Thursday, January 31, 2008

Media Notebook (Jan 31, 2008)





Collected and Edited by Rick Kaempfer






Writers & Studios nearing a deal
(LA Times) Verrier and Eller write: "Hollywood's striking writers and major studios have moved closer to bridging their divide after a week of talks, raising hopes that a new contract is within reach. The parties have narrowed the gap between them in some key areas, including how much writers should earn when films and TV shows are distributed online, according to people close to the situation who insisted on anonymity because talks are confidential. The discussions could still derail, as they did in early December, these people cautioned. The parties remain apart over how much writers should be paid when their shows are streamed online and union jurisdiction over original content created for the Internet. Moreover, relations between the two sides have been marred by distrust and near-loathing as positions hardened in both camps."

One of Pepsi's ads for the Super Bowl



Grammys get interim deal with writers

(Associated Press) The Writers Guild of America agreed Monday to let its members work on the show set for Feb. 10. Neil Portnow called the guild's decision gratifying and promised a 50th-anniversary show "with an amazing lineup of artists and performances." With the guild's board of directors deciding to sign an interim agreement for the awards ceremony, the Grammys will escape the fate that befell this month's Golden Globes


CLICK HERE




TV Showman, Once Exiled, Returns With Video Site
(New York Times) Brooks Barnes writes: "One of Big Media’s most controversial executives is back after a period of quasi-forced retirement. Stephen Chao — who was fired from a top position at the News Corporation after, in separate incidents, hiring a male stripper to disrobe at a company meeting and nearly drowning Rupert Murdoch’s dog at a party — plans to announce on Wednesday the formation of a Web video company that he hopes to build into an educational alternative to YouTube. The site, WonderHowTo.com, aggregates how-to videos, from the mundane (like “how to tie a tie” and “how to market your lawn care business in the winter”) to the strange (“how to do Criss Angel’s vanishing toothpick trick”) and the off-color (“how to train your cat to use the toilet” and beyond)."


Bob Schieffer's retirement plans
(Associated Press) Veteran CBS Washington hand Bob Schieffer, who has anchored "Face the Nation" since 1991, said Tuesday he plans to step down from the Sunday morning political talk show with the inauguration of a new president. The start of a new administration next January provides a natural transition, he said. "That's when I'll stop doing what I'm doing now," Schieffer, who turns 71 next month, told The Associated Press. "But I'll still have some relationship with CBS, at least I hope so."


FCC Fines ABC-TV and 51 Affiliates $1.4M for Indecency
(Radio Online) The FCC has issued Notice of Apparent Liability to the ABC Television Network and 51 affiliates, including ABC's O&O'ed stations, for indecent material airing during "NYPD Blue." The Commission says that each station will be fined $27,500 (totaling some $1.4 million) for a February, 2003 episode that contained adult female nudity airing in the "safe harbor" hours of 6am to 10pm when children could be watching.


FCC fine sends millions looking for NYPD Blue clip on YouTube
(WebProNews) Jason Lee Miller writes: "The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) thought long and hard about whether Charlotte Ross's buttocks were both shocking and titillating. Five years later, they've decided they were indeed, and are fining 52 ABC stations $1.4 million. Or $27,500 per Central and Mountain time zone station that presented Ms. Ross's derriere before 10 PM. In case you missed the February 25, 2003 pre-Nipplegate episode on its first run, the news of the FCC's indecency fine has spurred millions to check it out on YouTube. If YouTube deletes it for fear of copyright infringement, likely it'll pop up again from other users. If not, the Parents Television Council, who made the initial complaint and who hates any type of raunchiness on TV, has a clip of the raunchiness on their website, along with lots of other titillating and shocking clips."






CLICK HERE




Clear Channel’s challenge – keep morale up as the stock drops.
(Radio-Info.com) This is real inside radio stuff, or should I say inside Wall Street stuff, which anyone who works in radio knows is the same thing. Tom Taylor writes about Clear Channel's stock drop: "“CCU” sank below the $30 level Tuesday and finished down $2.25 for the day – off a full 7%. That followed Monday’s 7% decline. Tuesday’s erosion was partly fueled by David Faber’s CNBC report of “less than enthusiastic” public support for the deal by one of its two big private equity backers...To give you an idea of the trading frenzy, check the volume: Nearly 26.3 million shares of CCU changed hands yesterday. That’s triple the normal volume. It was also twice the volume of Coca Cola (which has 2.3 billion shares) and was three million more shares than Time Warner. As for employee morale – Monday I mentioned the corporate jets (plural) that are used by the Mays family, and you wonder if some public gestures (at least) would be in order.”



Olbermann: Why I keep 'poking Bill O'Reilly in the eye'
(Raw Story) According to MSNBC's Keith Olbermann, it's not about obsession. He isn't Captain Ahab and Fox's Bill O'Reilly isn't his great white whale, and, in a conversation with CNN's Howard Kurtz, he reveals that he's even getting a little bored of the constant feuding. Except, just like Michael Corleone, every time Olbermann thinks he can move on, O'Reilly "does something so outrageous," that it pulls him back in.
(Rick's note: The video of the entire interview is at the link too.)


Advertiser Sues Imus for $4 million
(Huffington Post) Samuel Maull writes: "Don Imus is being sued for more than $4 million by an advertiser on his former show who says the radio shock jock badmouthed the company and called its commercials for a book by the late President Gerald Ford "cheesy." Flatsigned Press Inc., a book publisher based in Nashville, Tenn., says Imus insulted the company last year in ads it paid for to promote a book by Ford on the Warren Commission's investigation into the 1963 assassination of President John F. Kennedy. On his "Imus in the Morning" show, the talker told WFAN listeners the publishers "have been waiting for (Ford) to croak so they can unload these (books)," the lawsuit claims. Besides calling the ad spots "cheesy," Imus said of Ford's death, "Now that he's flatLINED, you go to flatSIGNED.com," the lawsuit filed in Manhattan's state Supreme Court says. Marc Held, Flatsigned's lawyer, said Thursday that Ford approved the book and signed the copies Flatsigned was selling. Imus was told to read the script "word for word" and not insult the sponsor, "but he kept doing it," Held said."


CLICK HERE




Team Obama Not Courting the Press

(Washington Post) When reporters filed onto Barack Obama's press plane after his acrimonious debate with Hillary Rodham Clinton last week, one thing was noticeably missing amid the wine and snacks on the Boeing 737. There was no high-level campaign spinner to argue that Obama had gotten the better of the exchanges or that the verbal fisticuffs were part of some precisely calculated strategy. On the press bus the next day, mid-level aides dealt with travel logistics but made no attempt to shape the coverage.






CLICK HERE




The Soprano's and 30 Rock win SAG awards
(TV Week) Andrew Krukowski writes: "The Sopranos took home all three of the Screen Actors Guild Awards for which it was nominated—ensemble, lead actor and lead actress in a drama series—placing a definite final bullet point on the iconic HBO series. James Gandolfini kicked off the evening with his fourth SAG win for his portrayal of Tony Soprano. 'This is our last official act as ‘Sopranos’ together,' Mr. Gandolfini said. His castmate Edie Falco won for actress in a drama series, also her fourth win. 'I have fallen in love with these people [the cast of "The Sopranos"]—I don’t know how you walk away from that,' Ms. Falco said. On the comedy side, NBC’s 30 Rock received Actor statuettes for its leads, Tina Fey and Alec Baldwin, while NBC’s The Office nabbed its second consecutive comedy ensemble award."




An interview with Karen Hand
(Chicago Radio Spotlight) This past weekend I interviewed former WLS, WXRT, B-96, and WCKG personality Karen Hand. She told some great stories about her days at WLS and B-96, and explained what she is doing now. Coming this weekend: An interview with Kiss-FM's morning man, DreX.