Tuesday, April 11, 2017

NYC Radio: Talk WABC Mixes Politics, Pubs

WABC 770 AM and Rita Cosby hosted “Pubs and Politics” last Thursday evening at The Cutting Room in Midtown Manhattan. This event was a sold out epic LIVE radio showdown, featuring WABC’s Curtis & Kuby vs. Bernie & Sid.

This dynamic lineup of legends discussed the first 100 days of the new Trump administration. Listeners got to see and hear it all, where conservative values versus a liberal agenda added to a night of political entertainment in a very lively discussion!

2017 Pulitzer Prizes Announced

By Daniel Trotta | NEW YORK

(Reuters) -- The Pulitzer Prizes on Monday honored The Washington Post for hard-hitting reporting on Donald Trump's presidential campaign and The New York Times for revealing Vladimir Putin's covert power grab, praising their probing of powerful people despite a hostile climate for the news media.

The Daily News of New York and ProPublica, a web-based platform specializing in investigative journalism, won the prize for public service journalism for coverage of New York police abuses that forced mostly poor minorities from their homes.

Other winners included an international consortium of more than 300 reporters on six continents that exposed the so-called Panama Papers detailing the hidden infrastructure and global scale of offshore tax havens used by the high and mighty.

The Pulitzers, the most prestigious honors in American journalism, have been awarded since 1917, often going to famed publications such as The New York Times, The Washington Post and The Wall Street Journal.

But they are also won by smaller, lesser known publications across the country whose work does not always gain national attention when it is published.

Reporter Eric Eyre of Charleston Gazette-Mail in West Virginia took the prize for investigative reporting for exposing a flood of opioids in depressed West Virginia counties with the country's highest overdose death rates.

The staff of the East Bay Times of Oakland, California, won the breaking news award for coverage of the "Ghost Ship" fire that killed 36 people at a warehouse party, exposing the city's failure to take actions that might have prevented the disaster.


'TRANSPARENT JOURNALISM'

While the Pulitzer ceremony highlighted the news media's importance to democracy, it has been challenged by so-called fake news, which once referred to fabricated stories meant to influence the U.S. election but has become a term used by Trump to dismiss factual reporting that is critical. Trump has frequently excoriated the media and in February called it "the enemy of the American people."

Operating in the glare of the 2016 presidential campaign, David Fahrenthold of The Washington Post took the national reporting award. The judges said he "created a model for transparent journalism in political campaign coverage while casting doubt on Donald Trump's assertions of generosity toward charities."

Fahrenthold found that Trump's charitable giving had not always matched his public statements. He also broke perhaps the biggest scoop of the campaign, revealing Trump had been captured on videotape making crude remarks about women and bragging about kissing and grabbing them without their permission.

The Wall Street Journal columnist Peggy Noonan, a longtime Republican, took the commentary prize for a series of critical pieces about Trump during the real estate magnate's successful run for the White House.

Andrea Mitchell On Trump: "Never Seen Anything Like This"


Days after being called “Hillary Clinton’s PR person” by President Donald Trump, NBC News correspondent Andrea Mitchell fired back in a scathing new interview in which she ripped the Trump administration for, among other things, lying and limiting media access.

According to Mediaite, Mitchell recorded a podcast released by Politico Monday, the veteran NBC correspondent took the White House to task for what she deemed an unprecedented effort to deceive the public.

I have never seen anything like this where people just flat out lie,” Mitchell said. “You know, black is white and white is black, and they mislead you. It’s really disconcerting to see the podium in the White House briefing room being used to mislead or misdirect or obfuscate.”


Mitchell referenced Secretary of State Rex Tillerson‘s upcoming trip to Moscow, highlighting the fact that journalists are not being permitted to accompany the nation’s top diplomat.

“There is just an attempt, and it’s successful, to shut down not just me but The New York Times, The Washington Post, Agence France-Presse, CNN. I mean, we’re all just shut out,” Mitchell said. “You should not be flying into Beijing without a press corps. You should not be going to Moscow without the press corps. It’s wrong.”

Survey: Teen Spending Shifting To Starbucks, Amazon

Piper Jaffray Companies, a leading investment bank and asset management firm, completed its 33rd semi-annual Taking Stock With Teens research survey, which highlights spending trends and brand preferences amongst 5,500 teens across 43 U.S. states.

Since the project began in 2001, Piper Jaffray has surveyed more than 150,000 teens and collected over 38 million data points on teen spending in fashion, beauty and personal care, digital media, food, gaming and entertainment.

“While the overall spending environment has been challenging, we are seeing teen spending continue to shift more toward experiences—eating out, video games and leisure,” said Erinn Murphy, Piper Jaffray senior research analyst. “Share of fashion spending has moderated but we continue to see undisputed strength in athletic—Nike remains the No. 1 preferred brand and Adidas was the fastest-growing brand in our survey.”

Spring 2017 Key Findings

Spending & Shopping Behavior
  • Overall teen spending decreased 2.4% year-over-year.
  • Parent contribution to teen spend is at 63%, down from the survey’s 68% average.
  • Food is the most important category within a teen’s wallet at 24% of spend, eclipsing clothing at 19%.
  • Fashion share of wallet moved down from 38% to 36%.
  • Teens’ favorite website is Amazon at 43% share—up 200 basis points year-over-year.
  • For console video games, the percent of teens who plan to digitally download >50% of games increased to 45% for spring 2017 from 37% in fall 2015.
Brand Preferences
  • Starbucks is the only public brand to maintain double-digit share across all teenagers; it tied this survey cycle with Chick-fil-A at 12% preference.
  • Athletic is seeing no slowdown with 41% of teens citing an athletic brand as their preferred apparel brand—up from 26% last year.
  • Nike is the No. 1 apparel brand at 31% share—up from 21% last year. Adidas, however, is the fastest growing brand in our survey across footwear & apparel.
  • Fashion brands losing relevance with teens include Under Armour, Michael Kors, The North Face, Ralph Lauren and Vineyard Vines.
  • 81% of teens expect their next phone to be an iPhone, which was up from 79% in fall 2016 and, more importantly, the highest we’ve seen ever in the survey.
  • Disney films dominated the most anticipated movies list with No. 2 “Beauty and the Beast”; No. 3 “Star Wars: The Last Jedi”; and No. 4 “Guardians of the Galaxy Vol. 2” grabbing the top few spots. “Fast 8” is the No. 1 most anticipated movie.

St. Louis Radio: WARH Doing The High Fives


Adult Hits WARH  106.5 FM Arch morning show “Spencer’s Neighborhood” is on a mission to meet 100,000 fans this summer on their "100,000 High Fives" Journey!


Friday, 4/7/17, the show hosted an “adult field trip” to the AB Brewery in St. Louis! Cassiday Proctor on the left, the tall dude with the gray hat in the middle is Spencer Graves and sidekick Brando is on the right

Des Moines Radio: Pam Dixon Signs-Off At KIOA


Longtime Des Moines radio personality Pam Dixon of KIOA 93.3 FM announced Monday that she is retiring.

The classic hits station posted the news on its official Facebook page Monday morning. Dixon, a three-time breast cancer survivor, according to the post, is "hanging up her headphones — for good!" after nearly 35 years in the business. Dixon will be focusing on her health once again during her retirement, the post said.

"I just want to say thank you to KIOA listeners and my radio family for all of the love and support I have felt through the years," Dixon said in KIOA's post.

Dixon said during Monday's broadcast of the "KIOA Morning Show" that she remembers the day she was first diagnosed with breast cancer — June 4, 2007. She's "throwing everything at it" today, as far as treatment goes: Chemotherapy, meditation and prayer, among others. In 2015, the Register's Metro Voice columnist Dan Finney wrote about Dixon's cancer battles.

KIOA listeners reacted to Monday's news on social media and calling into "KIOA Morning Show" by offering Dixon well wishes and thanking her for the many memories on the airwaves. She said that the kindness shown by KIOA's listeners have helped her immensely.

"When you have half the state praying for ya, it's a powerful thing," Dixon said.!

April 11 Radio History



➦In 1902...journalist/war correspondent/broadcaster Quentin Reynolds was born in New York City. He was prominent on radio during & after WWII, and worked on TV during its formative years.  Writing & narration was his forte. He published 25 books, and wrote as many as 20 magazine articles a year. He died March 17 1965 at age 62.

➦In 1904...actor Paul McGrath was born in Chicago. For most of the long run of radio’s Inner Sanctum (and much more briefly on TV) he was the delightful but unctiously eerie host with the leer in his voice.  Also on radio he played the husband of the lead on the soap Big Sister.  On TV he had recurring roles on The Edge of Night & Guiding Light.  He died two days after his 74th birthday April 13 1978.


Paul Douglas
➦In 1907...actor Paul Douglas was born in Philadelphia.  He did some prominent announcing during the Golden Days of Radio, notably as the sponsor spokesman on NBC’s Chesterfield Supper Club.  On TV he was a frequent guest star on series such as Your Show of Shows, Climax, Damon Runyan Theatre, Hallmark Hall of Fame, Chrysler Shower of Stars, Studio One, etc.  He suffered a heart attack & died Sep 11, 1959 at age 52.

➦In 1912...actor John Larkin was born in Oakland Calif.  He had a perfect voice for radio, and played the lead in the daytime drama Perry Mason. On TV he was in The Road of Life, the original cast of Edge of Night, and played a lead in prime time’s Twelve O’Clock High. He suffered a heart attack and died Jan 29 1965 at age 52.

➦In 1921...KDKA-AM became the site of the first live sporting event to be broadcast on Radio. It was a boxing match featuring Johnny Ray and Johnny Dundee.

➦In 1924...KLO-AM, Ogden, Utah began broadcasting.

KLO originally signed on in the mid-20s as KFUR. Its current calls came about in the 1930s in honor of Mt. Lomond located near Ogden. KLO was the flagship of the Interstate Broadcasting Corporation, later the Intermountain Network.

Today, KLO is a Talk station at 1430 AM with power of 25Kw-D, 5 Kw-N.


Helen Choate, Lon Clark-Master Detective
➦In 1943...the long running melodrama Nick Carter, Master Detective debuted on Mutual radio. The show was based on a New York Weekly character who was first introduced in 1886.

➦In 1947...the Cy Howard radio comedy My Friend Irma started its seven year run on CBS.  Marie Wilson played the ditzy blonde, Cathy Lewis was her best friend Jane who narrated the series, which also featured John Brown and Hans Conreid.

➦In 1964…The Beatles set another music industry record by having 14 songs simultaneously on the Billboard Hot 100.




➦In 1973...Norm N. Nite did his first show on WCBS-FM, New York, New York. Nite was instrumental in bringing the Rock&Roll Hall of Fame to Cleveland.

➦In 1976…The first commercially available Apple computer, later known as the Apple I, was released.

➦In 1985...WJMK-FM, Chicago, Illinois held its "Rock 'N' Roll Reunion."

A year earlier WJMK "Magic 104" flipped to oldies. Initially, it was similar to what RKO's 103.5 WFYR was playing, except that WJMK played more '50s and early '60s music. WJMK initially also played '70s and '80s music along with a new song every hour. By early 1985, all songs released after 1972 were dropped.

The station focused primarily on songs released between 1964-1969 with a good amount of '50s music as well. In 1991, the station's moniker was changed from "Magic 104" to "Oldies 104.3".

WJMK dropped the moniker "Oldies 104.3" by 2001, and returned to their former moniker "Magic 104.3".

In 1998, they began to add more '70s music to the format. In 1999, with new competition from the new "Jammin Oldies format of WUBT "The Beat", WJMK added a few disco songs and more '70s and early '80s songs to the playlist.

After WUBT dropped Jammin' Oldies for CHR in 2001, WJMK continued with their oldies format, though they modified the playlist over the years, dropping older music in favor of more recent material. In 2003, the station once again changed monikers, going from "Magic 104.3" back to "Oldies 104.3" and began airing Dick Bartley's syndicated "Rock and Roll's Greatest Hits" to Saturday nights (which they'd drop at the beginning of June 2004 to return the 70s show "Saturday Night 70s"). By the winter of 2004/05, the station dropped the "oldies" moniker and became known as just "104.3 WJMK".

Today, WJMK is playing Classic Hits branding as  'K-Hits'.

➦In 1986...KXA-AM in Seattle WA changes call letters to KRPM

➦In 1991...New York's "Museum of Broadcasting" changed its name to the "Museum of Radio & Television"

➦In 1991...Scott Shannon started at WPLJ 95.5 FM.  WPLJ had been struggling since its glory days of the mid 1980s, and Shannon became program director and morning drive co-host. At the outset, the station's direct rival was Z100, and used the slogan "Mojo Radio," downplaying the WPLJ call letters, but the approach was eventually changed. Shannon created a Top 40 format that was geared more toward the adult contemporary audience, brought in co-host Todd Pettengill (from WFLY Alabany NY) to form "The Big Show," and the WPLJ call letters were re-emphasized.

➦In 1992…America's first commercially-licensed radio station, 50,000-watt KDKA-AM in Pittsburgh, replaced its 72-year-old music format with news, talk and information.

➦In 2007...the cable simulcast of Don Imus' nationally syndicated radio show was canceled by MSNBC after Imus became embroiled in a controversy over racial comments made about the Rutgers women basketball team.

Monday, April 10, 2017

United Airlines Has Another PR Nightmare


UPDATED 4/10/17 1:15 PM

By Alana Wise

NEW YORK (Reuters) - A doctor trying to return home to his patients was dragged by his hands from an overbooked United Airlines <UAL.N> flight, according to social media, embroiling the carrier in its second public relations nightmare in less than a month.

The airline was one of the top-trending topics on Twitter as users took to the website to express their anger over the forceful removal of the passenger from United Flight 3411, which was en route from Chicago to Louisville, Kentucky, on Sunday.

Video of the incident posted to Twitter account @Tyler_Bridges shows three security officers huddling over the seated passenger, who appears to be an older Asian man, before dragging him on the floor.

In a separate tweet, Bridges wrote that the man was removed because additional United crew needed to get to Louisville.

United said in a statement provided to some media outlets that the flight was overbooked.

"After our team looked for volunteers, one customer refused to leave the aircraft voluntarily," United spokesman Charlie Hobart said. "We apologize for the overbook situation."

In Bridges' video, a woman can be heard asking "Can't they rent a car for the pilots and have them drive?" before two of the uniformed men reach into the passenger's seat and yank him from his chair.

The passenger screams as he is dragged on his back by his hands, glasses askew and shirt pulled up above his navel.

Another video shows him, still disheveled from the altercation, returning to the cabin, running to the back of the plane and repeating: "I have to go home."

Fellow passenger Jayse D. Anspach, who goes by @JayseDavid on Twitter, wrote: "No one volunteered (to leave), so @United decided to choose for us. They chose an Asian doctor and his wife."

When the passenger refused to disembark, "a couple of airport security men forcefully pulled the doctor out of his chair and to the floor of the aisle." The man's face "was slammed against an arm rest, causing serious bleeding from his mouth," wrote Anspach.
    "It looked like he was knocked out, because he went limp and quiet and they dragged him out of the plane like a rag doll."
Late last month, two teenage girls dressed in leggings were denied boarding on a United flight from Denver to Minneapolis because of their form-fitting pants.

Because the girls were using free passes for employees or family members, they were subject to a dress code.




The Wall Street Journal reports social media explosions over airline transgressions seem to be coming more frequently and at greater cost to carriers. Delta Air Lines Inc. was hit by days of criticism after the airline canceled more than 3,700 flights last week after a thunderstorm caused an operational meltdown.

Two weeks ago, a passenger overheard United gate agents in Denver deny boarding to two young girls because they were wearing leggings. A passenger, Shannon Watts, began tweeting about the situation, which ended in the girls being denied entry for failing to match United’s dress code for people traveling on “buddy passes,” free or low-cost tickets airline employees and their friends can use.

The nuance was lost in an avalanche of social media debating whether United’s handling of the situation had been sexist. United’s social media team initially failed to call attention to its dress code for “pass riders,” further inflaming the situation. The girls were eventually allowed to take another flight.

Tampa Radio: WWRM Taps Danielle For Wake-Up Duty


Cox Media Group (CMG) Tampa Radio has named Magic Mornings with Danielle as its new, permanent morning show on WWRM Magic 94.9 FM.

Danielle McBroom 
“We are so excited to have Danielle join our Magic team,” said John Larson, CMG Tampa Radio’s Director of Branding and Programming for WWRM, WXGL and WDUV. “Her experience, creativity, social media expertise and infectious attitude brings a fresh, new sound to a huge brand like Magic.”

For the past 10 years, Danielle McBroom was on the air with sister station WSUN (97X).

“I am so excited to join the Magic team and stay with my Cox Media Group Tampa family,” said McBroom. “CMG is a company that really believes in promoting from within and I am thrilled to have this opportunity on this incredibly powerful and successful radio station, with so much heritage in the market.”

WWRM 94.9 FM (100 Kw) Red=Local Coverage Area
CMG Tampa Radio includes Magic 94-9 WWRM, The Dove 105.5 WDUV, 107-3 The Eagle WXGL, Hot 101.5 WPOI, 97X WSUN and 102.5 The Bone WHPT.

FCC Ends "Wee" Contesting Tussle


With a three-page order, FCC Chief Administrative Law Judge Richard Sippel has brought to a close an eight-year ordeal for Entercom.

InsideRadio reports Sippel says the company “willingly accepted the severest penalty” when it agreed to surrender the license for Sacramento’s KDND (107.9) and pay the legal fees incurred by activists who targeted the station for its ill-fated 2007 “Hold Your Wee for a Wii” contest which led to the death of one of its contestants.

Entercom last month asked the FCC to approve its settlement to cover the $35,000 spent by the Media Action Center (MAC) on legal fees and other expenses to challenge the company during the past decade. The two parties said the deal would “speed the resolution of, and bring finality to, the disputes between them—without the need for the expenditure of additional time and resources.”

The FCC’s Enforcement Bureau wasn’t part of the negotiations but it threw its support behind the proposal according to agency filings.

The deal with the Media Action Center came just weeks after Entercom abruptly announced it would voluntarily turn in the license for KDND rather than press forward with a fight to renew it. Its fate was in doubt after the Media Bureau last October threw the decision of whether to grant a new license term into what amounts to a trial setting. The Commission said the contest, during which contestant Jennifer Strange, 28, died, “raised serious questions” as to whether the company operated KDND in the public interest during its most recent license term.

In the aftermath, some 10 KDND employees lost their jobs.

L-A Radio: KFI Host Calls Fox Harassment Hotline

A Los Angeles radio personality’s claim that she was sexually harassed by Fox News host Bill O’Reilly in 2013 is being investigated by the cable channel’s parent company, 21st Century Fox.

Lisa Bloom, the lawyer representing KFI 640 AM talk radio host Wendy Walsh, told CNN on Sunday that 21st Century Fox attorneys say they will look into the claim that Walsh was denied an opportunity to become a contributor to Fox News because she rebuffed sexual advances made by O’Reilly.

The probe comes after Lisa Bloom, a civil rights attorney and advocate, called the network's corporate hotline last week with her client, Wendy Walsh, to make a complaint against O'Reilly. She put a video of the phone call on YouTube.



Bloom said Sunday on "Reliable Sources" that attorneys from the company told her and Walsh on Friday that they would conduct the investigation based on Walsh's complaint.  A Fox News representative did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

In an interview with the New York Times earlier this month, Walsh went public with an allegation that O'Reilly broke a promise to get her a job at Fox News because she rejected his advances. Walsh was a guest on O'Reilly's top-rated cable news show, "The O'Reilly Factor," multiple times in 2013.

Walsh,  has not sued O'Reilly or sought a settlement, said Bloom, a former contributor to NBC's "Today" show who is known for her liberal advocacy and legal work. Walsh currently airs weekends on iHeartMedia's KFI 640 AM in Los Angeles.

O'Reilly said that he was targeted with allegations and lawsuits because of his celebrity. He said that no one had ever filed a complaint about him with human resources "even on the anonymous hotline."
Advertisers, meanwhile, have fled O'Reilly's show since the Times report was published. So far, 60 sponsors have said they would stop advertising on the program.

Reuters reports Fox and O'Reilly have paid $13 million to five women who accused him of sexual harassment, the New York Times reported last weekend. O'Reilly said in a statement then that he had been unfairly targeted because of his prominence and has not made further comment.

Numerous companies have pulled ads from O'Reilly's Fox News show since the report, including BMW of North America, Allstate Corp, French pharmaceuticals maker Sanofi SA, direct marketer Constant Contact, men's clothing company Untuckit and mutual fund operator T. Rowe Price. British drugmaker GlaxoSmithKline Plc said it temporarily suspended its advertising.

Fox News, the top-rated cable news network, has faced heightened scrutiny of its workplace climate after sexual harassment allegations led to the resignation of founding Chairman Roger Ailes last year.

21st Century Fox hired law firm Paul Weiss to investigate Ailes.

On April 3, Democratic political consultant and Fox News contributor Julie Roginsky sued the network and Ailes, accusing them of denying her a permanent hosting job after she rebuffed Ailes' sexual advances.

Roginsky said that a misogynistic culture at Fox News had not changed since Ailes left the network.


According to The LA Times, Walsh occasionally appeared in a regular segment on “The O’Reilly Factor” in 2013. She claims O’Reilly reneged on a commitment to get a position as a paid consultant at Fox News after she rejected his advances at a dinner meeting at Hotel Bel-Air in which they discussed her future at the cable channel.

“At the beginning of the dinner, he made a point of telling me his best friend was Roger Ailes and they wanted to offer me a job as a contributor on his show,” Walsh said in her call to 21st Century Fox. “At the end of the dinner he said, ‘Let’s get out of here,’ and I thought he meant let’s go to the bar and continue talking about my career and to get more career advice. But he started walking in a different direction and when he turned around to find me he said, ‘Let’s go to my suite.’”

After Walsh declined, she said, they went to the bar, where O’Reilly allegedly became hostile, insulted her and told her to “forget about any career advice I gave you, you’re on your own.”

Walsh said O’Reilly barely acknowledged her when she returned to appear on “The O’Reilly Factor.” Shortly thereafter her appearances ended.

Fox News has said that Walsh was dropped from “The O’Reilly Factor” because the program’s ratings declined when she appeared. Cable news executives often use minute-by-minute Nielsen ratings to determine the appeal of segments and guests.

Fox Scandals Weaken Murdochs' TV Future


By Jennifer Saba | NEW YORK

(Reuters Breakingviews) - Fox News has entered the spin zone. Automakers Mercedes-Benz, Hyundai and BMW are among the companies pulling ads from "The O'Reilly Factor" amid a scandal involving popular host Bill O'Reilly. The cost to parent Twenty-First Century Fox is low for now. A toxic culture, however, can damage long-run efforts to broaden consumer appeal.

The lucrative cable news network with conservative tendencies is once again the story. The primary architect of Fox News, Roger Ailes, left as chairman last year after a two-decade run following allegations by Fox News host Gretchen Carlson that Ailes sexually harassed her. Six months after the company apologized and settled with Carlson, the New York Times reported over the weekend that O'Reilly and Fox made payments totaling $13 million to five women to settle claims regarding unwanted advances and other inappropriate behavior.

The list of O'Reilly refuseniks may grow. The controversy arises just as advertisers are raising concerns about their brands appearing with inappropriate material on Google and its video site YouTube – and pulling their ad dollars. It would take a major boycott to eat into Fox's top line, though. Fox News typically dominates evening programming. In February, for example, nearly 3 million people tuned in, compared with 1.2 million at CNN and 1.5 million for MSNBC.

It could become a bigger problem, though. Cable news has been enjoying a renaissance since Donald Trump entered the political realm a couple years ago. To keep the momentum going, however, the networks will have to find younger viewers. The median age of a primetime Fox News viewer in 2015 was 68, according to Nielsen, older than at both its main rivals.


James and Lachlan Murdoch, the mid-40s children of Fox Chairman Rupert Murdoch, have been given the job of making the company live up to the 21st century moniker. They were involved with the departure of Ailes, their father's longtime lieutenant. Fox News also has urged employees to come forward with concerns about unseemly behavior and retained law firm Paul Weiss to conduct a review.

The situations involving O'Reilly and Ailes make the job harder for the younger Murdochs. Like Travis Kalanick's Uber, which is confronting a backlash because of its frat-house culture, similar threats may endanger Fox. Audiences and advertisers may be changing faster than Fox can keep up.

Report: Pandora Seeks Better Terms From Music Labels

Pandora Media Inc.has asked major record labels for money or better deal terms to help reverse losses and reduce pressure from impatient shareholders, according to Bloomberg.

Top executives at Pandora have reached out with a couple of proposals for their counterparts at the record labels said sources, who asked not to be identified discussing private information. In addition to asking for direct investments from the labels, Pandora has sought to renegotiate licensing deals to reduce its costs, they said. The labels are unlikely to accede to the requests, the people said.

Pandora isn’t about to run out of money. It generates a significant amount of cash thanks to its online radio service, which has 81 million customers. Yet Pandora is under a tremendous amount of pressure to prove to shareholders, in particular activist investor Corvex Management, that better days are ahead. Pandora declined to comment, and Corvex didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment outside normal business hours.

Pandora has been losing users and suffering from a slowdown in advertising growth as paid services from Spotify and Apple, as well as free options like YouTube, have siphoned away customers.

Pandora shares fell as much as 4.8 percent to $11.41. The stock, which is down from an October peak of $14.77, was still up 35 percent from a year earlier as of Thursday’s close.


The company lost $345 million last year, more than double its losses from the year before. Pandora had to pay for the music rights it needed to offer an on-demand service, and then spent additional money to develop the technology for that service and market it.

Pandora has been pushing for help from its main partners while simultaneously postponing the deadline for proxy filings, which shareholders could use to propose changes to the company’s board.

St. Louis Radio: WIL's Bud & Broadway Fist Bump New Followers


The only live and local New Country morning show in St. Louis, Bud and Broadway from WIL 92.3 FM , are on a mission to meet 92,000 followers!



Seen fist bumping left to right: Bud Ford, local police captain, Captain Mac traffic, sidekick “Kelly from Arnold,” two firefighters and Jerry Broadway!

This is a shot from their Friday morning, 4/7, funny stop on their 92,000 Fist Bump Challenge Tour at a pancake house “across the river” in Granite City, Illinois.

The local, 23 strong, Junior High Jazz band played, cheerleaders, sports and academic stars, and community leaders along with hundreds of New Country followers had breakfast with “The Good Ol’ Boy Odd Couple!”

Even the fire and police department stopped by to play a round of “The Jokes on You;” a joke face off where the first person to laugh, loses! (The cop lost…we’ll just say the punchline was Pork Chop. Make up your own joke!)

NYC Radio: Gavin DeGraw Entertains for 95.5 PLJ Listeners

(Left to Right) 95.5 PLJ on-air talent, Ralphie; 95.5 PLJ Program Director, Gillette; Gavin DeGraw; 95.5 PLJ Assistant Program Director, Mike Alan; and 95.5 PLJ on-air talent, Melony Torres. 

Cumulus Media and WPLJ 95.5 FM welcomed singer/songwriter Gavin DeGraw to Stage 17, Cumulus Media’s new live performance venue in New York, for "Karaoke for a Cause" last week.

 DeGraw performed an acoustic set for an intimate group of 95.5 PLJ listeners and joined the station and Voss Foundation in raising awareness of Voss Foundation and VOSS Water’s annual #31Days to Make a Difference initiative.

Voss Foundation is dedicated to providing access to clean water, sanitation and hygiene as a means to enable community-driven development in Sub-Saharan Africa and raising awareness of the ongoing need in the region. Voss Foundation has made a difference in over 100,000’s people’s lives in seven countries. #31Days to Make A Difference runs from World Water Day (March 22) through Earth Day (April 22).  For more information, please visit: www.vossfoundation.org.

DeGraw was introduced by 95.5 PLJ on-air host John Foxx, and opened his performance with "She Sets The City On Fire.” DeGraw praised the new Stage 17 for looking "great," and later invited a lucky 95.5 PLJ listener on stage to sing a karaoke version of DeGraw’s single "Making Love With The Radio On" with Foxx, while DeGraw accompanied them on piano

25 Recordings Destined For National Registry

Davie Bowie, Barbra Streisand, Judy Garland, The Eagles, Richard Pryor, Talking Heads and N.W.A. are just a few of the artists whose work has now been marked for preservation by the Library of Congress.

The Library has named 25 audio recordings to be inducted to its National Recording Registry, a compendium of sound recordings that will be preserved as representative of America's cultural, artistic and historic treasures. Ranging from rock, pop, jazz, classical, gospel and musical theater to radio broadcasts and comedy albums, the recordings have been recognized as vital to our nation's audio legacy.

Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden said, "This year's exciting list gives us a full range of sound experiences. These sounds of the past enrich our understanding of the nation's cultural history and our history in general."

With this year's additions, the Registry now numbers 475 historic recordings - just a small part of the Library's collection of recorded sound numbering nearly three million items.

National Recording Registry additions

1.  The 1888 London cylinder recordings of Col. George Gouraud (1888)

2.  “Lift Every Voice and Sing” (singles), Manhattan Harmony Four (1923); Melba Moore and Friends (1990)

3.  “Puttin’ on the Ritz” (single), Harry Richman (1929)

4.  “Over the Rainbow” (single), Judy Garland (1939)

5.  “I’ll Fly Away” (single), The Chuck Wagon Gang  (1948)

6.  “Hound Dog” (single),  Big Mama Thornton (1953)

7.  “Saxophone Colossus,” Sonny Rollins  (1956)

8.  The Brooklyn Dodgers and the New York Giants at the Polo Grounds, announced by Vin Scully (September 8, 1957)

9.  “Gunfighter Ballads and Trail Songs,” Marty Robbins  (1959)

10. “The Incredible Jazz Guitar of Wes Montgomery,” Wes Montgomery (1960)

11. “People” (single), Barbra Streisand (1964)

12. “In the Midnight Hour” (single), Wilson Pickett  (1965)

13. “Amazing Grace” (single), Judy Collins  (1970)

14. “American Pie” (single), Don McLean  (1971)

15.  “All Things Considered,” first broadcast (May 3, 1971)

16. “The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars,” David Bowie (1972)

17. “The Wiz,” original cast album (1975)

18. “Their Greatest Hits (1971–1975),” Eagles  (1976)

19. “Scott Joplin’s Treemonisha,” Gunter Schuller, arr. (1976)  

20. “Wanted:  Live in Concert,” Richard Pryor  (1978)

21. “We Are Family” (single), Sister Sledge (1979)

22. “Remain in Light,” Talking Heads (1980)

23. “Straight Outta Compton,” N.W.A (1988)

24. “Rachmaninoff’s Vespers (All-Night Vigil),” Robert Shaw Festival Singers  (1990)

25. “Signatures,” Renée Fleming  (1997)

R.I.P.: Spotify Exec Chris Bevington Dies In Truck Attack

Chris Bevington
Chris Bevington, an executive at music streaming service Spotify was killed in the Stockholm truck attack Friday (April 7), the company’s co-founder/CEO Daniel Ek confirmed on Facebook.

“It is with shock and a heavy heart that I can confirm that Chris Bevington from our Spotify team lost his life in Friday’s senseless attack on Stockholm,” Ek wrote on Facebook Sunday. "Whilst this terrible news is sinking in, our primary focus is on supporting the family and loved ones of Chris in any way we possibly can."

Bevington, 41, had served in the role as director of global partnerships/business development at Spotify. He worked at the company for five years, according to Billboard.

Four victims were killed in the attack, in which a hijacked beer truck was driven into an upscale department store, the Associated Press reports.

April 10 Radio History


➦In 1915...superb supporting actor Harry Morgan was born Harry Bratsberg in Detroit.

His broadcast career began on NBC radio in 1947 as the announcer/host of Mystery Theatre starring Peter Lorre.  He went on to feature acting work in TV on the sitcoms December Bride, Pete & Gladys and (perhaps most memorably) MASH.  He also teamed with Jack Webb in the 1967 revival of Dragnet.

Harry reached the advanced age of 93 before passing in his sleep in the early hours of Dec. 7 2011.

➦In 1922...WBT Charlotte, NC began broadcasting.



The station actually dates back  to December 1920, when Fred Laxton, Earle Gluck and Frank Bunker set up an amateur radio station in Laxton's home. Four months later, the station received an experimental license as 4XD. The trio decided to go commercial in 1922, and incorporated as the Southern Radio Corporation.


On April 10, the station signed on as the first fully licensed radio station south of Washington, D.C. WSB in Atlanta was the first station in the Southeast to actually broadcast, a month before WBT. However, the Commerce Department only authorized WSB to broadcast weather reports until it received its license a few months after WBT.

In 1925, the original owners sold WBT to Charlotte Buick dealer C.C. Coddington, who promoted both the radio station and his auto dealership with the slogan "Watch Buicks Travel." Coddington built a transmitter at a farm property he owned on Nations Ford Road in south Charlotte, where it remains today. He sold WBT to the two-year-old CBS network in 1929; CBS wanted to make WBBM in Chicago full time on 780 AM, which was a shared frequency with KFAB in Omaha, Nebraska and in order to do that they moved KFAB to 1110 AM. That was accomplished by directionalizing the signal of WBT. A series of power increases brought WBT to its current 50,000 watts.


New Federal Communications Commission (FCC) regulations forced CBS to sell the station to Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company, forerunner of Jefferson-Pilot, in 1945, though it remained a CBS affiliate.


For much of its history, WBT aired a variety of programming including news, sports, soap operas, and musical programs such as "Arthur Smith and the Crackerjacks." Smith, best known for writing the song that became the Deliverance theme "Dueling Banjos", went to work at WBT at age 20 at the invitation of station manager Charles Crutchfield. He played guitar and fiddle for musical programs on WBT before getting his own show. Crutchfield believed that Charlotte, not Nashville, could have ended up being the country music capital because of the station's early "Briarhoppers" and "Carolina Hayride" shows, which may have inspired The Grand Ole Opry.

WBT's Grady Cole
Grady Cole was WBT morning host for 32 years, replaced in 1961 by Ty Boyd, who hosted the morning show until 1973, playing such artists as Duke Ellington, Peggy Lee and Petula Clark. Then he moved to WBTV. He returned to WBT in 2008 to co-host the morning show while its regular hosts took time off.

WBT was the number one station in Charlotte for many years; among its employees were Charles Kuralt and Nelson Benton. But by 1970, WBT was down to number nine, and national advertising representative Blair Radio Network wanted ratings to improve. Jefferson Standard did not like the idea of change, but Blair enlisted Mel Goldberg to research what programming Charlotte needed. Even Crutchfield gave in, and WBT let go 28 staffers and spent $200,000 on changes that included new studios. It also canceled many programs that advertisers supported but which didn't attract enough listeners.

WBT's H.A. Thompson
Henry Boggan
On March 15, 1971, WBT switched to adult contemporary music during the day; Rob Hunter and H. A. Thompson were new DJs. Bob Lacey started at WBT in 1972 with a nighttime talk show "Lacey Listens". Two years later, WBT had reached number one again, reaching the highest Arbitron numbers on record to this day. Around the same time, the station dropped its longtime affiliation with CBS Radio and joined ABC. WBT won Billboard adult contemporary station of the year in 1976 and 1978. In 1979, "Hello Henry" Boggan began his nighttime talk show.

WBT made changes to its format on December 10, 1990, hoping to attract more women. The station dropped James K. Flynn, Thompson and Tom Desio, generating numerous protests.

John Hancock
Don Russell had hosted "Russell & Flynn" in the morning; the show was renamed "Russell & Friends." John Hancock became midday host, and WBTV personalities Mike and Barbara McKay began an afternoon program. Boggan, whose show had run in the afternoon, returned to his evening slot, replacing Desio, but was sometimes pre-empted by sports programs.

Lincoln Financial Group bought Jefferson-Pilot in 2006. The merged company retained Jefferson-Pilot's broadcasting division, renaming it Lincoln Financial Media. In January 2008, Lincoln Financial sold WBT-AM-FM and WLNK to Greater Media of Braintree, Massachusetts. It sold its three television stations, including WBTV, to Raycom Media--thus breaking up Charlotte's last heritage radio/television cluster. Greater Media had long wanted to expand into the fast-growing Charlotte market; its owner had wanted to buy WBT after hearing its signal at night on Cape Cod.

➦In 1942...“People Are Funny,” with first host Art Baker, debuted on NBC Radio. Art Linkletter took over as emcee 18 months later and kept the job for 17 years, the last 6 years of which were also on television.

➦In 1943...the mystery/detective radio series The Falcon started its decade-long run, beginning with the Blue Network.

➦In 1967…The 13-day strike by the American Federation of TV and Radio Artists (AFTRA) ended, less than two hours before the 39th Academy Awards presentation was to go on the air.

➦In 1970…Paul McCartney made public the Beatles' secret breakup by issuing a press release to announce that he had left the group.



It was done in the form of a fake interview: "Q: Is your break with the Beatles temporary or permanent, due to personal differences or musical ones? PAUL: Personal differences, business differences, musical differences, but most of all because I have a better time with my family. Temporary or permanent? I don't really know." John Lennon was furious, especially since the breakup was announced a week prior to the UK release of McCartney's first solo album. When a reporter tracked down Lennon for his thoughts, he replied, "Paul hasn't left. I sacked him."

➦In 1978...NYC Radio personality Long John Nebel WNBC died.

Long John Nebel
In the mid-1950s, radio throughout the United States was floundering and trying to redefine itself after the explosive popularity of television. Over several years, Nebel had become friends with many people at various New York radio stations when he bought commercial time to advertise his auction house. WOR, one of New York's leading stations, faced poor ratings in 1954 when Nebel proposed an interview show. The format "would be devoted to discussing strange and unexplained topics".

WOR's management was not especially impressed by Nebel's idea. However, deciding they had little to lose, WOR offered him a midnight to 5:30 am time slot, the poorest-rated hours. Building on the modest fame of his auction house (and also hoping to generate more business), he used the same name, Long John, when he went on radio.

To the surprise of WOR's management, Nebel's show was a quick success among New York's night-owls and early risers. Unidentified flying objects were discussed almost daily, alongside topics such as voodoo, witchcraft, parapsychology, hypnotism, conspiracy theories, and ghosts. Perhaps fittingly for an overnight show, one of Nebel's sponsors was No-Doz caffeine pills.

Within a few months Nebel was getting not only high ratings, but press attention from throughout the United States for his distinctive and in many ways unprecedented program (WOR's powerful signal assured that Nebel's show was broadcast to over half of the United States' population).


➦In 1987...Newsman Dick Smythe ended an 18-year run at CHUM-FM and walked across the street to CFTR-FM.  Earlier in his career, Smythe was news director at The Big 8 CKLW.




➦In 1998...NYC Radio Personality Eddie O’Jay, WLIB, WWRL died.

Eddie O'Jay
O'Jay was from the old fast-talking school, and the signature phrase most cited Tuesday was the famous "Don't lose your head. You need your head. Your brain is in it. You hear?

His career began in 1951 as a Disc Jockey at WOKY in Milwaukee. From there, he went to WABQ in Cleveland, and WUFO in Buffalo, finally working my way to the "Soul at Sunrise" show on WWRL, WBLS and WLIB in New York City. After a distinguished 27 year career in radio in the United States, he expanded to include an internationally syndicated radio program on "Swazi Music Radio," in Johannesburg, South Africa in 1980.

He's been inducted into the Black Radio Hall of Fame.

While at WABQ, O'Jay discovered a group of five young beginners in the business called The Mascots from Canton and Masilon, Ohio.  O'Jay was asked to manage and direct the group which took hi name, The O'Jays. The rest, as they say, is history.

➦In 2013…Radio programmer (WOKY and WRIT-Milwaukee)/manager (WDRQ-Detroit)/broadcasting executive (Bartell executive VP) George Wilson died of complications from an earlier heart attack at age 83.