Thursday, February 27, 2014

Sports Talker Casey Stern Re-Ups With SiriusXM

Casey Stern
SiriusXM Satellite Radio announced Wednesday it has re-signed Casey Stern as a host on its MLB Network Radio channel.

Stern also will see his roles expand on other Sirius XM channels, including NFL Radio and Mad Dog Sports Radio.

Just recently WOR 710 AM NYC pursued Stern to serve as the reporter for its new Mets radio broadcasts.

Stern will continue hosting Inside Pitch with Jim Bowden on MLB Network Radio.  He'll also continue to host MLB's coverage of the World Series and All-Star Game.


Stern said, “I am thrilled to be staying with SiriusXM and MLB Network Radio.  Our Inside Pitch show has become the ultimate dialogue of fans, players, team personnel and others in the baseball community and it's an absolute honor to be a part of it every day.”

SVP/Sports Programming Steve Cohen said, “Casey has played an important role in making SiriusXM the premier radio destination for MLB news and information.  We're very pleased to have him continue on MLB Network Radio and we're excited to expand his role and make him a valuable contributor to SiriusXM NFL Radio and Mad Dog Sports Radio."

Chicago Radio: The Score Loses 3 To The Game

Connor McKnight
“Hit and Run” baseball show host Connor McKnight just became the latest prize in Chicago’s spirited sports/talk radio competition, according to Chicago Media blogger Robert Feder.

After more than four years as a host, anchor and reporter for CBS Radio sports/talk WSCR 670 AM, McKnight has jumped to Tribune Broadcasting’s upstart competitor WGWG LP 87.7, where he’ll become part of the daily lineup.

Todd Manley, vice president of creative content for The Game 87.7 FM, said McKnight would make his first appearance Thursday on Mark Carman’s show, which airs from 7 to 10 p.m.

The move follows the defection of two other Score players — midday producer and weekend host Ben Finfer, who joined The Game as midday host, and Tribune Bulls beat writer K.C. Johnson, who signed on as NBA expert.

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Nominees Announced For 2014 Radio Disney Music Awards

One Direction, Austin Mahone, Katy Perry, Justin Timberlake, Taylor Swift, Zendaya, Fifth Harmony, Ariana Grande, Becky G, Selena Gomez and Demi Lovato are among the nominees announced Wednesday for the 2014 Radio Disney Music Awards.

According to broadwayworld.com, categories reflect the music and artists abuzz among kids age 6-14, and range from "They're the One - Best Music Group" and "That's My Jam - Best Song To Rock Out To With Your BFF" to "The Buzz - Breakout Artist of the Year" and "The Bestest - Song of The Year."

Voting will begin Friday, February 28 (7:30 a.m., ET) through Sunday, April 6 at Disney.com/RDMA and via Radio Disney's Facebook, Twitter and Instagram profiles, or by texting RDMA to Disney (347639).

Winners will be announced at the Radio Disney Music Awards, a live event featuring musical performances and today's hottest stars among youth, Saturday, April 26 at Nokia Theatre L.A. LIVE. "Disney Channel Presents The Radio Disney Music Awards," a television special originating from the event, will be presented Sunday, April 27 (8:00 p.m., ET/PT) on Disney Channel.

Nominees for the 2014 Radio Disney Music Awards: Click Here

R.I.P.: Bob&Tom Comedian Tim Wilson

A well-known comedian and staple on the Bob and Tom radio show has died.

Tim Wilson died Wednesday night after suffering a heat attack.

The 52-year-old stand-up comedian and country musician is famous for his southern-style humor and songs like "Garth Brooks Ruined My Life." He liked combining his country and comedy in other songs as well, such as his famous "First Baptist Bar & Grill."

Wilson leaves behind a wife and two children.


R.I.P.: Longtime Springfield Radio Host Bob Murray

Springfield, Il. radio host Bob Murray, whose broadcast career spanned more than four decades and who revealed in December that he was fighting brain cancer, died Wednesday at Imboden Creek Living Center in Decatur.

He was 66, according to sj-r.com.

From 2003 until his recent illness, Murray was host of the Morning Newswatch on WTAX 1240 AM radio in Springfield.

“He was one of those people that is approachable, friendly, and just a consummate professional,” said Alex Degman, news director and brand manager for WTAX. “He was able to make anybody, no matter what the subject, feel comfortable enough to go on the radio with him. It’s a talent that is just not around all that much anymore.”

Murray had been in broadcasting in central Illinois since joining radio station WMAY in the Springfield market in 1970. He was a weatherman on Decatur-based WAND-TV from 1989-2001, and worked on WMAY again before joining WTAX. He also appeared on WICS Channel 20 early in his career and spent several years on WCVS-AM and WFMB-FM, two other Springfield radio stations.

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R.I.P.: Radio/TV Personality Jim Lange

Jim Lange
Jim Lange, original host of the popular game show “The Dating Game,” has died Tuesday from an apparent heart attack.

He was 81.

He was known to listeners in the San Francisco and Los Angeles radio markets with stints at several stations in both markets, racking up over 45 years on the air. Lange was also known to television viewers as the host of several game shows, including The Dating Game, which he hosted from its debut in 1965 until the late '70s.

Lange began his radio broadcasting career in the Twin Cities after winning an audition as a teenager. After graduating from the University of Minnesota and serving in the Marines, Lange moved to San Francisco. After making his Bay Area broadcast debut as "The All-Night Mayor" on KGO, he moved to afternoons on KSFO in 1960.

His network television career began in San Francisco with The Tennessee Ernie Ford Show in 1962, where Lange was announcer and sidekick to Ford. Three years later he would sign on to host The Dating Game.

While still on-air at KSFO, he commuted to Los Angeles to tape the TV program.



His other game shows include $100,000 Name That Tune, Bullseye and The $1,000,000 Chance of a Lifetime, as well as short-lived shows including, Spin-Off, Triple Threat and Give-n-Take.

He also appeared as himself on Bewitched, Laverne & Shirley, The Super Mario Bros. Super Show!, Parker Lewis Can't Lose and Moesha. He also appeared during December 2002 on Hollywood Squares for their "Game Show Week".

Lange  was introduced to Los Angeles local radio audiences on KMPC in 1970, in order to limit his commute while taping "The Dating Game". He returned to Gene Autry/Golden West station KSFO by 1971 and remained there till the station was sold in 1983. He then returned to KMPC, where he did mornings and afternoons (at different times) until the end of the decade.

In the early 1990s, he returned to full-time radio in the Bay Area, when he originally worked afternoons on KFRC 610 AM and eventually accepted an offer to broadcast weekday mornings on "Magic 61," by then owned by real estate magnate Peter Bedford (Bedford Broadcasting). Magic 61 was formatted as American pop standards.

The "Lange Gang" aired for much of the next decade.

After the sale of KFRC 610 AM / 99.7 FM, Jim and the show decamped for a run on KKSJ, San Jose. In 1997, Lange became morning host of The Lange Gang on KABL in San Francisco.

Lange retired in 2005

February 27 In Radio History

In 1891...David Sarnoff was born - a United States pioneer in Radio and TV. He eventually became the head of RCA Victor.


Throughout most of his career he led the Radio Corporation of America (RCA) in various capacities from shortly after its founding in 1919 until his retirement in 1970.

He ruled over an ever-growing telecommunications and consumer electronics empire that included both RCA and NBC, and became one of the largest companies in the world. Named a Reserve Brigadier General of the Signal Corps in 1945, Sarnoff thereafter was widely known as "The General."

Unlike many who were involved with early radio communications, viewing radio as point-to-point, Sarnoff saw the potential of radio as point-to-mass. One person (the broadcaster) could speak to many (the listeners).



When Owen D. Young of the General Electric Company arranged the purchase of American Marconi and turned it into the Radio Corporation of America, a radio patent monopoly, Sarnoff realized his dream and revived his proposal in a lengthy memo on the company's business and prospects. His superiors again ignored him but he contributed to the rising postwar radio boom by helping arrange for the broadcast of a heavyweight boxing match between Jack Dempsey and Georges Carpentier in July 1921. Up to 300,000 people heard the fight, and demand for home radio equipment bloomed that winter. By the spring of 1922 Sarnoff's prediction of popular demand for broadcasting had come true, and over the next eighteen months, he gained in stature and influence.

In 1926, RCA purchased its first radio station (WEAF, New York) and launched the National Broadcasting Company (NBC), the first radio network in America. Four years later, Sarnoff became president of RCA. NBC had by that time split into two networks, the Red and the Blue. The Blue Network later became ABC Radio.

Sarnoff was instrumental in building and established the AM broadcasting radio business which became the preeminent public radio standard for the majority of the 20th century. This was until FM broadcasting radio re-emerged in the 1960s despite Sarnoff's efforts to suppress it.


Sarnoff retired in 1970, at the age of 79, and died the following year, aged 80. He is interred in a mausoleum featuring a stained-glass vacuum tube in Kensico Cemetery in Valhalla, New York.


In 1922...Commerce Secretary, Herbert Hoover, convened the first National Radio Conference.




In 1940...In Actor Howard Hesseman, Dr. Johnny Fever of WKRP in Cincinnati was born


In 1942...J. S. Hey discovered that the sun was emitting radiowaves.


Murray Kaufman
In 1965...Murray the K did his last show at WINS 1010 AM.

By the end of 1964, Murray found out that WINS was going to change to an all news format the following year. He resigned on the air in December 1964 (breaking news about the sale of the station and the change in format before the station and Group W released it) and did his last show on February 27 prior to the format change that occurred in April 1965.

A year later, in 1966, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) ruled that AM and FM radio stations could no longer simply simultaneously broadcast the same content, opening the door for Murray to become program director and primetime dj on WOR-FM — one of the first FM rock stations, soon airing such djs as Rosko and Scott Muni in the new FM format. Murray played long album cuts rather than singles, often playing groups of songs by one artist, or thematically linked songs, uninterrupted by commercials. He combined live in-studio interviews with folk-rock — he called it "attitude music" — and all forms of popular music in a free-form format. He played artists like Bob Dylan and Janis Ian, the long album versions of their songs that came to be known as the "FM cuts". Al Aronowitz quotes Murray as saying about this formula, "You didn't have to hype the record any more. The music was speaking for itself."

WOR switched to an oldies format and Murray the K left New York radio to host programs in Toronto - on CHUM -and on WHFS 102.3 FM in Bethesda, MD in 1972. He returned to New York after his short stint on WHFS on the weekend show NBC Monitor and as a fill-in morning dj, and then in 1972 moved to a regular evening weekend program on WNBC radio where Don Imus was broadcasting; he was joined there by the legendary Wolfman Jack, a year later.

Although it was low-key, Murray's WNBC show featured his own innovative trademark programming style, including telling stories that were illustrated by selected songs, his unique segues, and his pairing cuts by theme or idiosyncratic associations.  In early 1975, he was brought on for a brief stint at legendary Long Island alternative rock station WLIR, and his final New York radio show ran later that year on WKTU-FM after which — already in ill health — he moved to Los Angeles. The syndicated show Soundtrack of the 60s mentioned below was heard in New York City on WCBS-FM. Gary Owens succeeded Murray as its host.


In 1968...Singer Frankie Lymon, of the group Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers, best known for their song, "Why Do Fools Fall in Love," died of a heroin overdose. He was 25.


In 1984...WRC-AM in Washington DC changes call letters to WWRC


In 2003...Fred Rogers, creator and host of the PBS children's TV show Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, died. He was 74.


In 2008...Pittsburgh journalist/sportscaster/author/National Radio Hall of Famer Myron Cope, color commentator on Pittsburgh Steelers radio broadcasts for 35 years and inventor of the Terrible Towel, died of respiratory failure at age 79.

Wednesday, February 26, 2014

LA Radio: Ryan Seacrest Celebrates 10 Years On KIIS-FM

Ellen K, Ryan Seacrest
Clear Channel Media and Entertainment announced today that Emmy-winning television and radio host, Ryan Seacrest, is celebrating 10 years of being on-air on 102.7 KIIS-FM, Los Angeles No. 1 Hit Music Station, as well as a decade of hosting American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest.

(After 23 years on KIIS-FM, Rick Dees left in 2004 because of a contract dispute).

In February 2004 Seacrest took the reigns as host of KIIS-FM's morning show and since then it has become No. 1 in Los Angeles and the most-listened-to morning show in Southern California. Broadcasting from Hollywood, Seacrest, Ellen K. and the on-air crew focuses on all aspects of the entertainment industry, highlighting and interviewing top talent from the worlds of music, film and television.

The show has featured a wide ranging roster of guests including President Obama and First Lady Michelle Obama, Ellen DeGeneres, David and Victoria Beckham, Oprah Winfrey, Taylor Swift, Pitbull, Katy Perry, Keith Urban, Demi Lovato, Jamie Fox, Hugh Jackman, Bruno Mars, Jimmy Fallon, Ashton Kutcher, Jennifer Lopez, Jimmy Kimmel, Julia Roberts, Ben Affleck, Channing Tatum, Jennifer Aniston, Tom Cruise, Miley Cyrus, Al Michaels, Bob Costas, Lady Gaga, Justin Bieber, the Jonas Brothers, Kim Kardashian, Madonna, Ke$ha, Donald Trump, Kobe Bryant, among many others.



The top-rated music and entertainment news program airs Monday through Friday from 5-10:00 a.m. PST. In addition, on March 1 and 2, Seacrest will celebrate 10 years as host of the nationally syndicated No. 1 countdown show, American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest, which is syndicated by Premiere Networks.

The show has more than five million weekly listeners (Source: Nielsen Audio, SP'13, Nationwide, Exact Times, Weekly Reach, P 12+) and can be heard on nearly 500 radio stations worldwide.

"Ten years have felt like ten minutes -- it has truly flown by. I'm so grateful to everyone at Clear Channel and for my dedicated KIIS and AT40 teams, as all of our success has so much to do with their passion and hard work," said Seacrest. "Radio has been my dream since I was a kid, and I'm still pinching myself every day I'm on the air. I love laughing with our listeners, hearing their stories, and being part of their daily lives."

"Back in 2004 when we began looking for a new morning show Ryan was doing afternoons at KYSR. It's hard work to establish a new morning show, but Ryan had full confidence he could do the job. His entire team threw everything they had into the show and it became the No. 1 show in Los Angeles in less than a year and today the most listened to morning show for 10 straight years," said John Ivey, Senior Vice President of Programming, CCM+E/LA Program Director of KIIS-FM.

NBC To Air iHeartRadio Music Awards In May

NBC and Clear Channel Media and Entertainment announced today that NBC will televise the first-ever iHeartRadio Music Awards May 1 (8-11 p.m. ET/PT) from the historic Shrine Auditorium in Los Angeles.

The show will air just 17 days before the Billboard Awards on ABC.

The three-hour iHeartRadio Music Awards will showcase this year's biggest artists and songs and feature live performances, never-before-done duets and collaborations, celebrity guest appearances and live award presentations. The show, which will feature performances from other Los Angeles venues, will also broadcast and stream live the audio across all participating Clear Channel radio stations and their websites, and on iHeartRadio.

The iHeartRadio Music Awards, which will feature the most popular artists and songs of the year, will be based on results from the all-new iHeartRadio Chart. Those charts are supplied and compiled by Mediabase, the music industry's No. 1 source for monitored airplay. They include listener feedback and performance data, according to airplay; digital streaming data from the iHeartRadio platform, including "thumbs up" and custom station creations; and sales, social, online video data and tags from BigChampagne and Shazam. In addition, for the first time ever in any music awards show, every voting category will include social #hashtags as the primary voting mechanism.

"Collaborating with a company that has the global reach of Clear Channel allows us to interact with music fans all over the world," said Paul Telegdy, President, Alternative and Late Night Programming, NBC Entertainment. "We feel fortunate being on the ground floor of the iHeartRadio Music Awards, which will deliver an array of great performances from today's biggest stars."

"With a reach of more than 240 million people every month, Clear Channel has an unparalleled ability to identify and track the biggest artists and songs in the country," said John Sykes, President of Entertainment Enterprises for Clear Channel. "The iHeartRadio Music Awards will be the first awards show in history to reflect America's favorite music, and which is truly powered by the people."

Clear Channel also today unveils the iHeartRadio Countdown, its new two-hour weekly program that highlights the top 20 Contemporary Hit Radio (CHR) songs in the iHeartRadio Chart. The new show will be co-hosted each week by a major artist and iHeartRadio's own Romeo on the Radio, airing on all Clear Channel Top 40/Contemporary Hit Radio (CHR) stations on Saturday or Sunday. The iHeartRadio Countdown will also spotlight songs outside the top 20 each week with special features such as Most Social Song, the iHeartRadio Most "Thumbed Up Song," iHeartRadio exclusives, along with premieres and sneak peeks from that week's guest host.

The iHeartRadio Awards will be executive produced by John Sykes and Tom Poleman of Clear Channel Media and Entertainment, Ryan Seacrest Productions and Ian Stewart and Hamish Hamilton of Done and Dusted Inc., who will produce the show for NBC Studios. Hamilton will also direct.

New Bill Would Increase Royalty Payments

Rep. Doug Collins
Federal legislation introduced on Tuesday would help increase royalty payments to songwriters and publishers, likely adding another layer to the ongoing conversation in Congress about broader copyright reform.

According to The Tennessean, the Songwriters Equity Act, introduced by U.S. Rep. Doug Collins, R-Georgia, has the backing of the songwriting and publishing community, including the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers, Broadcast Music Inc. and SESAC.

The legislation would allow federal rate courts to consider the fair market value for a composition when establishing digital performance rates. Currently, fair market value is not one of the guidelines that the special federal court considers when it sets royalty rates.

Most publishing licenses are compulsory and therefore regulated by federally determined rates, instead of through free-market negotiation.

But songwriters and publishers have found success negotiating licensing deals for television and film that have resulted in more favorable rates than those paid out when a digital copy of their song is sold. Currently, the rate court doesn’t factor in these licensing fees when it sets digital performance rates, but Collins’ legislation would allow them to do so.

Read More Now

In response to the introduction of legislation Wednesday to increase the rates that songwriters are paid when their music is played on local radio stations and other platforms, NAB Executive Vice President of Communications Dennis Wharton stated:

"NAB respectfully opposes this legislation, which could impose new costs on broadcasters that jeopardize the future of our free locally-focused service. While this legislation raises important issues about the changes confronting the songwriter community, NAB objects to changes in law that would deal with the financial imbalance between songwriters and artists by subjecting free broadcast radio stations to new fees."

ArtFlop Hurts Universal Music Group

Lady Gaga’s “ARTPop” album last fall certainly didn’t give Universal Music Group any pop.

According to The NY Post, Gaga’s fourth-quarter flop helped cut Universal’s revenue in the period 9.3 percent, the company said in a report Tuesday.

The tough Japanese economy — which accounts for 25 percent of global music sales — also hurt.
Earnings before interest, tax and amortization, or Ebita, was off 11.1 percent, or 7.8 percent on a constant-currency basis.

The tough quarter cut profits for the year by 2.9 percent, to $702 million (511 million euros).

They were up 1.4 percent on a constant-currency basis, the company said.

Full-year revenue rose 7.5 percent to $6.7 billion (4,886 million euros) or 12.8 percent when adjusted for
currencies.

For the year, Universal Music’s best-selling albums were from EMI’s Katy Perry and Interscope’s Eminem.

UMG reported a 75 percent jump in subscription and streaming revenue, though it didn’t break out a number.

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House Republicans Vow 'Newsroom' Hearings

House Republicans plan to introduce legislation to bar the Federal Communications Commission from ever conducting the kind of intrusive newsroom study they claim the agency was poised to launch, before officials pulled back last week.

According to Fox News, Rep. Greg Walden, R-Ore., head of the House Communications and Technology Subcommittee, said Tuesday that he'll bring forward a bill, and hold a hearing, aimed at completely stopping this and any similar studies in the future.

"The potential for violation of the First Amendment is exceptionally egregious," he said in a statement.

Rep. Greg Walden
He was referring to the FCC's proposed "critical information needs" study, which in its initial form would have sent researchers into newsrooms across the country to ask them questions about editorial decisions. Critics, including at least one member of the FCC itself, complained that the study could have the effect of intimidating journalists and editors.

On Friday, the FCC said that Chairman Tom Wheeler agreed that some of the study's proposed questions "overstepped the bounds of what is required." The agency announced that a proposed pilot study in South Carolina would be shelved, at least until a "new study design" is finalized.

The agency also made clear that this and any future studies would not involve interviews with "media owners, news directors or reporters."

But Walden said he wants to go further, and make sure the study comes off the books entirely.

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NYC Radio: Joe Piscopo Gets Morning Drive At The Answer

Joe Piscopo
Salem Communications Corporation has announced today the legendary Joe Piscopo of Saturday Night Live fame is joining WNYM AM 970 The Answer in New York City as the new morning talk host, effective immediately.

Piscopo, who starred on the popular NBC program from 1980-84 has been on the air for the station doing the morning show since January 3rd. He is joined on the air by morning show producer Frank Morano and newsman Al Gatullo.

"One of the best things I get to do in this job is find talented people who have accomplished something on one stage and are ready to take on another one," said Salem VP Director of Spoken Word Format Phil Boyce. "Joe is extremely talented on the radio, bringing a level of entertainment to mix with the information that you seldom get to hear. This is a very connected morning show in the nation's top market," said Boyce.

"I have my college degree in Broadcasting. I remain a dedicated student of the most intimate medium, radio. And with legendary broadcast giants like GM Jerry Crowley and current day guru of all radio personalities past and present, Phil Boyce, this is the positively perfect storm of talk radio," said Joe. "I honestly believe that this is not only the reinvention, renaissance and revitalization of AM radio, (not to mention a totally new and exciting journey of my career) but the best thing to happen to NY radio since David Sarnoff."

LISTEN-LIVE: Click Here.

AM 970 The Answer VP/General Manager Jerry Crowley said, "We have had a huge positive reaction to Joe, both from listeners and advertisers, since he joined us. This is going to be a true home run."

Piscopo was recently inducted into the New Jersey Hall of Fame, is involved in a multitude of charities too numerous to mention, and is a dedicated father and family man, living in Hunterdon County, New Jersey. This new morning radio program "Piscopo in the Morning" airs on AM 970 The Answer weekday mornings, 6-9am.

Detroit Radio: John Mason Moving To Mornings At WDMK

Fans of John Mason will soon find the Detroit radio star back in a familiar spot: in the a.m. on the FM dial, according to the Detroit Free Press.

Mason will take over the morning drive-time shift at WDMK 105.9 FM Kiss starting Monday, leaving his current afternoon post at Radio One sister station WCHB 1200 AM /99.5 FM. Mason, who ruled the morning airwaves on Detroit urban radio at WJLB in the 1990s, will broadcast 5:30-10 a.m. weekdays.

The move is part of a Radio One shift that will see the nationally syndicated Tom Joyner move from Kiss to WCHB in the mornings (6-10 a.m.), a slot now held by popular local talker Mildred Gaddis, who will move to afternoons (4-7 p.m.).

Philly Radio: WIP Newbie Josh Innes Gets First Death Threat

Josh Innes (philly.com photo)
One month. That's all it took for WIP 94.1 FM nighttime host Josh Innes to receive his first death threats, according to philly.com.

It happened via Twitter on Feb. 4, about four weeks after he took over the 6-to-10 weeknight shift. Innes, who came from Houston, had been defending Eagles wide receiver Riley Cooper.

Cooper began the 2013 season in controversy after a video surfaced that caught him using the N-word at a Camden concert.

"Somebody said something to me on Twitter, and I [used the phrase] 'I dodged that bullet,' " the 27-year-old sports-gabber said during a recent interview at the station's Old City headquarters. "A guy [tweeted], 'If you keep defending Riley Cooper, you'll have to dodge real bullets.' I probably should have not talked about [the threat] on the air, but it was interesting. That's one of my biggest flaws - I think everything is for broadcast."

That hold-nothing-back attitude is why the guy who brought Innes to town believes that the Poplar Bluff, Mo., native is on his way to being the market's next radio superstar.

"Josh gets an amazing reaction," WIP Operations Director Andy Bloom said. "There are people who strongly dislike him, as they disliked Howard Cosell . . . and Howard Stern. Some will hate him and listen every day, some will [not listen] and others will find he is the most unique and compelling personality that they've heard, and he'll find an audience. And you don't have to have 50 percent of the audience to be No. 1."

Bloom certainly knows his onions when it comes to bringing lightning-rod broadcasters to town. He launched Stern's national career in 1986. As program director of WIP's predecessor, WYSP-FM, he was the first to syndicate Stern's New York-based morning-drive program. And, while he didn't equate the two, Bloom definitely believes that Stern and Innes have plenty in common.

"The traits and qualities are similar: strong opinions, brash, fearless, prepared, willing to take controversial stands," he said.

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Charlotte Radio: Personality Talks About Sochi Scam

Brittney Cason
She thought it was her dream job, but it turned into a nightmare.

“I thought it was the opportunity of a lifetime,” explained Charlotte media darling, Brittney Cason, “ it was humiliating.”

According to WCNC.com, in September, Cason was working in sports talk radio at WFNZ 610 AM The Fan. She said a man, who claimed to handle talent acquisition for a production company, contacted her about a gig during the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Russia.

In a piece the 33-year-old penned for XOJane.com, she explained the man’s credentials appeared to check out just fine.  So she began the nearly three month application process.  Cason provided him several videos of her television and hosting work, along with audio reels of her jobs in Charlotte radio.

The former Panthers cheerleader said the fact another Charlotte-based sports personality had been recruited made her feel better.  She admitted the man was slow to answer questions, but said she initially ignored her intuition because it was a great opportunity.

That is, until a couple weeks before the games began, she noted the recruiter had an odd request.

“He asked me if I knew any other girls who would want to go to Sochi,” explained Cason, “When he wanted my friends’ VISA information, her passport information and social security number, before even seeing her reel—I thought, ‘OK, red flag!’ That is not normal.”

NJ Radio: WRAT's Marty Martinez Retiring Friday

Marty Martinez
Greater Media New Jersey has announced longtime WRAT 95.9 FM morning co-host Marty Martinez has decided to officially hang up his headphones and retire after a long and successful career.

The radio veteran’s last day on the air will be Friday, February 28, 2014.

Martinez has served as the official morning co-host of the RAT’s Carl and Marty in the Morning Show for the past 13 years.

“After 37 years of rocking the airwaves, I believe it’s time to enjoy what life has to offer next,” said Martinez. “I felt like part of the Greater Media and the WRAT family from day one til right now.  I’d like to thank Dan Finn for his faith in me and Carl Craft for sharing the insanity.  The staff here is the best in rock radio.”

“Working with Marty for the past decade has been a total blast,” said WRAT Program Director and Morning Co-host Carl Craft. “We had some great times together on the air.  It was like we were plugged into the same electrical current.  I could list a million stories, but at the end of the day it always came down to having fun and doing the right thing for the audience.”

“Marty Martinez is an iconic radio personality and it has been an immense pleasure working with him for the last dozen years of his stellar career,” said Greater Media New Jersey Senior Vice President and Regional General Manager Dan Finn. “He will be missed.”

Martinez began his career in 1977 as an overnight radio host at WNEW-FM, where he eventually went on to serve on the station’s morning show from 1980 to 1999 before working as the Program Director of EYada, a pioneer in internet talk radio, from 1999 to 2001.