic turnabout. A tacit admission that the media had botched the story by initially ignoring it, playing it down — ‘Nothing to see here, let’s move right along, and hmm, I wonder what Donald Trump is up to,'” Kurtz said at the start of Sunday’s show.

America's Media Habits Divide Along Political and Racial Lines


Race and identity play into the media platforms people use to advocate their politics, according to Axios. Their data shows.

Why it matters: People of color and Democrats are more likely to take to social platforms like Twitter to advocate for a cause, and to say that seeing something on social media changed their views. Republicans are increasingly turning to partisan outlets on TV, print and audio.

Details: In a Pew Research poll from this summer, Democrats were more than twice as likely as Republicans to post a hashtag for a political or social issue.

Black social media users were twice as likely as white users to say they used a hashtag to promote a social or political issue on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, or any other social media site.

Nearly half (48%) of all Black social media users say they have posted a picture on social media to show their support for a cause in the past month, compared with 37% of Hispanic users and 33% of white users.

The survey also found that Black adults who use social media (45%) are also much more likely than their Hispanic (33%) or white (30%) counterparts "to say that in the past month they’ve taken to social media to encourage others to take action on issues that are important to them."

The Intrigue: Mexican Americans and Native Americans especially seek information on social media platforms like Instagram and TikTok because they don't see themselves on network TV or cable news, said Eli Magaña, a Las Vegas Democratic consultant with Vox Consulting LLC.

"When they do put Latinos on CNN or MSNBC, it's usually from an East Coast perspective and they don't understand Mexican Americans on the West Coast," said Magaña, who has amassed nearly 50,000 followers on TikTok by posting about Mexican genealogy.
 
Tokata Iron Eyes, a 12-year-old member of the Standing Rock Sioux tribe, used #NativeTwitter to organize around the Dakota Access Pipeline protests and spread the #NoDAPL hashtag in 2016, when few mainstream news outlets covered the demonstrations over water rights.

#BlackTwitter is used to share information about unrest in Haiti, a new police shooting caught on video, or the latest fashion trends for African Americans.

What to watch: Following the Capitol siege, some conservatives may find that traditional channels are more skeptical of their message.

Simon & Schuster, one of the country's biggest book publishers, canceled plans to publish Sen.Josh Hawley's book, following an outcry over his role in supporting the Capitol attack on January 6th.

Elsewhere in the book publishing world, the editorial director of the conservative imprint at the Hachette Book Group was terminated, the New York Times reported, for, she believes, her political beliefs.

Conservative TV networks, like Fox News and Newsmax, have also started to treat conservative guests known for touting election fraud conspiracies with more caution, following a $2.7-billion defamation lawsuit and other legal threats.

Radio giant Cumulus Media warned conservative hosts to temper any allegations of election fraud following the siege.

What they're saying: "Social media is becoming increasingly hostile toward conservatives who feel their views aren't being respected," GOP consultant Danny Laub told Axios.
 
Laub said a combination of social media mobs attacking conservatives and technology companies censoring conservative views has created a world where some Republicans increasingly go to right-leaning media outlets and avoid social media.

"This polarization is probably a net negative on democracy."

Go deeper:
Activism defined social media in 2020.

GRAMMY Performers Announced



The Recording Academy announced the full lineup for the 2021 GRAMMY Awards show, officially known as the 63rd GRAMMY Awards. Performers include Bad Bunny, Black Pumas, Cardi B, BTS, Brandi Carlile, DaBaby, Doja Cat, Billie Eilish, Mickey Guyton, Haim, Brittany Howard, Miranda Lambert, Lil Baby, Dua Lipa, Chris Martin, John Mayer, Megan Thee Stallion, Maren Morris, Post Malone, Roddy Ricch, Harry Styles, and Taylor Swift

Artists will be coming together, while still safely apart, to play music for each other as a community and celebrate the music that unites us all.


Additionally, Music's Biggest Night will pay tribute to the independent venues, which have been greatly impacted by the pandemic. From bartenders to box office managers, those who work day-to-day at the Troubadour (Los Angeles), the Hotel Café (Los Angeles), the Apollo Theater (New York City), and the Station Inn (Nashville) will present various categories throughout the night.

Read: How To Watch The 2021 GRAMMY Awards Show: A Viewer's Guide On Where To Watch Music's Biggest Night

Hosted by Trevor Noah, CBS and the Recording Academy present the 63rd Annual GRAMMY Awards, airing live on Sunday, March 14, 2021, at 8:00 p.m. ET/5:00 p.m. PT on CBS Television Network and also available to stream live and on demand on Paramount+.

Here's Who Leads the Streaming Wars


Many companies have launched a streaming service over the past few years, trying to capitalize on the digital media shift and launching the so-called “streaming wars.”

After Netflix grew from a small DVD-rental company to a household name, every media company from Disney to Apple saw recurring revenues ripe for the taking. Likewise, the audio industry has long-since accepted Spotify’s rise to prominence, as streaming has become the de facto method of consumption for many.

But it was actually the unexpected COVID-19 pandemic that solidified the foothold of digital streaming, with subscription services seeing massive growth over the last year. Although it was expected that many new services would flounder along the way, media subscription services saw wide scale growth and adoption almost across the board.

The Visual Capitalist has taken the video, audio, and news subscription services with 5+ million subscribers to see who came out on top—and who has grown the most quickly—over the past year. Data comes from the FIPP media association as well as individual company reports.

R.I.P.: Dick Smyth, Famed Former CKLW, CHUM News Anchor

Dick Smyth was 86
Radio and television personality Dick Smyth, whose booming commentary filled Canadian airwaves for decades with hot takes on the day’s topics, died  Saturday.

He was 86, according to The Toronto Star.

The veteran broadcaster was a familiar voice to radio listeners.

His career spanned an array of influential stations, such as CKLW 800AM in Windsor, Ont., when it was known as “the Big 8,” and CHUM 1050 AM in Toronto.

And his face was known to viewers during the early days of Citytv’s news broadcasts where he offered unapologetic and animated opinions on political leaders, the economy and local issues.

A Montreal native, Smyth was fascinated with radio programming in his youth, and it led him to join a children’s theatre group that performed live on the air. He usually played the giants and ogres, he once recalled. The experience helped land his first official radio gig at a station in Cornwall, Ont., where he met his wife.

But it was being hired at the legendary Windsor station “the Big 8,”named for its powerhouse 50,000-watt signal at 800 on the AM dial,that offered Smyth a serious opportunity to build his reputation as a standout morning newscaster and reporter.

When the 1967 Detroit Riots were sparked by a police raid of an illegal after-hours club for Black Americans, Smyth sprang into action as one of the few Canadian reporters on the scene.

Venturing across the Windsor border, his reports captured the fear gripping Motor City as martial law went into effect. Each update offered vivid descriptions of the scene and colourful interviews with locals.

The news pieces earned much acclaim. Smyth was the first Canadian to receive the International Award of the Radio Television News Directors Association.

Smyth retired from full-time broadcasting in 1997, a decision he made after suffering a period of severe depression.

March 8 Radio History




➦In 1925...John Bradley Gambling started on-air at WOR NYC. Bernard McFadden was a physical culturist who had a radio show in New York City. When McFadden failed to show up for his daily morning program, Gambling, a studio engineer,  was forced to ad-lib on the air for a solid hour. Thus, WOR decided to gtive the time slot to Gambling.

John B. Gambling
John Bradley Gambling (April 9, 1897 – November 21, 1974) became the first of the Gambling family, 3 generations to host mornings on WOR. John B., John A. and John R. - were hosts of WOR Radio's 'Rambling with Gambling' over the course of over 80 years (1925–2000 and 2008–2013).

John B. was the host from 1925 to 1959, when he retired in favor of his son, John A. Gambling. With his Musical Clock, his all-in-fun setting-up exercises, cheerio music, wheezy gags, weather information and news scraps, John B. Gambling was a WOR fixture.

➦In 1945...George Michael 'Mickey' Dolenz Jr. born.  He is an actor, musician, television director, radio personality and theater director, best known as a vocalist and drummer of the 1960s pop/rock band the Monkees.

On January 10, 2005, Dolenz replaced Dan Taylor as the morning disc jockey at oldies radio station WCBS-FM in New York. On June 3, 2005, Dolenz celebrated his 100th show with a special morning show at B.B. King's. In an ironic and controversial twist, that was also his last regular show at the station; at 5:00 pm, WCBS-FM announced that the station would replace its oldies format with a "Jack" format.

However, WCBS-FM had since returned to its oldies format on July 12, 2007.

➦In 1949...WBAP 96.7 FM, Fort Worth Texas, signed-on. Today the station is Sports KTCK-FM, owned by Cumulus Media.



➦In 1979...Compact Disc Digital Audio, also known as Audio CD, is the standard format for audio compact discs, was first demonstrated.



➦In 1994...Jack Spector died at age 65 (Born - September 15, 1928). He was a longtime New York City radio personality.

Jack Spector
Spector began his career in 1955 and in 1961 became one of the original WMCA Good Guys.  In late December 1963, WMCA, with Spector, earned the distinction of being the first New York City radio station to play the Beatles' Capitol Records' single, "I Want to Hold Your Hand." (Outside New York, the single's broadcast debut is widely accepted to have occurred earlier at WWDC in Washington, D.C.)

After WMCA moved to a talk format, Spector went to WHN, then a vocal-based easy listening station. He remained for a while after WHN became a Country music station in 1973. In 1974, Spector left WHN to go to WCBS-FM where he hosted a 1955-1964 based Oldies show called "The Saturday Night Sock Hop" and another regular weekend shift. He was also a full-time swing host there, filling in for various airstaffers over the years. In 1983, Cousin Brucie began doing every third Saturday night of the month. Spector remained at WCBS-FM until the Spring of 1985.

In 1985, Spector was at WNBC as the original host of "Sports Night". He went then to WPIX-FM, which was playing an adult contemporary format. Upon their change to NAC and soon after to smooth jazz, he became one of the first air personalities on CD 101.9. Spector also worked as an optician when he was not on the air.

Late in 1988, Spector left WQCD and joined the staff of WHLI on Long Island, NY playing an Adult Standards format. That station began mixing in more rock and roll oldies by the early '90s. After a few Radio Greats Weekends at WCBS-FM, Jack Spector returned as a part-time swing announcer there in 1993 while working full-time at WHLI.

On March 8, 1994, shortly after starting a recording of Louis Prima's "I'm In The Mood For Love", he suffered an apparent fatal heart attack and collapsed.


➦In  2016… Ronald Herbert Jacobs died in Hawaii (Born - September 3, 1937). He is best known as the program director of KHJ radio in Los Angeles during its ground-breaking "Boss Radio" period (1965–1969), and as co-creator of the countdown show American Top 40, and the seminal radio program The History of Rock and Roll (1969).

At 23, Jacobs moved to the U.S. mainland. In 1962, he was promoted to vice president of programming for the Colgreene Corporation. From there he programmed San Bernardino’s KMEN Radio, and then, Fresno’s KMAK.

In Fresno, Jacobs found himself competing head on with radio consultant Bill Drake. They soon combined their talents to program RKO General’s KHJ Radio in Los Angeles. Within six months, the Drake-Jacobs’ “Boss Radio” format was Number One in America’s second largest radio market, garnering national recognition for creating pop radio’s most influential sound of the 1960s.

Jacobs produced the 48-hour-long History of Rock and Roll. Radio’s first "rockumentary," which aired on KHJ and subsequently other stations in the RKO chain, and was accepted into the Library of Congress as the “first aural history of rock and roll music.”

While programming the RKO radio chain from KHJ, Jacobs teamed again with Moffatt and Tom Rounds to form Charlatan Productions to produce films featuring recording artists in strange but eye-catching settings.

After four years atop the L.A. radio ratings, Jacobs left KHJ to co-found and become vice president of Watermark Inc. In 1970, with Tom Rounds and veteran LA deejay Casey Kasem, Jacobs co-created the syndicated radio program, American Top 40.



At Watermark, Jacobs also produced the award-winning Elvis Presley Story, written by rock author Jerry Hopkins and narrated by broadcast personality, Wink Martindale. Next, Jacobs produced a 15-album record series of legendary top-40 DJs re-creating their station's sound with the original music, commercials and jingles. The albums covered 1955 through 1969 and were titled "CRUISIN': A History of Rock 'n' Roll Radio."

Jacobs then went to San Diego to program KGB AM/FM Radio. It was there that Jacobs conceived and produced the original Home Grown album. The KGB Chicken, later known to the nation as "The San Diego Chicken" was also hatched from Jacobs' imagination.

In 1972, Ron Jacobs was honored by Billboard as Program Director of the Year. Jacobs’ documentary about Max Yasgur, on whose farm the Woodstock festival was staged, won Program of the Year honors and two years later, Billboard named KGB, Station of the Year.

During this time, Ron Jacobs continued concert promotions with Tom Moffatt, Tom Rounds and Mel Lawrence. In 1964, the four men formed Arena Associates, staging the first rock show in the Honolulu International Center (now, the Neal S. Blaisdell Arena). In 1968, Arena Associates produced the Miami Pop Festival. Jacobs produced concerts at the Hollywood Bowl, Hollywood Palladium, Los Angeles Sports Arena, Orange County Fairgrounds (first US appearance of the Rolling Stones), San Diego Stadium, in conjunction with KMEN, KHJ and KGB radio stations, which he served as program director.

In July 1976, Jacobs returned to an on-air position doing morning drive on KKUA Radio, in Honolulu, as “Whodaguy Ron Jacobs.” It was at KKUA that Jacobs introduced Home Grown, a radio station promotion in which contest winners had the opportunity to record their winning songs for release on a compilation album with the proceeds being donated to Habilitat, a drug/alcohol rehabilitation facility in Honolulu. Jacobs did three albums, Home Grown (1976), Home Grown II and Home Grown III, that featured a track named " Kona Winds " that introduced singer Marvin Franklin, while he was at KKUA.

Clark Webber circa 1980s

➦In 2020...Clark Weber was one of the most popular disc jockeys in Chicago during the 1960s and 1970s, first at WLS 890 AM and then at WCFL 1000 AM died at age 89


🎂HAPPY BIRTHDAY:
  • Andrea Parker is 51
    Jazz saxophonist George Coleman is 86. 
  • Actor Sue Ane Langdon is 85. 
  • Songwriter Carole Bayer Sager is 77. 
  • Actor-director Micky Dolenz of The Monkees is 76. 
  • Bassist Randy Meisner (The Eagles, Poco) is 75. 
  • Singer Peggy March is 73. 
  • Jazz pianist Billy Childs is 64. 
  • Singer Gary Numan is 63. 
  • NBC News anchor Lester Holt is 62. 
  • Actor Aidan Quinn is 62. 
  • Guitarist Jimmy Dormire (Confederate Railroad) is 61. 
  • Actor Camryn Manheim (“The Practice”) is 60. 
  • Actor Leon (“Cool Runnings”) is 60. 
  • Singer Shawn Mullins is 53. 
  • Actor Andrea Parker (“Less Than Perfect”) is 51. 
  • Actor Boris Kodjoe (“Code Black,” ″Madea’s Family Reunion”) is 48. 
  • Actor Freddie Prinze Jr. is 45. 
  • Actor Laura Main (“Call the Midwife”) is 44. 
  • Actor James Van Der Beek (“CSI: Cyber,” ″Dawson’s Creek”) is 44. 
  • Singer Kameelah Williams of 702 is 43. 
  • Actor Nick Zano (“Minority Report,” ″2 Broke Girls”) is 43. 
  • Singer Tom Chaplin of Keane is 42. 
  • Guitarist Andy Ross of OK Go is 42. 
  • Singer Kristinia DeBarge is 31.