Holidays
are in the air(waves) as KOST (103.5 FM) continues its annual tradition
of playing Christmas and holiday music, and SiriusXM features
traditional (channel 18), contemporary (channel 13), country (channel
58), Latin (channel 785), and Hanukkah (Channel 68) holiday favorites,
with more scheduled to go on as the season progresses. Even New Years
Day gets its own channel on December 31, billed as the ultimate
soundtrack to parties around the country.
It’s
a killer ratings time for KOST, which dominates the ratings for
December every time it switches formats. As one reader put it years ago,
“it just puts me in a good mood. I love listening to KOST this time of
year.”
Rivera Ousted from Cumulus
Changes
continue at Cumulus Media, owner of KABC (790 AM) and KLOS (95.5 FM),
under the direction of new CEO Mary G. Berner. Berner replaced Lew
Dickie, who many -- myself included -- credit with accelerating the
decline of the company.
The
latest move is to finally take Geraldo Rivera off the air in New York;
Rivera was once heard on KABC in an East-Coast/West-Coast simulcast,
though he was removed form the KABC lineup at the end of 2013. Since
that time Rivera had been heard on WABC/New York exclusively, until he
was allegedly locked out of the studio last week.
“This
is the end,” he posted on Facebook November 28th. “In the four years
since I joined 77 WABC radio in my hometown of New York I have enjoyed
uneven success, but managed to establish an open-mined core following.”
According to Rivera, Berner (or her team) are not recognizing a
handshake deal made to extend his contract that was made with the
Dickies before their removal from the company.
Speaking
on the subject of the problems being suffered by his employer, he
wrote, “As the company tanked, the men who employed me, the honorable
brothers John and Lew Dickey ultimately found themselves in financial
peril, over-extended and prey to hedge funders who gobbled up enough
clout to oust them as managers and install someone who had no experience
in broadcasting but who apparently impressed those adventurous
investors.”
While
I tend to agree that someone with no experience in radio running a
radio company is a bad idea, Rivera is a bit off-base. It was the
Dickies who put the company in peril first by overextending to the point
where massive debt held the company down, then by responding by gutting
talent. The result: low-ratings, lower ad revenue, and even more debt.
Cumulus stock has lost over 99 percent of its value since it hit $50 in
December, 1999.
Think I’m too harsh? Let’s turn the page over to Tom Leykis, who left radio for online media (
www.newnormalnetwork.com) due in large part to the Dickie-effect. His response to Rivera:
"’Uneven
success?’ I challenge you to open up the ratings to the public. They
will find the same thing you found in Al Capone's vault: virtually
nothing. The fact that you think the Dickey Brothers are "honorable"
shows what a radio neophyte you are. By not signing a contract with you,
they PUT you in the position you're in right now, rather than showing
‘honor.’
“Most
of us who've worked in radio have known the truth about the Dickeys and
Cumulus Media before you ever heard of them. You've conveniently
ignored their long list of firings of hundreds of professional radio
people.
“Your
firing in this holiday season gladdens the hearts of many of us in the
radio business because you had no business working in the business in
the first place.”
Cumulus
stock was actually up last week and as I write this is trading in the
area of 38 cents per share, double what it was at the close of last
Friday. That’s a huge improvement, but still a long way from the $1 per
share it needs to maintain in order not to be delisted from the stock
exchange.
Corrections and Clarifications
Reader Pat Mooney of Torrance sent in some information regarding Bob Eubanks that I never knew.
“Regarding Bob Eubanks' rise and career in Los Angeles radio: he created and owned the Cinnamon Cider right up the road at the Long Beach traffic circle (I think it is a car dealership now)
“It was the place to be. The Upstairs Downstairs in Downey was started right after plus a couple other clubs. But the Cider was the first. Heck, Art Laboe used to hang there.”
And
I wrote that Stephanie Edwards did not have any radio experience
outside of Lucky Supermarket commercials ... longtime radio programmer
Chuck Southcott checked in to tell me she actually did have some
experience: “Edwards was part of the on-air talent Saul Levine hired to
host his Broadway format” when it ran on then KGIL (now KMZT, 1260 AM).
Long Beach's Cinnamon Cinder (you omitted the "n"). More about it here: http://www.presstelegram.com/article/ZZ/20080217/NEWS/802179970
ReplyDeleteEnjoy reading your column each week here on the blog, as well as locally in the Long Beach Press Telegram!