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July 2006 to December 2006

By Dave Hughes
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    December 27, 2006
    NBC Cuts 4's AM News Producer
    The latest victim of NBC's budget-cutting ax is longtime Channel 4/WRC morning news Executive Producer Lisa Rasmussen. She'd been at the station more than 20 years. Rasmussen was "the behind-the-scenes fourth person of the long-running Barbara Harrison - Joe Krebs - Tom Kierein morning team," we're told. "We're grateful to Lisa for the hard work and determination it took to jump start the news day for so long," News Director Vicki Burns said in a pre-Christmas memo to WRC staff.

    December 27, 2006
    Cumberland Radio Personality Dies During Show
    Charles "Chazz" Offutt (right), the morning man on Cumberland MD's nostalgic music WTBO (1450 AM), died at 8:23 AM on 12/26, while in the midst of his show. He was 66. He suffered an apparent heart attack. "I was listening to Chazz and all of a sudden there was just nothing," said Joanne Van, mother of Jim Van, one of Offutt's co-workers, told the Cumberland Times-News. "The mike was open and I heard somebody say 'Chazz,' then I heard them say 'Call 911,' then Jimmy called and gave me the bad news. People will miss Chazz. He is a wonderful man." Offutt started in radio in 1959. His late-night show, "The Night Owls Club," on WCUM was popular with rock-and-roll fans in the 1960s. He left for several years to work in newspaper ad sales. He returned to radio in 1993 and had hosted "The Morning Road Show" on WTBO since then. Offutt is survived by his wife and five children.

    December 25, 2006
    James Brown Dies, Once Owned Baltimore Radio Station
    James Brown, the dynamic, pompadoured "Godfather Of Soul," whose rasping vocals and revolutionary rhythms made him a giant of R&B and an inspiration for rap, funk, and disco, died early Christmas morning. He was 73. In the 1970s, Brown owned a Baltimore radio station, soul music outlet WEBB on 1360 AM.

    December 24, 2006
    Arch Campbell To 7
    Former Channel 4/WRC entertainment reporter and film critic Arch Campbell will jump to Channel 7/WJLA. A parttime gig. Campbell, who'd been at WRC for more than 30 years, recently said his farewell to the NBC station after he was budget-cutted. He'll do entertainment-related news segments for the Allbritton-owned ABC affiliate on Thursdays and Fridays.

    December 22, 2006
    1230 Drops WITH, Becomes WRBS-AM
    Baltimore's 1230 AM, righty talk WITH, is now WRBS-AM, playing music and announcing a schedule of Bible-teaching, hymns, and inspirational music. A few months ago, DCRTV reported that Baltimore-based Peter And John Ministries, which owns Charm City's WRBS-FM, was buying WITH from Salem.

    December 22, 2006
    Orioles To Leave BAL Radio
    It looks like the Orioles will be leaving their longtime Baltimore perch of Hearst's WBAL-AM for CBS's WJFK-AM and WHFS-FM duo. So reports Baltimore Examiner sports media columnist Jim Williams. "Barring any last-minute snags... That will give the O's tons of cross-promotion with the two Charm City talkers booking plenty of time for players and front office staff." It will also give a much-needed ratings boost to WJFK-AM, also known as ESPN Radio 1300.

    December 22, 2006
    Changes At WSMJ
    We hear: "Changes afoot at Baltimore's Smooth Jazz 104.3. Midday host, Bill Simpson, has left for greener pastures - no official word as to what happened to him. The new weekday lineup is Randy Dennis (morning drive), (Program Director) Lori Lewis middays, (and) Trish Hennessey (PM drive). No other changes - as far as we know."

    December 20, 2006
    Triple X's Riggins To Also Air On MASN
    A deal has been done to put Triple X afternoon radio man and Redskins legend John Riggins' show also on the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network. Probably come February. A multi-year contract. We hear that MASN will also continue to carry WJFK-AM afternooner Anita Marks. The deal is expected to include several other elements that will give MASN exclusive access to the Redskins Radio Network. Triple X is owned by Redskins owner Dan Snyder and MASN is owned by Orioles owner Peter Angelos.

    December 19, 2006
    Covering Fire, 7 Photog Hit By Vehicle & Killed
    A news cameraman for Channel 7/WJLA was struck and killed by a vehicle overnight while covering a news story in Upper Marlboro. WJLA Vice President Of News Bill Lord identified the cameraman as Gordon Davis (right). Davis, 51, was shooting video of Prince George's County firefighters battling a blaze in the 7500 block of Robert Crain Highway around 2:40 AM. Prince George's County Fire And Emergency Medical Services spokesman Mark Brady said the fire in a strip center was quickly brought under control. He said the driver of the striking vehicle approached firefighters and said he'd struck a pedestrian in the southbound lanes of Route 301 about 100 yards away from the fire scene near Osborne Road. Brady said emergency medical technicians quickly responded to the injured man and transported him to Southern Maryland Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. Davis had been the overnight videographer for WJLA and sister NewsChannel 8 for about a decade. He lived in Thurmont with his wife and 14-year-old daughter. The incident is being investigated by the Maryland State Police. No charges have been filed against the driver.

    December 18, 2006
    Sinclair & Former DC Chief Settle Legal Wranglings
    Baltimore-based Sinclair and its former Washington bureau chief have ended a two-year legal battle over his dismissal during the 2004 presidential election campaign. Sinclair fired Jonathan Leiberman after he publicly criticized Sinclair's decision to pre-empt normal programming at 40 of the company's stations to air what he called "an extremely one-sided and negative" documentary about Democratic nominee John Kerry. Under the terms of the settlement, no one involved in the case may speak publicly about it, according to the Baltimore Sun.

    December 16, 2006
    WETA-FM May Go Back To Classical
    Non-commercial news talk WETA-FM's board of directors have voted to return 90.9 to classical music if Redskins owner Dan Snyder terminates classical for sports talk - practically a certainty - when he takes control of WGMS in January. "This would end a potential public relations embarrassment for Snyder," we're told. WETA-FM and WGMS were rival classical stations for 35 years, but WETA-FM abandoned the format in March 2005. According to the Washington Post, Snyder's Red Zebra still could affect WETA-FM's future by keeping the classical format and putting it on its Triple X sports talker's current 92.7 and 94.3 weakish signals, with the sports talker moving to the better coverage of WGMS's 104.1 and 103.9.

    December 16, 2006
    O's Dempsey To MASN
    After spending the past five seasons on the Orioles' coaching staff, Rick Dempsey, who had been in line to be the team's bullpen coach in 2007, now is expected to take a broadcasting job with the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network, where he would be on the Orioles' pre- and post-game shows and provide color commentary for certain games. Though a final deal hasn't been reached, several sources confirmed that it could happen soon. MASN has yet to announce the Orioles' broadcast team for 2007. Dempsey was an analyst for Comcast SportsNet in 2000, but was hired to the Orioles' coaching staff the next season.

    December 15, 2006
    Ratings Sun Shines On El Zol
    Another batch of those monthly Arbitrends. Big gains full day and in afternoon drive for CBS's Spanish El Zol, WLZL. For DC, full day, age 12+: 1) WMMJ, 2) WPGC-FM, 3) WHUR, 4) WTOP, 5) WKYS, 6) WASH and WIHT, 8) WMZQ, 9) WMAL and WJZW, 11) WLZL (up from 15th) and WGMS, 13) WBIG, 14) WWDC, 15) WRQX, 16) WJFK-FM, 17) WARW, 18) WAVA, 19) WTEM, 20) WPGC-AM and WFRE, 22) WTNT, 23) WYCB and WWXX and WTWP. Morning drive, age 12+: 1) WTOP, 2) WPGC-FM, 3) WMMJ, 4) WHUR, 5) WWDC (Elliot up slightly) and WKYS, 7) WMAL, 8) WIHT, 9) WMZQ, 10) WRQX, 11) WJFK-FM (Junkies down slightly), 12) WASH, 13) WLZL, 14) WJZW and WGMS and WBIG, 17) WAVA, 18) WTNT and WTEM, 20) WARW, 21) WFRE and WTWP and WPGC-AM. Afternoon drive, age 12+: 1) WHUR, 2) WPGC-FM, 3) WTOP, 4) WMMJ, 5) WIHT and WJFK-FM (D&M down slightly), 7) WKYS, 8) WLZL (way up from 16th) and WASH, 10) WMAL, 11) WJZW and WMZQ, 13) WBIG, 14) WWDC, 15) WGMS and WRQX, 17) WARW, 18) WTEM, 19) WAVA, 20) WPGC-AM and WWXX and WTWP. Despite the seemingly sluggish numbers for Washington Post Radio, station operator Bonneville claims it's "finally getting some traction" in the age 25-54 demo, where WTWP almost ties rival talker WMAL in the monthly number for morning drive. Baltimore, full day, age 12+: 1) WERQ, 2) WPOC, 3) WWIN-FM, 4) WBAL-AM, 5) WLIF, 6) WSMJ, 7) WIYY, 8) WWMX, 9) WCBM, 10) WQSR, 11) WCAO, 12) WHUR, 13) WZBA, 14) WHFS, 15) WIHT and WPGC-FM and WWDC, 18) WRBS, 19) WKYS, 20) WTOP. Fredericksburg, full day, age 12+: 1) WFLS, 2) WBQB, 3) WHUR, 4) WGRQ and WTOP, 6) WGRX and WPGC-FM.

    December 15, 2006
    Crize Cyuises To DC101 PD Post
    Cruze has been named program director of Clear Channel rocker DC101. The position has been open since Rick Schmidt left in October. Before his latest gig at Philadelphia classic rocker WMGK, Cruze worked at alternative rock WFNX in Boston for seven years. His previous programming stops included rockers in Houston, Mobile, and St. Louis.

    December 15, 2006
    Ahmet Eryegun Dies
    Ahmet Ertegun (left), the founder of Atlantic Records and the man who launched the careers of Ray Charles and Led Zeppelin, died 12/14 in NYC following complications from a fall at age 83. After his Turkish diplomat father was named ambassador to the US in 1934, Ertegun gained access to the streets of Washington DC and jazz groups with the help of Cleo Payne, the embassy's black janitor. Both Ahmet and older brother Nesuhi became avid collectors of jazz and blues records, gaining mention in Esquire magazine in 1938 when Ertegun was still in high school. After briefly attending DC's St. Albans School, Ertegun enrolled in the Landon School in Bethesda. He enrolled in St. John's College in Annapolis, where he graduated with a degree in classical philosophy in 1944, the year of his father's death. While working toward a doctoral degree at Georgetown University, Ertegun hung around Waxie Maxie Silverman's Quality Music Shop. In 1947, Ertegun decided to start his own record label in NYC, launching his music biz career.

    December 12, 2006
    PFW's Ambrose Lane Hospitalized
    Pacifica Radio icon and WPFW host Ambrose Lane (left) has been hospitalized with congestive heart failure. He's being treated at the Howard County General Hospital in Columbia and is not expected to return to his "We Ourselves" program on XM's The Power (XM-169) for the rest of this week, at least. Lane, who is a minister, has been a talk show host as well as a political/religious commentator since 1978 on WPFW, and has been doing his XM show since March.

    December 12, 2006
    Ray Davis To Do Daily Bluegrass On Digital WAMU
    Come January, WAMU bluegrass music veteran Ray Davis will return to the weekday airwaves from 3 PM to 6 PM via 88.5's third digital channel. The "HD Radio" offering, WAMU's Bluegrass Country, broadcasts bluegrass tunes 24/7. Davis joined WAMU in 1985, back when WAMU broadcast bluegrass on weekday afternoons via its main signal. Currently, Davis hosts three hours of traditional bluegrass music at 10 AM Sundays on WAMU. Davis began his radio career at the age of 15, and spent 38 years hosting a bluegrass program for then-country WBMD in Baltimore.

    December 12, 2006
    R&F Do NYC Radio Deal
    Former WJFK-FMers Ron and Fez (right), who are now heard on DC's XM Satellite Radio, have penned a deal with CBS Radio to also be heard on the Free FM talker in NYC. R&F take the 6 PM to 9 PM slot on WFNY. It'll be a live show, not a replay of their midday XM show. Opie and Anthony, who are also heard on XM, will remain on WFNY's mornings. Still no word about whether Ron Bennington and Fez Whatley will again be heard on DC's CBS-owned Free FM talker, WJFK-FM. They had aired in the midday and evening slots before jumping to XM in 2005.

    December 11, 2006
    Regular On 1960s Baltimore Radio & TV Dies
    Margaret Pedone Frillarte (right), age 70, died on 12/4 after a series of lengthy illnesses. Born and raised in Baltimore, she made a number of appearances as a youth on WCBM radio's "Hobby Club" childrens' show. As Peggy Pedone, the up-and-coming model and beauty contest contestant was a regular on Channel 13/ WJZ's "The Jack Wells Show" in the early 1960s, and was featured during fashion segments of dance-oriented "The Buddy Deane Show," seen on WJZ in afternoons. She was seen in numerous local commercials and print ads in the 1960s. In 1968, she went to NYC to appear on the NBC game show "Eye Guess."

    December 10, 2006
    JP Gets TKO'd In 1st
    From a DCRTVer about the 12/9 boxing match featuring the WJFK-FMer against pro middleweight Jay Watts. "Kudos to Junkie JP Flaim (right) for putting on a fine - but all too brief - match at the Patriot Center (Saturday night)! He was a crowd favorite... The kid he was fighting was fit as a fiddle and quick fisted. Just outclassed our poor JP at his debut... JP looked buff and seemed to have good upper body strength, but his legs were weak. He fell down a few times early on... except for the one time a blow sent him reeling and he staggered back about 10 feet into his corner! Ref checked his eyes to make sure he didn't have a concussion, and sent him back in... 'The Latin Donkey' (JP's nickname) fought his heart out, and even gave the other guy a few good licks, but after he went down again late in the round the ref stopped the fight. JP Flaim, TKO'd in round one. He looked distraught. He was so upset that he didn't make it through the round, just really ticked at himself."

    December 9, 2006
    Rabbi Gets Six Years In "Dateline" Sex Sting
    Associated Press reports that a Maryland rabbi ensnared in a "Dateline NBC" sex sting was sentenced to 6-and-1/2 years in prison last week for attempting to solicit someone pretending to be a 13-year-old boy. David Kaye, 56, of Rockville, was convicted in September in federal court of enticement and traveling across state lines to engage in illegal sexual conduct with an underage youth he had contacted via the internet. When Kaye drove to what he thought was the boy's home in Herndon, he was instead confronted by an NBC television reporter and camera crew.

    December 8, 2006
    Len Hathaway Dies
    Len Hathaway, who handled Redskins announcing duties with Sam Huff in the mid-1970s on WMAL radio, passed away on 12/7, at age 79. We hear that he also did sportscasting duties on the old WMAL-TV, Channel 7. Hathaway died in his sleep in Columbia SC, where he did a radio show after leaving Washington. He had been suffering from ALS.

    December 8, 2006
    Donald Allen Dies
    From the Washington Post: Donald Allen, a television anchorman in Washington during the 1960s and early 1970s, died of brain trauma dementia on 11/23 at Inova Fairfax Hospital. He was 78. Allen worked in DC for 12 years, starting in 1962, at what was then WTOP-TV (Channel 9), where he won a local Emmy for his 1964-65 reports and an individual achievement award for his 1967-68 11 PM newscasts. In 1969, he switched to what was then WMAL-TV (Channel 7) and won a local Emmy in 1970 for his 6 and 11 PM newscasts. He worked closely with a number of future network television news stars, including Sam Donaldson and Charlie Gibson.

    December 7, 2006
    RedZeb Talking To Bonneville About Buying WGMS
    Redskins owner Dan Snyder's Red Zebra is in talks to buy classical WGMS and its 104.1 and 103.9 signals from Bonneville. For sports talk Triple X ESPN Radio. Says Joel Oxley, who heads Bonneville's radio operations in the DC area: "I want to respond to rumors on a deal between Bonneville and Red Zebra Broadcasting (Dan Snyder's group) regarding the sale of 104.1/103.9. Our company is in discussions with Red Zebra but there is not a deal in place."

    December 6, 2006
    1260 Adds Press, Moves Franken Later
    Clear Channel lefty talker WWRC (1260 AM) picks up Bill Press for mornings, starting 12/11. Press, who once co-hosted mornings on ABC's righty talker WMAL, replaces Air America's "The Young Turks." Also, WWRC flips Ed Schultz to the noon slot, with Al Franken moving to 3 PM.

    December 5, 2006
    MHz Gets French Net
    Fairfax-based MHz Networks will carry the new France 24 news channel fulltime on its MHz-3 service, which is available via digital broadcast on Channel 30/WNVT and Channel 57/WNVC. It replaces MHz's Link TV international service. MHz-3 is also available via Comcast in the DC area on channel 186.

    December 5, 2006
    Radio One Counsel Dies
    Radio One General Counsel John Jones died on 12/3 at age 38. He was based at the urban radio firm's Lanham HQ. A heart attack.

    December 4, 2006
    Former M&C Producer Dies
    Dave Marcum, who once produced the old Murphy and Cash morning show back when it was on country WMZQ, died on 12/3 of cancer at age 52. Marcum spent three decades working at country radio stations around the country, and most recently hosted a morning show for ABC's Real Country service, which is based in Texas. DCRTV hears that Marcum also worked at Baltimore's WGRX in the 1990s.

    December 3, 2006
    92Q's LaDawn Black To PGC
    Urban radio relationship expert LaDawn Black, host of Radio One-owned WERQ's "The Love Zone," will be jumping to CBS's WPGC-FM come mid-January. There have been rumblings over the past few weeks that the DC native has wanted to take her program elsewhere, with rumors that she might become a fill-in host on Michael Baisden's nationally syndicated relationship show, "Love, Lust And Lies."

    December 1, 2006
    13 Gains But 11 Wings Baltimore TV Battle
    The Baltimore Ravens' powerhouse season has sent fans flocking to Channel 13/WJZ's game telecasts, which last month showed a viewership increase of 59 percent over November 2005. Nielsen ratings figures show that "Dr. Phil," the newest addition to WJZ's chat lineup, took 60 percent of the audience from Channel 11/WBAL's "Ellen DeGeneres Show." But the so-called ratings "sweeps" for November prove that WBAL, Charm City's NBC affiliate, continues to lead the local market overall, attracting more news viewers than Baltimore's other stations.

    November 30, 2006
    Viewers Tune Out 11 PM Newscasts
    The Washington Post looks at Nielsen's TV November "sweeps" ratings for DC and finds that there's "a precipitous decline in late prime-time viewership" that has taken "its toll on 11 PM weeknight newscasts." Channels 4, 7, and 9 saw late-newscast viewership plummet by more than 10 percent. At 11, 7 plunged by about 35 percent. Channel 4 led at 11, but viewership was down 11 percent. The area's most popular news station remained 4. From early morning to late night, 4 trumped 5, 7, and 9 when newscasts went head-to-head. Nearly all early-morning newscasts grew in popularity, with 4 in the lead. The hyped "CBS Evening News" with Katie Couric was in 3rd place at 6:30 PM on 9. Former UPNer Channel 20, which began airing My Network TV, nose-dived in primetime, while former WBer Channel 50, now a CW affiliate, posted a 15 percent primetime rise.

    November 30, 2006
    Smith Hempstone Dies
    Ambassador Smith Hempstone, who was once editor of the Washington Star editorial page, and executive editor and editor-in-chief of the Washington Times, has died at age 77.

    November 29, 2006
    MAL Newser To TOP
    Veteran WMAL newser Michelle Basch is jumping to radio rival WTOP.

    November 29, 2006
    Brooke Stevens To WVIE
    Area radio veteran Brooke Stevens now does the morning show on Baltimore female-oriented talker WVIE (1370 AM). Stevens, who once did the afternoon show with Chris Core on DC talker WMAL (630 AM), co-hosts with Michael Gabel. They're joined by Brenda Carl (news), Ted Patterson and Chuck Whittaker (traffic), Justin Berk and Tony Pann (weather), and Paisley Wessel (business).

    November 29, 2006
    Albie Grabs XM Gig
    Albie Dee, who was canned from Clear Channel's Hot 99.5 afternoon slot several months ago, and who has been doing fill-in work at CBS's WPGC-FM, WARW, and WJFK-FM since, lands the noon to 6 PM gig at DC-based XM Satellite Radio's Hit List (XM-30) contemporary music channel.

    November 29, 2006
    Kathleen Matthews Says Goodbye
    Longtime Channel 7/WJLA evening news anchor Kathleen Matthews signed off for the last time on tonight's 5 PM newscast on DC's ABC affiliate. The one-hour 'cast concluded with a look back at her 31-year broadcast career. Matthews, who is married to MSNBC's Chris "Hardball" Matthews, will become the executive VP for global communications and public affairs with Marriott. She'll remain a contributor to the station's primetime news magazine, "Metropolitan Edition."

    November 28, 2006
    Arch Campbell Leaving 4
    Longtime movie reviewer and entertainment reporter Arch Campbell is the latest victim of budget cuts at NBC4, WRC. He'll be leaving the NBC-owned station at the end of the year. Campbell, who had been with DC's Channel 4 since 1974, tells the Post that he'll still be heard on WASH radio and via his own new website.

    November 28, 2006
    NPR Commentator Dies
    Bebe Moore Campbell, whose commentaries were heard on DC-based National Public Radio, died on Monday of brain cancer. She was 56. The best-selling author of several novels and non-fiction books was a frequent guest on "Morning Edition" and other NPR programs.

    November 27, 2006
    Fadool Replaces Theoharis At 45
    Amy Fadool is taking Amber Theoharis's sports gig at Baltimore's Channel 45/WBFF. A Northern Virginia native, Fadool worked as a weekend sports anchor at Sinclair's sister WZTV-TV in Nashville. Her career started at WKYT-TV in Lexington, Kentucky as a sports reporter.

    November 24, 2006
    Former 5er Faces Prostate Cancer
    Former Channel 5/WTTG news anchor Mike Landess is battling prostate cancer. And he's doing a series of reports about the disease, which is common among older men, for Denver's KMGH-TV, where he now works.

    November 24, 2006
    Amber Theoharis Leaving 45
    Amber Theoharis will be leaving Channel 45 at the end of the year. Theoharis, who joined Sinclair's WBFF in 2004, doesn't have a new fulltime gig lined up yet. She has been heard on Charm City sports talker WJFK-AM and has been hosting shows on the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network.

    November 23, 2006
    No Injuries In 9 News Truck Mishap
    A Channel 9/WUSA technican failed to lower the 65-foot microwave mast as he drove away in a news remote truck. The mast hit the metal cross arm for a pair of traffic signals in Herndon Tuesday. The mast broke, but no one was injured. Luckily, the mast didn't strike power lines, which could have produced deadly consequences. The incident occurred at the intersection of Ferndale Avenue and Herndon Parkway, at the site of a fatal pedestrian hit-and-run, which 9 News was covering. Besides extensive damage to the truck, the traffic signal pole and cross arm had to be taken down and replaced by two temporary wooden poles with wire strung between them to carry the traffic signals. Herndon expects to bill Channel 9 for the repair work. According to a station source, several safety features which might have prevented the mishap were not installed or activated on the truck.

    November 22, 2006
    El Jefe & J-Dubs Return To 106.7
    Former WJFK-FMers El Jefe and J-Dubs are returning to their old haunt to do a week-worth of "test shows" from 12/4 to 12/8 in the 8 PM to 10 PM slot. "Dubs and I are excited to welcome our former co-worker and very good friend, Shaffee, into 'The Hideout' as a new member of the show," El Jefe writes via his website. The radio duo, which left the DC area's CBS talker 106.7 two years ago, recently got canned from their evening gig at a Clear Channel talker in Orlando.

    November 22, 2006
    2's GM Resigns
    Drew Berry, general manager of Scripps-owned Channel 2/WMAR in Baltimore, has announced his resignation. Come December, the 50-year-old executive will join the faculty of the Norfolk area's Hampton University, where he will teach at the school's Scripps Howard School Of Journalism And Communication. Berry joined WMAR in 1997 and was news director and station manager before assuming his current duties in 2000.

    November 20, 2006
    4 Cans Susan Kidd
    Network-owned Channel 4/WRC longtime news anchor Susan Kidd has been cut loose. In a "dear colleagues" message she sent a copy of which to DCRTV: "I've been kicked to the curb... I'm told I'll be off the air as of the end of December... I'm not bitter because I've remained humble. Really humbled. You can only be called Doreen (Gentzler) or JC (Hayward) so many times before you realize it's not all about you... People love me, but they love (Jim) Vance more." Kidd anchors NBC4's 5 PM 'cast with Wendy Rieger. A winner of six Emmys, she's been with WRC since 1983.

    November 20, 2006
    Fox 5 Settles Tornado Complaint
    Channel 5/ WTTG owner Fox has agreed to pay $12,000 and adopt various new newsroom policies to settle a proposed FCC fine against it over conveying emergency warnings to the hearing-impaired. The move mirrors a similar settlement by NBC's Channel 4/WRC. The FCC had proposed fining WTTG $16,000, but said it was in the public interest to take the $12,000, combined with a number of steps Fox pledged to take. The proposed fine stemmed from a viewer complaint that Fox 5 had "failed to make accessible to persons with hearing disabilities emergency information that it provided aurally in its programming" for WTTG during a thunderstorm and tornado watch in May 2004.

    November 20, 2006
    Two Posties Jump To Allbritton-CBS Venture
    Washington Post political reporters Jim VandeHei and John Harris are jumping to Channel 7/WJLA and NewsChannel 8 owner Joe Allbritton's new Capitol Hill rag, the Capitol Leader, to launch a multi-platform company that will feature a one-stop web hop for political news. The new venture will also include a partnership with CBS News, with cross-promotion via DC-based "Face The Nation" and other CBS news shows.

    November 17, 2006
    NABET Reaches Accord With 7 & 8
    After almost two years of negotiations, a tentative agreement has been reached between the National Association Of Broadcast Employees And Technicians and Allbritton-owned Channel 7/WJLA and NewsChannel 8. The last issue remaining was the right to arbitrate discharge cases. As a result of extended talks, since the membership's vote in June, the NABET union negotiated the right for arbitration in all cases. A Local 31 unit meeting will be held soon to discuss and vote on the deal.

    November 17, 2006
    TOP Drives To Top Of Drivetimes
    All-news WTOP took the top spot in both morning and afternoon drives in the overall age 12+ Arbitrend radio ratings, out today. In the full-day numbers, adult urban WMMJ ranked 1st, urban WPGC-FM 2nd, with adult urban WHUR in a tie with WTOP for 3rd, and hit Hot 99.5 in 5th. Talker WMAL jumped from 14th to 9th, rocker DC101 slid from 9th to 13th to tie with classic rock hits WBIG, Spanish WLZL remained level at 15th, WJFK-FM dropped from 15th to 16th, classic rock WARW slid from 15th to 17th, and sports talk WTEM slumped from 18th to 19th. In mornings, WMMJ's Tom Joyner was 2nd, WPGC-FM's Donnie Simpson 3rd, WHUR's Steve Harvey 4th, WMAL's Grandy and Andy 5th, DC101's Elliot 6th, the just-fired Hot 99.5 "Hot Morning Mess" 7th, and WJFK-FM's Junkies 10th. New talker Washington Post Radio and new sports talker Triple X both failed to crack the top 20. Urban WERQ took the top spot in Baltimore and country WFLS was the king of Fredericksburg.

    November 17, 2006
    Former Baltimore TV Personality Enters Plea In 1974 Assault
    Former Memphis TV news anchor Ron Meroney, who worked in the Baltimore TV market in the 1970s, has entered a plea to a reduced charge of child abuse in connection with the sexual molestation of an underage girl in Wicomico County on Maryland's Eastern Shore in 1974. Meroney's plea deal includes a 15-year sentence, with all but 18 months suspended, and five years probation. Meroney will also be forced to register as a sex offender. His guilty plea will prevent him from serving any time in jail.

    November 16, 2006
    George Michael Leaving Sports Anchor Gig At 4
    Longtime DC TV legend George Michael (right) will be giving up his nightly sports anchoring duties come March, as well as his nationally syndicated "Sports Machine," but he will continue to host Redskins-related (with Sonny Jurgensen, John Riggins, and Michael Wilbon) and other sports shows for the NBC-owned station. Even though he's getting the "best ratings ever" on the top-rated DC TV news operation, Michael tells DCRTV that he will not participate in the network's much-hyped budget cuts. "I was offered a longterm contract to stay," he says, "but I will not lay somebody off." Michael adds: "If they're going to cut, let them start with me." He stresses that he will remain under contract to NBC, but in a different capacity than in the past. And, according to Michael, there is no truth to the rumors that he'll be doing anything for Redskins owner Dan Snyder's Red Zebra broadcasting arm via Triple X ESPN Radio.

    November 15, 2006
    Jack Alix Dies
    Area radio legend Jack Alix (left), 64, (WEAM, WPGC, WEEL, WINX, WXTR) passed away Wednesday morning due to complications from pneumonia. After his days in the 1960s and 1970s at many area "top 40" outlets, Alix (pictured at right in the 1960s and more recently at left) continued his radio career in Richmond (WLEE, WRVQ, WMXB, WBBT, WXGI) and Fredericksburg. Also, Alix produced the 1970s syndicated radio show "Rock And Roll Roots" and did a teen dance show on Channel 20/WDCA. He received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Richmond Association Of Broadcasters last spring. "I knew Jack from the time I got into radio at age 15," Joel Denver, the DC radio vet who runs California-based radio biz website All Access, tells DCRTV. "Great jock in his day, for sure."

    November 15, 2006
    Nats Back To WaPo Radio
    The Washington Nationals have reached a one-year deal to broadcast its games on WTWP, Washington Post Radio, the outlet that carried the games last season. There was talk that the team might bolt for SportsTalk 980 or Triple X ESPN Radio, which it may still do in 2008. The agreement with Bonneville-operated WTWP calls for "an extensive post-game show" and weekly Nationals programming. The Nationals' radio team of Charlie Slowes and Dave Jageler is back, too.

    November 15, 2006
    More "MOYL" At 1160
    Gaithersburg-based brokered talk outlet WMET (1160 AM) announces that it'll be running the "Music Of Your Life" nostalgic popular standards format from 8 PM to 6 AM on its airwaves, and fulltime via moyl.wmet1160.com.

    November 14, 2006
    Bob Menaker Dies
    Bob Menaker, 61, a journalist at several Washington-area publications and in recent years editor in chief of the Atlanta Jewish Times, died 11/8 of brain cancer at his home in Atlanta. He was a former resident of Alexandria. Menaker was a contestant on "Jeopardy," the TV quiz show, in the mid-1980s and won $9,000.

    November 14, 2006
    Joe Ungaro Dies
    Stars And Stripes ombudsman Joe Ungaro, the driving force behind major reforms to the DC-based military-oriented newspaper in the 1990s, died suddenly Sunday night. He was 76.

    November 13, 2006
    WAMU To Provide Digital Relay Of WTMD
    On 11/14, American University news talker WAMU, 88.5 FM, will begin relaying the adult album alternative signal of Towson University's WTMD on its second digital channel. This will provide a reception boost for the Baltimore area's WTMD, which has an analog signal on 89.7 FM that doesn't reach most of the DC area. Says WAMU General Manager Caryn Mathes: "Using HD Radio to bring AAA music back to Washington DC is one step in our process of developing a 'family of content services' to listeners. I'm very excited to be on the forefront of not only HD Radio usage and programming, but also collaboration between two public radio stations." Adds WTMD General Manager Stephen Yasko: "In 1980, I was an undergraduate at American University, and the music on the radio matched the sense of adventure and optimism that I think many of us have carried in our lives. To be able to recreate that listening experience for folks on the radio in Baltimore and now in Washington is a great honor for me and the entire WTMD staff."

    November 11, 2006
    Jack Marsh Dies
    Jack Marsh, a retired award-winning news photographer who chased fires and accidents for Baltimore and Washington television stations, died on 11/5 at the Maryland Shock Trauma Center after suffering a fall at his Hampden home. He was 78. During his 40-plus-year career, he worked for Baltimore's Channels 11 and 13, DC's Channel 9, Salisbury's Channel 47, and the DC bureau of NBC News.

    November 8, 2006
    Former JFKers Fired In Orlando
    Former WJFK-FMers El Jefe and J-Dubs have had their evening "The Hideout" show canned from Orlando talker WTKS. An apparent budget cut at the Clear Channel station.

    November 8, 2006
    Marimow To Philly
    Bill Marimow, a former Baltimore Sun editor who's recently been working at DC's National Public Radio, takes the editor gig at the troubled Philadelphia Inquirer.

    November 7, 2006
    New Morning Team At RBS
    Baltimore Christian talk and music outlet WRBS (95.1 FM) has announced that Tracey Tiernan, Mike Alley, and David Paul will replace longtime morning host Dick Ireland, who suffered a stroke in May. Tiernan moves from afternoon drive, Alley anchored traffic and co-hosted with Ireland, and Paul is the station's program director. Steve Swanson will replace Tiernan in PM drive. Ireland, who had worked at WLIF for 26 years, announced in September that he was retiring from WRBS due to health issues. Says Steve Lawhon, WRBS's general manager: "(Ireland) continues to improve and is thankful for everyone's thoughts and prayers." WRBS is owned by the Peter And John Radio Fellowship.

    November 7, 2006
    Nats Can Paciorek As TV Color Man
    Ex-big leaguer Tom Paciorek, who served as a color analyst on the Nationals' television broadcasts on the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network, was told that his contract would not be renewed. Paciorek said he was told by Chris Glass, MASN's executive producer, that the Nats had made the decision. Paciorek said he would retire from broadcasting, "because this is the only job I wanted." Play-by-play man Bob Carpenter is signed through 2007.

    November 6, 2006
    Arnie Dachs Dies
    Arnie Sachs, a longtime political and sports photographer for a number of local and national media services, died on 11/3 in Dunkirk MD of cancer. He was 78. Sachs is best remembered for his photo (right) of a young Bill Clinton with President John F. Kennedy. Sachs was a fixture on the Redskins sideline since the 1960s and even covered training camp last summer from his motorized scooter. His son, Ron Sachs, is also a local photographer.

    November 6, 2006
    James McIlhenny Dies
    James McIlhenny, 78, former president of US News And World Report magazine, died of complications of cancer 11/3 at his Alexandria home. McIlhenny's career embraced retailing, manufacturing, and publishing, although his favorite job was running the magazine in the early 1980s. At the time, it was Washington's second-largest publishing company.

    November 5, 2006
    Helen Dewar Dies
    Helen Dewar, 70, for 25 years the Washington Post's Senate reporter, died of breast cancer on 11/4.

    November 3, 2006
    930 Club Founder Dies
    Jon Bowers, 61, an attorney and real estate developer who founded the legendary 930 Club, died of cancer on 10/6 at his home in DC. In 1979, Bowers purchased the Atlantic Building at 930 F Street in old downtown DC, bought out the lease of a failing establishment on the first floor, and replaced it with his club. The 930 soon became the DC area's "alternative" music mecca - featuring punk, new wave, funk, reggae, roots rock, go-go, and much more.

    November 3, 2006
    Jen To 106.5
    Former WHFSer Jen gets the 2 PM to 7 PM gig on Baltimore's Mix 106.5.

    November 2, 2006
    NGC Crew Injured In Afghanistan
    A crew on assignment for the DC-based National Geographic Channel, embedded with a US Army Special Forces unit in Afghanistan, was injured on 10/28 when a vehicle in their convoy struck a landmine. Executive Producer Steven Hoggard, of the DC area-based Hoggard Films, and a DC-based crew of one cameraman and one soundman were filming the convoy when a vehicle in front of them hit a landmine. Based on unconfirmed information, both Hoggard and the cameraman suffered non-life-threatening injuries. Hoggard was airlifted to Germany, and the cameraman is being treated and expected to be flown to the US for additional treatment. The soundman was unharmed from the blast, and is still filming in Afghanistan. The crew arrived in Afghanistan on 10/25 and was embedded with Special Forces filming the special "Inside The Green Berets" for NGC.

    November 2, 2006
    Huckabee Leaves Parr
    Darryl Huckaby, VP of operations for the WKYS-based "Russ Parr Morning Show," has resigned. Huckaby held the position for more than a year and, prior to that, was program director of urban WKYS.

    November 2, 2006
    Broadcasting Mag's Former Publisher Dies
    Lawrence Taishoff, the former publisher of once DC-based Broadcasting magazine, and son of Sol Taishoff, the founder of the publication that eventually became Broadcasting And Cable, passed away on Wednesday morning in DC after a long, debilitating illness. He was 73. Until a recent stay at the Washington Hospital Center, he had been living in Naples, Florida. He also maintained a home in suburban DC. In 1986, he sold Broadcasting to Times Mirror, which sold it to Cahners, which is now Reed Business Information.

    November 1, 2006
    Hot 99.5 Fires "Morning Mess"
    Clear Channel has dumped "The Hot Morning Mess" (left) from Hot 99.5, WIHT. DCRTV had heard that Mark Kaye and Kris Gamble's contracts are up at the end of the year. Kane, a on-air personality at WFLZ, a Tampa hit music station, is joining Hot 99.5 to head the morning show as of 11/13. Kane previously worked with Clear Channel DC radio honcho Jeff Kapugi at WFLZ. Also out: "Mess" producer Ron Ross.

    November 1, 2006
    Jessica Cash Gets Morning Gig At FLS
    Jessica Cash, once part of the "Murphy And Cash" morning team heard on Clear Channel's WBIG (100.3 FM) and WMZQ (98.7 FM), has landed a permanent gig as morning show co-host with Fredericksburg country outlet WFLS (93.3 FM). With her former partner Gary Murphy, Cash spent seven years at country WMZQ, and another four at oldies WBIG. The pair parted company last April when Clear Channel flipped WBIG from oldies to classic rock hits. Since then, Cash has been doing parttime fill-in work at WFLS, which is owned by the Fredericksburg Free Lance Star newspaper. Cash starts on 11/13 and will be paired with Brian Stroble, a longtime WFLSer. DCRTV has reported that Murphy is now handling ad sales at CBS Radio in Baltimore.

    November 1, 2006
    Changes At NST
    Changes at Baltimore sports talker WNST (1570 AM). We're told that Nester Aparicio's station has yanked personalities Terry Ford and Jeremy Conn.

    October 31, 2006
    Levan Reid Back To 9
    Levan Reid is returning to Channel 9/WUSA. He'll soon be anchoring the weekend sports, and do weekday sports reports with Brett Haber and Sara Walsh. "No word exactly why he came back, although there wasn't much official word as to why he left either," a WUSA source tells DCRTV. Reid, who joined 9 from the Fox station in Boston a few years back, left WUSA in mid-summer to deal with apparent family issues.

    October 31, 2006
    Allie Oakley Flies For Fox 5
    Allie Oakley, creative services director for Fredericksburg radio stations WBQB and WFVA, is the latest "Sky Fox" airborne traffic reporter with DC's Fox 5, WTTG. Actually, she works for Metro Traffic. Oakley plans to continue parttime with the two radio outlets, helping with production and community events. You'll recall that Oakley used to be part of the Mark and Art morning team on classic rock WARW, pre-Stevens and Medley.

    October 30, 2006
    K&M Gone From 98 Rock, To Replace Junks on HFS, M&A To 98 Mornings
    A Baltimore media source tells DCRTV: "Kirk and Mark from 98 Rock are gone from the station. They must serve a 90-day no-compete clause in their contracts but will start with WHFS 105.7 - or at least legally can - on February 1st. The issues between Kirk McEwen and 98 Rock caused problems for local wrestling company Maryland Championship Wrestling. 98 Rock's general manager... informed both McEwen and Mickey Cuchiello that they could not appear in the scheduled '8 Man Tag Team Match' they were promoting on their respective shows up to the Friday of the event, which was last night. Both were informed that they would be in essence in breach of contract if they did the wrestling match. For the record, the vast majority of the crowd came to see TNA Wrestlers Samoa Joe and Christopher Daniels and although the announcement that the 98 Rock DJs were unable to appear did elicit a negative response from parts of the audience, the show was still a considerable success with over 800 fans in attendance. By the time you read this, (98 Rock afternooners) Mickey and Amelia will be the morning show and (former 98 Rock morning men) Kirk and Mark will be sitting out no-compete clauses as they await their February debuts on WHFS." Also: The WJFK-FM-based Junkies are officially gone from WHFS mornings come February, and, on their show, they slammed the suits at CBS Radio in Baltimore for not promoting and backing them as Howard Stern's replacement in the Charm City. 98 Rock morning newsman Josh Spiegel is believed to be staying with the station. According to a statement at 98online.com, it was Kirk and Mark's "decision" to leave 98 Rock.

    October 26, 2006
    2 Veteran George Kroen Dies
    George Kroen, a retired television cameraman and engineer whose career dated to the pioneering days of Baltimore's Channel 2/WMAR, died of complications from a stroke Sunday at Sinai Hospital. The longtime Randallstown resident was 78. In 1947, Kroen began his broadcasting career as an announcer for radio station WLEE in Richmond, and later moved to WGAY radio in Silver Spring. In 1948, he joined WMAR, which went on the air in 1947, as a cameraman. Kroen was promoted to master controller, overseeing technical operations, a position he held at his 1999 retirement.

    October 26, 2006
    New PD At MZQ & POC
    Meg Stevens becomes program director for Clear Channel's DC country WMZQ (98.7 FM) and Baltimore country WPOC (93.1 FM). She comes from Clear Channel's country WGAR and oldies WMJI in Cleveland, and replaces George King at WMZQ and Ken Boesen at WPOC.

    October 24, 2006
    Snyder Seeks Power Hike For 730
    Redskins owner Dan Snyder's Red Zebra is applying to hike the power of WXTR, 730 AM, one of the three signals of his Triple X ESPN Sports talker. RZ wants to jump the daytime power from 8,000-watts to 28,000-watts, and the tiny night power of 25-watts to 20,000-watts. The plan would move WXTR's transmission towers from Mount Vernon, south of Alexandria, to Redskins Park in Ashburn, near Dulles Airport. We'll see if the Federal Communications Commission will allow the signal improvements since the frequency is reserved by Canada, and American stations on 730 must protect Canadian stations at night. The daytime signal changes would add nearly all of Maryland's Eastern Shore while limiting the signal towards Baltimore a bit. But the nighttime signal changes would be the most noticeable, providing the ability to listen to the station after sunset throughout much of the DC area, we're told.

    October 21, 2006
    Pye Chamerlayne Dies
    Edward "Pye" Chamberlayne, 68, died in his sleep Saturday morning at his home in Virginia's Shenandoah Valley. Chamberlayne suffered from numerous medical ailments and had heart artery bypass surgery a few years ago. He was the Capitol Hill correspondent for the old UPI Radio Network. A Richmond native and University Of Virginia graduate, Chamberlayne moved to DC and began working for UPI in 1962, covering the White House before covering Congress and politics. He also worked for Metromedia Radio, including a stint as the broadcasting group's DC news bureau chief. "We've lost another great voice," says his friend, former WMAL personality and ABC Radio newsman Tom Gauger.

    October 21, 2006
    ZGS Buys Richmond TVer
    ZGS Communications, an Hispanic-owned broadcasting company headquartered in Arlington, has agreed to acquire a low-power TV station in Richmond, Channel 45/WKYV. The currently off-air outlet owned by Tiger Eye Broadcasting used to relay a shopping network. ZGS owns the DC area's Telemundo affiliate, low-powered Channel 64/WZDC, which is widely carried on area cable TV systems.

    October 18, 2006
    IJ Hudson Out The Door At 4
    Veteran reporter IJ Hudson is being shown the door at Channel 4/WRC. Our sources at NBC 4 say that "Ira John" Hudson was actually "informed" weeks ago that he is being "let go" as part of a round of massive cuts coming to NBC, including at its local stations, like WRC. His contract is up in January and is not being renewed. "Having worked at 4, I can say IJ is truly one of the really nice guys in the business. I hope he makes out well," we're told. Hudson joined WRC in 1985.

    October 18, 2006
    PGC Tops Summer Ratings
    The summer radio ratings numbers from Arbitron. DC: WPGC-FM is trailed by WMMJ, WTOP, WHUR, WKYS, WIHT, WGMS, WASH, WMZQ, and WWDC. Baltimore: WERQ is trailed by WPOC, WWIN-FM, WLIF, WBAL, WIYY, WSMJ, WWMX, WZBA, and WCBM. Hit music Hot 99.5 and hot adult contemporary Mix 107.3 posted huge gains. Both benefiting from the demise of "modern music" Z104 in January. The FM urbans - WPGC, WMMJ, and WHUR - did well, as usual, as did all-news WTOP. Classical WGMS, which got relocated to a less powerful pair of signals in January, has lost nearly 30 percent of its audience. And the Post's own Washington Post Radio, talker WTWP, "remains mired" at 22nd place, dropping a spot from spring. In morning drive, DC101's Elliot Segal was up, as were the Junkies over on WJFK, at least in their male target demo. But WTOP remained dominant, at 1st, with WMMJ's Tom Joyner in 2nd, and WPGC's Donnie Simpson in 3rd. Dan Snyder's Triple X ESPN Radio debuted in 28th place. But, having a second sports talker on the DC radio dial sent rival SportsTalk 980 down a half-point to 18th place. DCRTV adds: In afternoon drive, WTOP again placed 1st, with WHUR 2nd, WPGC 3rd, WMMJ 4th, and Hot 99.5 5th. WJFK's Don and Mike slumped from 3rd to 6th. Full-day, talker WMAL sunk to 14th.

    October 18, 2006
    DC101 PD Gone
    Rick Schmidt has resigned his program director post with Clear Channel rocker DC101. He joined WWDC in August 2005. During his almost 20-year radio career, Schmidt has worked for rock and alternative rockers in Raleigh, Tampa, Tallahassee, and Jacksonville.

    October 18, 2006
    ABC Radio's Joe Shamwell Dies
    Joe Shamwell (right), head of marketing research for ABC's DC radio cluster (WMAL, WJZW, WRQX), passed away in his sleep Monday. He apparently had a history of heart problems. Shamwell, 62, once worked at WHUR and was co-writer of the song "Just The Two Of Us" and more than 100 other tunes. His music career began in his birthplace, Washington DC, in 1967 at Waxie Maxie's Record Store where he befriended Eddie Floyd. He moved to Memphis and collaborated with Floyd on many titles and also wrote with Isaac Hayes, David Porter, Tommy Tate, Steve Cropper, William Bell, Homer Banks, and others. Floyd, Bell, Tate, Carla Thomas, Rufus Thomas, the Bar Kays, Con-Funk-Shun, Johnnie Taylor, and Booker T And The MG's all recorded Shamwell's songs.

    October 18, 2006
    Goss Drives From JFK To WaPo Radio
    Longtime WJFK-FM weekend car radio guy Pat Goss (left) is jumping to Washington Post Radio. Come 11/4, "Goss's Garage" will be heard on Bonneville-operated talker WTWP, 107.7 FM and 1500 AM, on Saturdays from 11 AM to 1 PM. For the past 15 years, Goss has been heard on CBS talker WJFK-FM, 106.7. "We're excited to have been able to make this happen," says WTWP Program Director Greg Tantum. "The addition of Pat Goss to the weekend lineup further strengthens Washington Post Radio's role as the Washington area's leader for local, in-depth news, and information." For 26 years, Goss has been co-host of the Maryland Public Television-produced "MotorWeek," which airs on nearly 300 PBS stations. Also, he owns a car repair shop in Prince George's County. Goss's WJFK-FM defection leaves the ratings-slumping former Redskins outlet's weekend lineup mainly populated with infomercials and reruns of weekday shows.

    October 17, 2006
    CBS News Vet Christopher Glenn Dies
    Veteran CBS News correspondent Christopher Glenn, who retired earlier this year, has died. He was 68. Glenn, who suffered from liver cancer, died suddenly in a hospital in Norwalk, Connecticut. After a 35 years as an integral part of CBS News, Glenn shut off his microphone in February. Prior to joining CBS News, Glenn was managing editor of the Metromedia Radio News Network in DC in the early 1970s.

    October 17, 2006
    Arlington Launches Emergency AMer
    Arlington County's Office Of Emergency Management has started a low-powered AMer on 1700. It's currently running a three-minute loop in English and Spanish about the "Arlington Alert" system.

    October 16, 2006
    98 Rock Goes Digital
    Baltimore's 98 Rock, WIYY, apparently became the 1,000th US radio station to broadcast a digital HD Radio signal. Last week, owner Hearst has flipped the switch for 97.9 FM to start transmitting via Columbia MD's iBiquity system, along with a replacement for its 19-year-old analog transmitter. The station is taking a "soft opening" approach to the digital debut, and expects to promote it in November with the launch of a website for WIYY's digital output. WIYY will feature three channels - classic rock, alternative rock, and the main rock signal.

    October 14, 2006
    Local Hip-Hop Engineer Gunned Down
    Raymond Brown, 36, a hip-hop music engineer professionally known as Scottie Beats, was shot and killed after an early morning dispute Friday with someone trying to tow his car from his Mitchellville area home. "He was the man," WPGC-FM personality DJ Flexx tells the Washington Post. "He understood all the music in DC, from go-go to hip-hop. He was one of the best studio engineers in the area. Everybody wanted him on their projects because they knew if he worked on it, it would be special." Brown was an engineer at Night Flight Recording Studios in Fort Washington. He is credited as a producer on the CD "Crunk Juice" by Lil Jon and the East Side Boyz and as an engineer on "Rebirth" by Jennifer Lopez. According to the Post, police have not determined whether the tow truck operator was attempting to steal Brown's car or to repossess it.

    October 13, 2006
    Ballard To BIG Mornings
    Classic rock hits WBIG is moving former DC101er Jon Ballard from afternoons to mornings, with evening man Struber moving to afternoons.

    October 13, 2006
    Nassau Buys WRNR
    Nassau Broadcasting, which owns more than 50 stations along the eastern seaboard, has agreed to purchase adult alternative "Triple A" WRNR, 103.1 FM, in Annapolis, from Empire Broadcasting. The station's buyer is actually "a new entity called Grasonville Broadcasting. WRNR will operate under an LMA - local marketing agreement - with Empire, which is contracting management through Nassau. According to WRNR Operations Manager (and former 99.1 WHFSer) Bob Waugh, "We are very excited about Nassau taking over WRNR. They have assured us there will be no format change at the station and have already made it clear that they will offer us resources for the station that were not available to us before." Nassau also owns adult contemporary WAFY, Key 103, in Frederick, which is also on 103.1 FM.

    October 13, 2006
    Marimow Resigns NPR News Post
    The top news executive at National Public Radio suddenly resigned from his post last night, leaving the DC-based organization without an editorial leader for programming that reaches more than 20 million listeners a week. Bill Marimow will stay at NPR and become its ombudsman, which removes him from daily responsibility for programs such as "All Things Considered." The much-decorated newspaperman who spent a decade at the Baltimore Sun, first as managing editor and then as editor, joined NPR in 2004 and was named vice president for news and information in February 2006.

    October 11, 2006
    VOA's Mark Hopkins Dies
    Mark Hopkins, 75, a Voice Of America journalist who died of complications from liver cancer 9/25 at Sibley Memorial Hospital, broadcast from China's Tiananmen Square as tanks rolled in to crush the 1989 student demonstrations. He also was the first to alert the world in 1991 to former Soviet president Mikhail Gorbachev's ouster in Moscow. Hopkins, a DC resident, was one of a number of journalists expelled from China for his reporting on the massacre in Beijing.

    October 10, 2006
    New News Director For 2
    David Silverstein, the news director at Columbus OH's WSYX-TV, is heading to Baltimore's Channel 2/WMAR. Connie Howard left her gig as 2's news director in June, after she failed to improve the Scripps Howard ABC affiliate's chronically anemic news ratings. WSYX is owned by Baltimore-based Sinclair.

    October 10, 2006
    Zan Hollander Dies
    Zander "Zan" Hollander, 75, a former reporter with United Press International and an export control specialist with the Department Of Energy, died 10/3 of respiratory failure at Sibley Memorial Hospital. He was a resident of DC and had been hospitalized for a hip fracture.

    October 9, 2006
    Gary Murphy To CBS
    Gary Murphy, formerly half of the "Murphy And Cash" morning team on Clear Channel's WBIG, and WMZQ before that, starts a gig as an ad account executive at CBS Radio in Baltimore.

    October 7, 2006
    Tower Terminated
    It's the end of the road for legendary music retailer Tower Records. The bankrupt California-based company has been sold to a liquidator. Look for "going out of business" sales at Tower's five DC area locations starting today.

    October 6, 2006
    New Gig For RQX's Dave Linn
    Mix 107.3's Dave Linn gives up eight years of doing overnights to become the station's continuity director. Linn will still be heard on the ABC hot adult contemporary outlet doing weekend shifts. A Vienna VA native, Linn's also worked at WJFK-FM, Fredericksburg's WBQB, and Richmond's WRXL/WRNL.

    October 6, 2006
    O'Meara's Pub Hit With Fine
    The Potomac News reports that the Virginia Department Of Alcohol And Beverage Control has accepted an offer from O'Meara's Restaurant And Pub in Manassas to pay a $4500 fine instead of losing its liquor license for 10 days. The owners of O'Meara's, including WJFK-FM afternoon personality Mike O'Meara, half of the "Don And Mike Show" team, were charged with selling alcohol to two intoxicated people, allowing lewd or disorderly conduct, and selling alcohol in an unauthorized manner or place.

    October 5, 2006
    Teapot Tim Leaving Hot 99.5
    Hot 99.5's "The Hot Morning Mess" is saying goodbye to "stuntboy extraordinaire" (that's what Radio And Records calls him) "Teapot Tim" Coburn, who's devoting his fulltime energies to his photography business. The 28-year-old Vienna resident has had lots of "fun" while working at WIHT, including running down the Beltway during rush hour, going barefoot on hot coals, cooking steak on his butt, strapping fireworks to his body, stripping on Rockville Pike's median strip, and mooning drivers in "ManASSas." That last one got him picked up by the cops, one of numerous run-ins with the authorities. "After five long years of mischief, mayhem, laughter, and legal fees," Coburn's last day at the Clear Channel contemporary hit outlet will be 10/13.

    October 5, 2006
    Charlie Slezak Dies
    Delmarva Broadcasting employees are mourning the death of engineer Charlie Slezak, 53, who died suddenly this past weekend. He had worked for the Delaware-based group for 26 years. He was president of the Chesapeake Bay Radio Association. Slezak worked at WNRK in Newark before coming to WDEL/WSTW in Wilmington, where he DJed as "Chris Stevens."

    October 4, 2006
    WERQ Morning Changes
    From the Baltimore Sun: Listeners of "The Big Phat Morning Show" on Baltimore's urban 92Q, WERQ, got a surprise when they turned on their radios. The on-air team of Troy Johnson, Marc Clarke, and Sonjay, known for its lively discussions of current events, social issues and politics sandwiched between Jay-Z and Chingy tunes, was no longer intact. In typical radio fashion, the changes came swiftly and silently - with no on-air explanation offered to listeners. Johnson was told that his contract wouldn't be extended. Sonjay was transferred to a mostly behind-the-scenes production job. And Clarke, who will continue in the morning slot, was joined by Johnny "Porkchop" Doswell, another 92Q DJ.

    October 4, 2006
    Bill Neal Dies
    William "Bill" Neal, who had a morning program on WBAL radio in the 1960s, died of Alzheimer's disease complications on 9/30 at Stella Maris Hospice. The Timonium resident was 81. Neal was a TV announcer at NBC in NYC when he moved to Washington and worked at Voice Of America before holding radio jobs in Baltimore at WBAL and WCBM in the 1960s. He retired from broadcasting in 1979 as a television staff announcer at then-WTOP, DC's Channel 9.

    October 4, 2006
    RW Apple Dies
    RW Apple Jr., who, in more than 40 years as a correspondent and editor at the New York Times, wrote about war and revolution, politics and government, food and drink, and the revenge of living well from more than 100 countries, died early this morning in Washington. He was 71 and had been suffering from cancer.

    October 4, 2006
    Grandy OK After Heart Scare
    WMAL morning man Fred Grandy is "doing fine" after receiving two heart artery stents to relieve chest pains and shortness of breath he suffered before Tuesday's show. So said his ABC talker co-host Andy Parks on Wednesday's show. Grandy suffered a heart attack a few years ago, and had one stent installed at that time. Parks said that the former "Love Boat" star and Congressman should be back at old 630 in a few days.

    October 3, 2006
    Bob Sellers From Fox News To Fox 5
    Bob Sellers will jump from NYC-based Fox News Channel to DC's Fox 5 to co-anchor the morning news show with Lark McCarthy, Gurvir Dhindsa, Steve Cheveney, Allison Seymour, Holly Morris, and Tony Perkins. He starts on 10/23. Sellers, who most recently anchored "Fox News Live" and spent four years with CNBC's "Market Watch" and "Today's Business," replaces Michael Gargiulo, who left Fox 5, WTTG, over the summer for a gig with NYC's WNBC-TV.

    October 3, 2006
    CBS Cans Ken Merson
    Charm City radio veteran Ken Merson ("The Merson Person") was cut loose by CBS Radio in Baltimore. He had been doing afternoon drive at WLIF, Lite-FM, for the last couple of years. Prior to that, he had been on WQSR for many years. Merson is under contract to CBS until the end of the year. WLIF Program Director Greg Carpenter will take Merson's shift.

    October 3, 2006
    Baltimore Radio Vet Buys Bama Station
    Baltimore radio legend Jack Gale has purchased a radio station in Dothan, Alabama, where he'll do mornings. Gale worked mornings at WITH and WWIN back in the 1950s and '60s. Joining him will be Kevin Larkin, formerly of WITH, and Chris Morgan, formerly of WQXI in Atlanta. Morgan also worked for Gale at WPDQ in Jacksonville. Gale will continue to do national voiceovers, as well as his show on ultimateoldies.com, plus traveling to Nashville to produce country artists. As Gale says, "Us old guys never know when to quit." He will celebrate his 81st birthday in November.

    September 29, 2006
    Sol Schildhause Dies
    Sol Schildhause, 89, the first chief of the Federal Communications Commission's cable television bureau, who later became a lobbyist for the industry, died of heart disease 9/15 at his home in Bethany Beach.

    September 27, 2006
    God Returns On DC's 23
    The DC area hasn't had a fulltime broadcast Christian TV station since the 1980s, when Channel 66 in Manassas used to be WTKK (Witnessing The King Of Kings). But, now, there's Channel 23, WDDN, a lowish-powered 2,000-watt religious outlet transmitting from rocker DC101's tower. It features Christian programming via satellite from the Dallas-based Daystar network. WDDN's analog signal covers most areas inside the Beltway, and even makes it out to central Montgomery and Fairfax counties.

    September 26, 2006
    Former Balto TV Personality Reaches Plea Agreement In 1974 Rape
    From Salisbury's WBOC-TV: A former Baltimore TV personality, who most recently worked at a Memphis TV station, has made a deal with prosecutors in connection with an accusation that he raped a young girl on the Eastern Shore more than 30 years ago. On Tuesday, attorneys for 69-year-old Ron Meroney said their client will plead guilty to statutory rape charges in court on 11/3 in Wicomico County, according to WBOC. He is accused of raping a girl under the age of 14 in the summer of 1974, back when Meroney worked as a weatherman at Channel 2/WMAR. Meroney was charged in May after the adult victim, now in her 30s, came forward. Even though the alleged crime occurred more than three decades ago, under Maryland law there is no statute of limitations for felony arrests.

    September 26, 2006
    No More Severin On 106.7
    Jay Severin, who has hosted a national show syndicated by Westwood One for the past year, will return to hosting a daily live and local afternoon drive show exclusively for Boston talker WTKK. That means no more Severin from 8 PM to 11 PM on WJFK-FM.

    September 21, 2006
    Stern Takes NPR CEO Gig
    Ken Stern, who served as executive vice president since 1999, has been named chief executive officer of DC-based National Public Radio, effective 10/1. Kevin Klose, who joined NPR as president and chief executive officer in 1998, will continue as president and as a member of the NPR Board Of Directors.

    September 21, 2006
    WRBS's Dick Ireland To Retire
    Baltimore religious outlet WRBS (95.1 FM) announced today that Baltimore radio legend Dick Ireland (right) will not return to his morning program after suffering a stroke in May. Hundreds of cards, letters, and well-wishes have encouraged Ireland and his family as he continues his rehabilitation therapy. "Physically I am doing well. There are times when I can't express everything I want to say, but I am making progress in speech therapy. Our prayer is that the Lord would be glorified through this experience," Ireland said via a WRBS statement. At a recent gathering in his honor, Ireland was presented with a commemorative plaque containing the microphone he used at WRBS. Steve Lawhon, WRBS General Manager noted, "We wanted Dick to understand the depth of our appreciation for his work in broadcasting and to honor his exemplary Christian faith and witness." Ireland was the morning man at then easy listening WLIF (101.9 FM) for 26 years before joining WRBS in 1997. No word yet on Ireland's replacement at WRBS.

    September 20, 2006
    MMJ & PGC Rule Latest Trends, TOP Tops Drivetimes
    Another round of those monthly Arbitrend radio ratings. DC, full day, age 12+: 1) WMMJ and WPGC-FM, 3) WHUR, 4) WTOP-FM/AM, 5) WIHT, 6) WKYS, 7) WASH, 8) WMZQ, 9) WGMS/WGYS, 10) WRQX and WWDC, 12) WJZW, 13) WBIG, 14) WMAL, 15) WARW, 16) WJFK-FM, 17) WLZL, 18) WTEM, 19) WFRE and WAVA, 21) WPGC-AM and WTWP-FM/AM. In morning drive, WTOP-FM/AM takes 1st. WMMJ's Tom Joyner is in 2nd, up from 5th. WWDC's Elliot Segal places 4th, down from 3rd. WMAL's Grandy and Andy stay even at 11th. WJFK-FM's Junkies stay even at 13th. In afternoon drive, WTOP-FM/AM again places 1st. WJFK-FM's Don and Mike sink from 3rd to 6th, behind WIHT's now canned Albie Dee in 5th. WMAL's Sean Hannity drops from 11th to 14th. Baltimore, full day, age 12+: 1) WERQ, 2) WPOC, 3) WWIN-FM, 4) WLIF, 5) WBAL-AM, 6) WIYY, 7) WSMJ, 8) WWMX, 9) WZBA, 10) WCAO and WCBM, 12) WQSR.

    September 19, 2006
    Syd Thrift Dies, Had Show On WAVA
    Longtime baseball executive and radio host Syd Thrift (right) died on 9/18 following knee replacement surgery. In addition to a career that spanned nearly 50 years with the Orioles, Yankees, Cubs, Pirates, and others, Thrift and co-host Tim Donner aired the "Talkin' Baseball" show, which was syndicated via DC's Radio America and heard locally on WAVA-AM (780) Sunday afternoons. A Virginia native and resident, Thrift was 77.

    September 19, 2006
    Tim Virgin To Phoenix
    Tim Virgin, who did nights and was the music director and interim program director at Baltimore's WHFS, 105.7 FM, which is talk by day and alternative rock at night and on weekends, snags the assistant program director and music director gigs at alt rock KEDJ in Phoenix. Virgin used to do afternoon drive on WHFS, back when it was a DC market fulltime alt rocker on 99.1 FM.

    September 19, 2006
    Del Walters Gone From 2
    Channel 2/WMAR has parted ways with anchor Del Walters. Walters came to WMAR following two decades in DC as anchor and senior investigative reporter for Channel 7/ WJLA. The word is that WMAR General Manager Drew Berry called a meeting yesterday and told the staff that Walters was no longer at the station, which ranks 3rd or 4th in Charm City TV news ratings in any given time slot.

    September 13, 2006
    Rosenblum To Start DC TV News Net For Verizon
    Michael Rosenblum, a TV news consultant who's said to be a major proponent of one-man-band TV journalists, has placed several ads on Craigslist for a new local network startup in DC. Our sources say its for a news channel to be exclusively carried by Verizon's DC area cable systems. A la Comcast's exclusive CN8, which recently debuted in the DC area.

    September 13, 2006
    Knapp Gets 99.5 FM Drive Gig
    Toby Knapp will take Hot 99.5's afternoon drive slot. He comes from a sister Clear Channel contemporary hit outlet in Columbia SC. He'll also assume assistant program director duties at WIHT. Knapp replaces Albie Dee's replacement.....

    September 10, 2006
    Setbacks Hit Alternative Broadcasting
    Tim Davis is stepping down as the general manager of Arlington-based Alternative Broadcasting. To accept a job as the operations manager of Charlottesville's alternative rock WNRN (91.9 FM). We're told that the decision was made after a deal for a transmitter site in Warrenton fell through. Alternative, which set its sights on a construction permit with Roy Clark-owned WYQZ (96.7 FM), was hoping to get its non-commercial alt rock programming on the air in Northern Virginia. Davis will remain on Alternative's board of directors as it plots an alternative course for the future.

    September 9, 2006
    Hurricane Leaves WOLB's Young
    Hurricane, producer of the "Larry Young Morning Show" heard on Baltimore urban talker WOLB (1010 AM), is leaving after two years on the show. During his time there, Young went from relative unknown locally to nationally recognized as one of Talkers Magazines top 250 talk shows in America. Hurricane is joing a radio group in DC.

    September 9, 2006
    50 Launches The Tube
    Channel 50/WDCW has launched The Tube on one of its digital channels. And the music video network will pop up on Comcast's 207 in the DC area. The Tube is already carried in the Baltimore area via the digital offerings of Channel 54/WNUV and via Comcast.

    September 7, 2006
    Potomac Rabbi Found Guilty In NBC Sex Sting
    A 56-year-old rabbi has been found guilty of attempting to solicit what he thought was a 13-year-old boy for sex in an August 2005 internet sting aired by NBC's "Dateline." David Kaye of Potomac, who has been in jail since his arrest in May, could get 60 years behind bars for traveling to a Herndon house only to be confronted by NBC correspondent Chris Hansen. Those "To Catch A Predator" episodes of "Dateline" highlight NBC's collaboration with Perverted Justice, a so-called "pedophile-hunting vigilante group." "The extent of the network's business relationship" with PJ founder Xavier Von Erck "has raised eyebrows in the halls of NBC News," John Cook writes for Radar. "Dateline" has "gone to unprecedented lengths to secure Von Erck's ongoing cooperation, reportedly paying him in excess of $100,000 per episode for his services," according to Cook's report.

    September 7, 2006
    11 Kicks Off 5 AM Sunday Newscast
    Channel 11/WBAL launches an early Sunday morning newscast on 9/10. From 5 AM to 8 AM. It will make the Hearst-owned NBC affiliate the only Baltimore TV station with local newscasts starting at 5 AM seven days a week. "Weekend Today" airs at 8 AM on Sundays, more local 11 news at 9 AM, "Meet The Press" at 10 AM, "The Chris Matthews Show" at 11 AM, and "11 TV Hill" at 11:30 AM.

    September 7, 2006
    Causey & Norris To Do FED Mornings
    Bonneville's Federal News Radio WFED (1050 AM) teams Mike Causey with Jane Norris for morning drive. Starting 9/13. Causey wrote the "Federal Diary" at the Washington Post for two decades and has been a senior correspondent for FNR since its start in 2002. Norris, a media savy right-leaning political analyst who used to co-host the morning show on WMAL, joined the Bush Administration in 2004 and has held posts with the departments of Labor and Health And Human Services.

    September 7, 2006
    Fairfax City Debuts Radio Station
    You will get community announcements, weather, and emergency information on a new radio station owned by the City Of Fairfax, WQEL336. The 1650 AMer can be heard throughout much of central Fairfax County.

    September 5, 2006
    Mick Lee Gone From 99.5
    Mick Lee has been canned from the afternoon drive slot and assistant program director gig at Hot 99.5. A Clear Channel source tells us that "he's out for cursing on the air while voice tracking." Lee joined contemporary hit WIHT only a month ago from a station in Albany NY to replace DC radio veteran Albie Dee.

    September 1, 2006
    Capitol Hill Studio For CN8
    Comcast is rolling out its CN8 network throughout the DC area in September - to 2 million more subscribers in DC, Maryland, and Virginia. Also, the northeastern USA-oriented news and entertainment channel, which is based in Wilmington, Delaware, is breaking ground on construction of a Capitol Hill studio to allow the region's "politicians, newsmakers, pundits, and athletes" to contribute to "Comcast Newsmakers" segments and other CN8 programming.

    August 31, 2006
    Rouse To Do Mornings At LIF
    Baltimore radio veteran Steve Rouse is going to be doing mornings on CBS's adult contemporary WLIF (101.9 FM). Starting 9/12. On "Baltimore's Morning Show," Rouse will be paired with Lite FM's Diane Lyn and traffic reporter Scott Parker. Rouse and his "Company" got bounced from CBS's WQSR (102.7 FM) in the spring of 2005 when it flipped from older rock and soul oldies to eclectic newer oldies Jack FM. According to the Baltimore Sun, Rouse, 55, who has been doing fill-in work on WBAL-AM and 98 Rock since his WQSR show was canceled, said he's excited about returning to Baltimore radio on a fulltime basis. "It's what I've done all my life. You have a tendency to miss that once you're not doing it. You miss that groove you get into and talking with people on the street and going out to different events." The current WLIF morning show host, Greg Carpenter, will remain at the station as program director.

    August 31, 2006
    WETA Takes Digital TV Channels Fulltime
    Channel 26/WETA's digital TV channels will go to 24-hour-per-day schedules. WETA, DC's PBS outlet, broadcasts four standard definition digital channels during daytime hours and one high definition and one standard definition channel during primetime and overnights. Effective 9/1, WETA's digital channels - WETA HD, WETA Create, WETA Family, and WETA World - will be available fulltime. WETA's analog over-the-air signal will retain its operating hours of 6 AM until 3 AM daily and will not be simulcast on the digital broadcasts. Comcast, the DC area's dominant cable TV provider, carries WETA's digital services on cable channels 200, 201, 202, and 220.

    August 31, 2006
    Allbritton Hires Miss America's Daughter
    Allbritton-owned Channel 7/WJLA and NewsChannel 8 have hired a reporter fresh out of college. Something that the DC area TV news operation almost never does. And, Pamela Brown, unlike other NC8 "one man band" recent hires, will get a photographer to tag along with her. Brown, a May graduate of the University Of North Carolina-Chapel Hill, does have some connections. We're told that she's the daughter of former Kentucky Governor John Brown and his former wife, Phyllis George, Miss America 1971, who once had gigs on CBS's "NFL Today" and "Morning News." Says an NC8 source: "The hire is causing morale among some of the reporters and producers to plummet. It's being viewed as a slap in the face to some of the more senior reporters."

    August 30, 2006
    VOA Head Accused Of Irregularities
    The NY Times reports that State Department investigators have concluded that Kenneth Tomlinson, chairman of the Broadcasting Board Of Governors, which oversees the DC-based Voice Of America, improperly hired a friend on the public payroll for nearly $250,000 over two and a half years. They also said that Tomlinson used his government office for personal business, including running a "horse racing operation," repeatedly used government employees to do his personal errands, and that he billed the government for more days of work than the rules permit. Tomlinson was ousted from the DC-based Corporation For Public Broadcasting last year following an inquiry that found evidence that he had violated rules meant to insulate public television and radio from political influence. His renomination by President Bush to another term as BBG head is pending before the Senate.

    August 28, 2006
    John Wilson Dies
    Journalist and activist John Wilson has died in NYC. Wilson was a former Metropolitan section editor at the Washington Times and an editor with the Science section of the New York Times. Wilson was also a founding member of the National Lesbian And Gay Journalists Association. He was 56.

    August 28, 2006
    GMS To Charge For Opera Stream
    Bonneville-owned WGMS plans to turn its VivaLaVoce.com internet stream into a subscription-only affair. As of 9/1, you'll have to cough up $4.99 per month to hear the vocally-based classical programming on your computer. At the same time, the service will be going ad-free. "The increase in (music) royalty and streaming expenses has outpaced our ability to support the station commercially," says an announcement on the stream's website. No word about how this change will affect VivaLaVoce's broadcast via classical WGMS's digital signal.

    August 27, 2006
    Kidnapped Fox Newsers Released In Gaza
    Two Fox News journalists held for 13 days in the Gaza Strip were released Sunday after they were shown on a videotape saying they converted to Islam. The two journalists, American Steve Centanni, 60, and New Zealand cameraman Olaf Wiig, 36, "have liberated themselves" by converting to Islam, according to the statement accompanying a videotape from a group calling itself the Holy Jihad Brigades. Gaza journalists confirmed that Centanni, who is a veteran of the DC TV news scene, and Wiig arrived at a hotel in Gaza shortly after noon local time.

    August 24, 2006
    Marius Payton Gone From CSN
    Earlier this month, Scott Hanson left Comcast SportsNet after his contract was not renewed. Now, Marius Payton, who joined the DC and Baltimore area version of the sports channel in 2004, is out the door as well. His photo, profile, and bio have been removed from the talent page on CSN's website. We hear that Payton told viewers that he took a TV sports job back home in his native Utah, to be close to friends and family. We also hear that he could be working on a new CSN version in the Rocky Mountain region.

    August 23, 2006
    PGC Tops Trends
    Another round of those monthly Arbitrend radio ratings. For DC. In the "beauty contest" full-day, age 12+ numbers: 1) WPGC-FM, 2) WHUR, 3) WTOP-FM/AM, 4) WMMJ, 5) WKYS, 6) WIHT, 7) WJZW and WMZQ and WWDC and WASH, 11) WGMS/WGYS, 12) WRQX, 13) WMAL, 14) WBIG, 15) WJFK-FM, 16) WLZL, 17) WARW, 18) WTEM, 19) WFRE and WAVA-FM/AM, 21) WTWP-FM/AM, 22) WPGC-AM, 23) WFLS and WBPS/WBZS, 25) WACA and WKDL and WIYY, 28) WWRC and WAFY and WTNT, 31) WOL and WYCB and WILC and WBQB and WINC-FM. Baltimore, full-day, age 12+: 1) WERQ, 2) WPOC, 3) WWIN-FM, 4) WBAL-AM, 5) WLIF, 6) WIYY, 7) WSMJ, 8) WWMX, 9) WZBA, 10) WCBM, 11) WQSR, 12) WCAO, 13) WRBS, 14) WHFS, 15) WIHT and WPGC-FM.

    August 18, 2006
    More BIGers Announced
    Lisa Berigan takes middays and Scott Struber nights and assistant program director duties at Clear Channel's classic rock hits WBIG. She's a veteran of the defunct Z104 and the Chicago radio scene and he's from XM's Ethel and XMU as well as rockers in San Diego, Chicago, and Albuquerque. We already know that DC101er Jon Ballard will be doing afternoons on 100.3.

    August 18, 2006
    Hanson Gone From CSN
    Comcast SportsNet is not renewing Scott Hanson's contract. After some "tense negotiations," an agreement couldn't be reached. He's been yanked from the sports net's website. Hanson joined CSN's Philadelphia network in 2000, and moved to the DC-Baltimore version in 2002, where he's been an anchor and reporter and was the network's main correspondent for the Washington Nationals.

    August 17, 2006
    Longtime HR Head Leaves CC DC
    The longtime head of human resources for Clear Channel's DC radio cluster, Cordell Weaver, was cut loose on Thursday. "Cordell is well known to anyone who worked at WMZQ from the 70s-80s days," we're told by a CC DC source. "She worked her way up when WMZQ was sold numerous times."

    August 17, 2006
    WNN Closes
    A source tells us: "Washington News Network is closing its doors. The bureau at 400 North Capitol Street has already ceased operations, and is in the process of selling off its equipment. WNN is the latest in a series of bureaus that have been shuttered in the last 10 years, including the much larger Conus, and Group W. Similarly, Potomac News has told its few remaining staffers that they should find new jobs, as it is consolidating its Unification Church-owned facilities and will no longer provide news services."

    August 17, 2006
    Clear Channel Rules DC Radio Roost
    Arbitron releases DC radio ratings by ownership group. Clear Channel, which owns eight stations (WWDC, WIHT, WMZQ, WTEM, WASH, WBIG, WTNT, WWRC), commands a 22.2 share of the overall audience and a 46.8 percent "cume." CBS, with five stations (WPGC-FM/AM, WJFK-FM, WLZL, WARW), takes second place with a 14.1 share/32.7% cume. Bonneville, with seven outlets (WTOP-FM/AM, WTWP-FM/AM, WFED, WGMS/WGYS), ranks 3rd with a 10.4/28.3%. ABC, with three stations (WMAL, WRQX, WJZW), places 4th with an 11.0/24.3%. Taking 5th is Radio One, with four outlets (WKYS, WMMJ, WOL, WYCB), with an 11.1/21.0%. Rounding out the top dozen or so: Howard University (WHUR) with a 6.2/12.2%, Mid-Atlantic (WBQB, WINC-FM) with a 0.9/4.4%, Salem (WAVA-FM/AM) with a 1.0/3.8%, and Mega (now Red Zebra) (WKDL, WBPS/WBZS) with a 0.9/2.2%.

    August 17, 2006
    O'Meara's DC Pub Deal Falls Through
    A source tells us: "I have heard from friends in the bar biz that Mike O'Meara's deal to buy The Sign Of The Whale on M Street has gone kaput!" The afternoon WJFK-FM man (right) was working on a deal to buy the Dupont Circle area pub and transform it into the second outlet of his O'Meara's eatery in Manassas. When it was publicly announced in June, O'Meara warned on-air that the contract to purchase the DC restaurant was not finalized and could fall through.

    August 17, 2006
    DC TV News Vet Lands NYC TV Gig
    NYC's WCBS-TV names Carl Gottlieb as executive producer of political and investigative reporting. Gottlieb career includes the following gigs: executive news producer at Channel 7/WJLA, news director at Channel 5/WTTG, chief for Tribune's DC news bureau, and managing news editor for Baltimore's Sinclair.

    August 15, 2006
    Former 4er Larry Carl Dies
    Larry Carl, 88, an associate director at Channel 4/WRC from 1950 to 1988 who specialized in news and sports programs, died on 8/11 at University Hospitals Of Cleveland. He had pneumonia. Carl helped direct WRC's coverage of the Kennedy-Nixon presidential debates, the death and funeral of John Kennedy, the assassination of civil rights leader Malcolm X, and Richard Nixon's presidential resignation. He also was a Washington coordinator for NBC's weekend football broadcasts from the 1960s to the 1980s.

    August 15, 2006
    4 Picks Clay's Replacement
    Steve Villaneuva, a weekend weather forecaster NYC's Fox-owned WWOR-TV, has been hired to replace weatherman Clay Anderson at NBC's Channel 4/WRC.

    August 15, 2006
    Herzog Plays Movie Judge
    DC TV and radio veteran Frank Herzog plays a judge, a la a gavel and robe, in "Step Up," a dance-oriented flick released last weekend. The film ranked second in overall ticket sales nationwide. The Herzog character sentences the male lead to community service at the so-called Maryland School Of The Arts, Fox 5 and WTWP radio film critic Willie Waffle tells DCRTV. Herzog, once the radio voice of the Redskins as well as a sports anchor at Channels 7 and 9, currently does news anchoring for WTOP radio.

    August 14, 2006
    Steve Hegwood To Program KYS
    Steve Hegwood is returning to Lanham's Radio One to again program urban WKYS. He replaces Derrick Brown, who exited KYS last month. And Hegwood may take on more company duties, too. Hegwood, who runs a broadcasting biz in Lanham, has most recently been consulting for Magic's urban KDAY in LA.

    August 13, 2006
    WPFW's Raymond Whitfield Dies
    WPFW's Raymond Whitfield (left) who died of cancer on 8/2 at age 77. Focusing on the criminal justice system, he produced and hosted two nationally distributed radio series: "The Inside-Outside Media Collective" and "Youth At Risk." Whitfield also hosted a show that gave inmates at the former Lorton prison an opportunity to speak on the air and to hear from families and friends. More recently, he produced and hosted "Crossroads: Where Criminal And Social Justice Meet," a series focusing on issues that affect both incarcerated people and their families.

    August 10, 2006
    5's News On 24 Too
    Fox is going to simulcast Fox 5 WTTG's DC morning newscast on co-owned My 24 WUTB in Baltimore. Look for the news show's scope to be broadened to include the Charm City area and the Eastern Shore. It starts on 9/5, the same date that Fox's My Network TV (which replaces UPN on many stations) launches. "We have long realized that there are many loyal viewers of Fox 5 news in the Baltimore market," WTTG General Manager Duffy Dyer said in a statement. "My 24 recognizes that the appetite in Baltimore for regional news of the day, weather, and traffic is growing."

    August 10, 2006
    Radio One Hires HURer
    DC area-based Radio One names Daisy Davis operations manager for its three-station Philadelphia radio cluster. Davis most recently served as consultant at Howard University's urban adult contemporary WHUR.

    August 9, 2006
    Baltimore Ravens Want DC TV Market
    The Baltimore Sun reports that the Baltimore Ravens are quietly appealing to the NFL to unite Baltimore and Washington into a single television market, a move that could help the club serve thousands of fans - and cultivate new ones - who can't see all of the team's games because they live outside the immediate Baltimore area. Under the club's proposal, all Ravens regular-season games would be televised on network affiliates not only in Baltimore, but also on Washington stations, which reach areas such as Frederick County, where their fans have complained about missing games. The proposal also calls for all Washington Redskins games to air on Baltimore stations.

    August 9, 2006
    George Keady Dies
    Steve Williams, regional program director for First Media (WWZW and WREL) in Lexington VA, tells us that his dad, George Keady, 77, passed away in Cumberland MD on Monday. Starting in the late 1950s and for the next 20 years, Keady worked at Frederick MD's WFMD, Cumberland's WKYR (now WCBC), and Gettysburg PA's WGET. Plus Channel 25/WHAG in Hagerstown MD. "He had me on the air when I was three. The one thing that he was most proud of and always talked about was that he helped build WHAG," says Williams. "I remember him working 24 on (and) 24 off and sleeping on a cot at the transmitter site in Clear Spring."

    August 8, 2006
    DC101's Ballard To BIG
    Jon Ballard is getting pushed out of afternoons at Clear Channel rocker DC101 to do afternoons at sister classic rock hits WBIG. Greg Roche moves from evenings at DC101 to afternoons, replacing Ballard. Weekender Whitney will take Roche's current 7 PM to midnight shift at DC101.

    August 8, 2006
    Tom Moyer Heads WAVA
    Salem officially names Tom Moyer station manager of DC area Christian programming outlets WAVA-FM/AM. Moyer had been general sales manager at the now Rosslyn-studioed stations since 1992, and had previously served as acting station manager. He'd also worked at WABS (now WAVA-AM) before Salem bought the station, and at Westwood One's Mutual Broadcasting Network.

    August 8, 2006
    Brooke Baldwin To 5
    Brooke Baldwin, morning news anchor at WOWK-TV in Huntington WV, has landed a reporting gig at DC's Fox 5. That's a leap from the 64th largest TV market to the 8th.

    August 6, 2006
    Clay Anderson Leaving 4
    Weatherman Clay Anderson announced during a "Today Show" local cut-in Sunday he's leaving Channel 4/WRC.

    August 5, 2006
    Comcast Agrees To Carry MASN & Nats
    Washington Nationals fans can uncork the champagne and start celebrating. Comcast and MASN announced an agreement to bring the Mid-Atlantic Sports Network to 1.6 million customers on the cable TV giant's expanded basic line-up in the DC, Baltimore, and Salisbury areas beginning 9/1. MASN will be made available to an additional 600,000 regional Comcast customers over the next two years. Terms were not available.

    August 4, 2006
    Harrisonburg Station Wants Chunk Of DC TV Market
    The Federal Communications Commission has granted a "special relief" request by Gray's ABC affiliate Channel 3/WHSV in the Virginia Shenandoah Valley town of Harrisonburg to modify the Harrisonburg "designated market area" (DMA) to include Virginia's Berryville, Boyce, Frederick, Middletown, Stephens City, Winchester, Front Royal, and Warren - all of which currently are in the Washington DC DMA. WHSV says it wants to preserve its signal carriage on local (formerly Adelphia now Comcast) cable systems in those communties. Opposition to the request has been filed by DC's major TV stations - including Allbritton's ABC affiliate Channel 7/WJLA, NBC's Channel 4/WRC, Fox's Channel 5/WTTG and Channel 20/WDCA, Gannett's Channel 9/WUSA, and Tribune's Channel 50/WDCW.

    August 3, 2006
    Albie Axed At 99.5
    Clear Channel contemporary hit outlet Hot 99.5, WIHT, is making line-up changes. The "Hot Morning Mess" with Mark Kaye, Kris Gamble, Teapot Tim, and Ron Ross stays the same. In middays, Vibegrrl makes the move from the late night. Mick Lee comes from Albany, NY, to take the afternoon drive slot as well as the station's assistant program director duties. And, Grooves comes from Lexington, Kentucky, to do nights. Also, Gillian Sussman adds music director stripes to her programming coordinator chores. With all the changes, DCRTV hears that Hot 99.5 big boy Albie Dee has been given the boot from his afternoon gig and will be doing temporary fill-in work at CBS's urban WPGC-FM while the 20-year DC radio vet prowls for a new permanent gig. Middayer KT Harris is gone from 99.5, too.

    August 2, 2006
    John Irving Gone From Metro
    DC radio veteran John Irving is the latest to get a budget cut-based pink slip from Metro Traffic. Its DC news operation. Irving, you'll recall, worked at WKYS way back when.

    August 2, 2006
    WPPT Goes Country
    Verstandig has flipped Hagerstown's WPPT (92.1 FM) from hot adult contemporary to classic country. The air staff is expected to remain in place with the exception of the syndicated "Valentine In The Morning" show, which has been dropped.

    August 1, 2006
    11's Dave Collins Hurt At Orioles Game
    Veteran Channel 11/WBAL investigative reporter Dave Collins was badly hurt over the weekend at a Baltimore Orioles baseball game when he was hit in the face by a foul ball. He'll need reconstructive surgery.

    July 31, 2006
    Fox 5 Launches "Edge"
    Channel 5/WTTG unveils its "The Edge" 11 PM newscast tonight, as part of a two-hour news and information block that starts with its top-rated 10 PM newscast and ends with a half hour of Geraldo Rivera's tabloid show at 11:30 PM. Brian Bolter, who co-anchors the 10 PM 'cast, will solo anchor and be chairless during the 11 PM show. "We're blowing out the old model of the newscast that viewers have become accustomed to," he tells John Maynard in the Washington Post. Fox 5 News Director Katherine Green says viewers shouldn't expect to see the same lead story at 11 PM that they might have watched an hour earlier. "The weather is the number one reason people watch news," Green adds, so "The Edge" will usually lead with the next day's weather report.

    July 28, 2006
    Vance Reaches Deal With 4
    Jim Vance, Channel 4/WRC's longtime news anchor, will be staying right where he is. We're told that Vance has reached a new three-year deal to remain the big dog on the NBC station's top-rated "News 4." No word on the money numbers. There were rumblings a few months ago that Vance, who's been at WRC more than three decades, and NBC weren't seeing eye-to-eye on a new contract.

    July 28, 2006
    Amy Paige Leaving 107.3
    Amy Paige, middayer on Mix 107.3, WRQX, is leaving the ABC-owned hot adult contemporary station at the end of August. She's planning to relocate to Nashville with her family.

    July 28, 2006
    Beverly Fox Jumps From MAL To WaPo Radio
    Yet another ABC-owned WMAL staffer will jump ship today to go to rival talker Washington Post Radio, WTWP, joining ex-WMALers like David Burd and editor Mike Jakaitis. Our sources are telling us that it's ad sales maven Beverly Fox. She'll also handle ad sales for Bonneville sister, classical WGMS. Fox used to do on-air work on the old WLTT and WGAY.

    July 28, 2006
    Metro Traffic Pink Slips Forsythe
    Ken Forsythe, who did traffic reports for NBC4, was among the 72 recent budget-cutting national job slashings made by Westwood One's Metro Traffic.

    July 26, 2006
    Adelphia To Become Comcast
    More than half-a-million Adelphia cable TV subscribers in Virginia and Maryland will become Comcast subscribers as of 7/31. In places like Frederick, Sterling, Ashburn, Leesburg, Winchester, Front Royal, Warrenton, and Harrisonburg. The acquisition of bankrupt Adelphia will give Comcast 23.3 million more subscribers nationwide - cementing its status as America's largest cable TV company. Philadelphia-based Comcast already owns most of the cable TV systems in the immediate DC and Baltimore areas.

    July 26, 2006
    Lauren Thompson Gone From 95.9
    Lauren Thompson of Baltimore's adult urban WWIN-FM, Magic 95.9, is gone. Jeff "The Jammer" Daniels assumes the midday spot and Magic fill-in "youngster" Durwin Dean, who is the board operator for the "Sunday Morning Joy" program with Radio One head Cathy Hughes' beau, Jeff Majors, takes over Daniels' weekend spot.

    July 25, 2006
    Country Is King In Winchester & Hagerstown
    Arbitron releases more of those spring radio ratings "books." In Winchester, country WUSQ attracts a mammoth 20.2 share of the northern Shenandoah Valley audience. Its closest competitor, hot adult contemporary WINC-FM, places second with a distant 8.9 share of the overall age 12+ listeners. A few miles north, in the Hagerstown area, country also rules the roost with WAYZ taking a 15.4 share. Second place is a tie between another country station, Frederick's WFRE, and hot adult contemporary WIKZ.

    July 24, 2006
    WAMU & WETA Down But Not Out
    DC's two NPR-based non-commercial news-based talkers, WAMU (88.5 FM) and WETA (90.9 FM), saw a drop in their spring ratings. Could the arrival of commercial news-based talker WTWP (107.7 FM and 1500 AM), Washington Post Radio, have been the culprit? In the key age 25-54 demo, WAMU went from winter's 4.5 share to spring's 3.8. While WETA slid from a 2.3 to a 1.9. In that demo, WTWP debuted with a 0.9 share. Arbitron does not include non-commercial stations in the heavily-hyped quarterly ratings "books" with their commercial brethren.

    July 24, 2006
    Zoh Back On Baltimore Radio
    Baltimore radio veteran Zohara "Zoh" Hieronimus returns to the Charm City airwaves on Sundays from 3 PM to 5 PM on female talker WVIE (1370 AM). "Clear View" will include interviews with entrepreneurs, archeologists, artists, scientists, politicians, and sports figures. According to Baltimore's City Paper, her show features an "idiosyncratic system of New Age beliefs and quasi-plausible conspiracy theories." Hieronimus had been heard on WCBM and WOLB a few years back.

    July 24, 2006
    Keith Mills Lands Radio Gig At BAL & 98 Rock
    Keith Mills has been officially named "sports guy" for Baltimore's WBAL-AM and 98 Rock WIYY, both owned by Hearst. It was announced Monday morning. The former Channel 2 anchor, who has been battling a drug addiction problem, replaces Jerry Coleman, who just signed to cover the Redskins for DC's WTEM. Also, Mills recently signed a deal to work with a sports-oriented Baltimore PR firm.

    July 21, 2006
    Hot 99.5 Leaps To 5th
    The quarterly spring radio ratings from Arbitron. DC, full day, age 12+: 1. WPGC-FM, 2. WTOP-FM/AM, 3. WHUR, 4. WMMJ, 5. WIHT (Hot 99.5 up from 9th), 6. WKYS, 7. WASH, 8. WMAL, 9. WJZW and WGMS and WMZQ, 12. WWDC, 13. WRQX, 14. WBIG, 15. WLZL, 16. WJFK-FM, 17. WTEM and WARW, 19. WFRE and WAVA, 21. WPGC-AM and WTWP-FM/AM, 23. WBPS/WBZS, 24. WACA and WWRC and WFLS, 27. WOL and WAFY and WYCB and WKDL and WTNT and WBQB and WIYY, 34. WILC and WWEG and WINC-FM. Baltimore, full day, age 12+: 1. WERQ, 2. WPOC, 3. WBAL-AM, 4. WWIN-FM, 5. WLIF, 6. WIYY, 7. WSMJ, 8. WMMX, 9. WCAO, 10. WQSR, 11. WCBM, 12. WHFS and WZBA, 14. WPGC-FM and WRBS, 16. WWDC, 17. WIHT, 18. WHUR and WKYS, 20. WRNR and WTOP-FM and WXCY.

    July 21, 2006
    Julian To Chicago
    Former Clear Channel WIHT, Hot 99.5, evening dude Julian Nieh is now doing evenings on CBS's contemporary WBBM, B96, in Chicago.

    July 15, 2006
    Jerry Coleman To WTEM
    Former Baltimore WBAL-AM/98 Rock sports reporter Jerry Coleman has signed up with DC's SportsTalk 980 to do sports updates and serve as WTEM's Redskins beat reporter.

    July 20, 2006
    Evie Ward To TOP
    That new female voice on WTOP is Evie Ward, who did country WMZQ a few years back. She's been hired as a fill-in anchor from her recent gig as chief of Metro News in Raleigh.

    July 18, 2006
    Sun's Publisher Steps Down
    Denise Palmer, the publisher and chief executive officer of the Baltimore Sun, will steps down after leading the paper for four years. She becomes publisher of the Tampa Tribune. Palmer will be replaced temporarily by Bob Gremillion, a vice president for the Sun's parent, Chicago-based Tribune Company, and publisher of its South Florida Sun-Sentinel, until a permanent replacement is appointed.

    July 18, 2006
    KYS PD Gone
    Derrick Brown has resigned for personal reasons his position as program director at Radio One's urban WKYS. He's headed back to his family in Denver. Brown joined WKYS earlier this year after Denver's KDJM, the station he previously programmed, flipped from urban to country. This is just the latest wave of changes hitting Lanham-based Radio One, with its head of programming, Mary Catherine Sneed, recently out, and rumors of big line-up changes at its Baltimore urban outlet, WERQ.

    July 17, 2006
    WXTR Calls Revived By RedZeb
    We now know the call letters for Redskins owner Dan Snyder's new Red Zebra sports talker - Triple X ESPN Radio. The WXTR calls, which once graced the late great XTRA Oldies 104 and more recently all-news WTOP's Frederick relay on 820 AM, come to the 730 AMer, which had been WKDL. Warrenton's 94.3 FMer drops WBPS for WWXT and Prince Frederick's 92.7 FMer WBZS becomes WWXX.

    July 16, 2006
    9 Loses Cohan To 5
    Reporter Stacey Cohan is jumping from from Gannett's Channel 9/WUSA to Fox's Channel 5/WTTG at the end of July. We hear that Cohan will be the first of "many other talented people" leaving WUSA.

    July 16, 2006
    Snyder Buys VA Beach Station
    Redskins owner Dan Snyder's Red Zebra is buying an FMer in Virginia Beach. It's urban WWHV from bankrupt On Top Communications. That'll give Snyder five stations - including three (two rimshot FMers and an AMer) in the DC area and one (an AMer) in Richmond.

    July 15, 2006
    DC Man Gets Jail For Kiddie Smut On VOA Computer
    James Russell Woodgates, 54, who worked as a broadcaster for the DC-based Voice Of America, was sentenced Friday to a year in prison for possessing child pornography. Woodgates, who lives in DC, was accessing the material from his computer at VOA, the US attorney's office said. The images were found in 2002. In May, Woodgates pleaded guilty in US District Court to one count of possession of child pornography.

    July 14, 2006
    Memphis Anchor Returns To MD To Face 1974 Rape Charge
    A Memphis television anchor indicted last year for statutory rape was officially charged in Maryland Thursday. Ronald Meroney, 69, of Arlington, Tennessee, turned himself into the Wicomico County Sheriff's Office for one count of statutory rape dating back to 1974. He had been indicted by a Wicomico County grand jury in late 2005. Meroney - who lived in Maryland in the 1970s and 1980s and worked at Baltimore's Channel 2/WMAR - was serving as a anchor on "Good Morning Memphis," via a Fox affiliated television station, when he was arrested by Tennessee police for the Wicomico warrant in May. He then elected to fight extradition back to Maryland. Now in the custody of Maryland authorities, Meroney's next court appearance will be at a bail hearing, which has yet to be scheduled.

    July 13, 2006
    Salem Sells WITH To WRBS
    California-based religious radio giant Salem is selling its Baltimore talker WITH (1230 AM) to the Peter And John Radio Fellowship, which owns religious WRBS (95.1 FM), also Baltimore. The price for WITH is $3.25 million.

    July 13, 2006
    Gillispie Gone From JFK-FM
    WJFK-FM Program Director Greg Gillispie is among the 100+ CBS Radio employees nationwide who got pink slipped on Wednesday in a round of job cost-cutting. Gillispie joined WJFK in February 2006 - just in time for the recently Howard Stern-less Free FM talker to suffer a huge ratings plunge.

    July 12, 2006
    Brenda Carl Named CBM News Head
    Brenda Carl has been named news director at WCBM. She replaces Mandy Allen, who resigned in May. Also, John Lewis comes from WILM in Wilmington to join the Baltimore talker's afternoon news team. Joan Doniger, formerly of DC's WMAL, had been doing news fill-in work on 680.

    July 12, 2006
    49 Arrives On DC's Airwaves
    If you're one of the diminishing number of people in the DC area who still watches over-the-air (non cable or satellite) TV, point your rabbit ears in the general direction of northwest DC for Channel 49/WWTD. The just-launched lowish-powered analog (old fashioned) station airs a mix of old movies and infomercials. According to the FCC, WWTD is owned by an outfit called DC Broadcasting.

    July 12, 2006
    O'Meara Buys DC Pub
    WJFK-FM afternoon man Mike O'Meara will pick up DC M Street pub Sign Of The Whale. O'Meara won the Dupont Circle area property in bankruptcy court and plans to turn it into a second outlet of his O'Meara's Irish pub in Manassas. O'Meara and biz partner John Cantrell bid $390,000 to win the right to take over the bar from owner Glasgow.

    July 11, 2006
    MAL's Portnoy To ABC News Radio
    WMAL's Steven Portnoy is jumping to ABC News Radio, where he's been freelancing since February 2006. He'll be based in DC. Portnoy, who has been anchoring and reporting at ABC-owned WMAL for three years, came from Syracuse, where he graduated from Syracuse University and worked at WSYR radio.

    July 10, 2006
    4's Tony Dorsey To Metro
    Channel 4/WRC reporter Tony Dorsey is joining DC's Metro transit system to become its public affairs director.

    July 10, 2006
    Kathleen Matthews Leaving 7
    Channel 7/WJLA news anchor Kathleen Matthews (right) is leaving DC's Allbritton-owned ABC affiliate to be vice president for global communications and public affairs for DC-based hotel company Marriott when her contract expires in December. Kathleen, who anchors WJLA's 5 PM newscast and hosts "Capital Sunday" and "Working Woman," has been covering news from DC for three decades. She is married to Chris Matthews, the DC-based "Hardball" MSNBC host who also has a syndicated Sunday political talk show.

    July 10, 2006
    Cal Lampley Dies
    Cal Lampley, who hosted "Peabody Presents," a Sunday evening classical music program on Baltimore's WCBM radio in the 1970s, died on 7/6 of complications from multiple sclerosis at the Baltimore Washington Medical Center. He was 82. The retired musical educator, composer, and pianist produced acclaimed jazz and pop records. Also, Lampley appeared on Maryland Public Television's "The Critics' Place," where he reviewed classical music for 11 years in the 1970s and 1980s.

    July 10, 2006
    New Calls For 97.7
    Somar Communications has dumped the longtime call letters of WMDM in the southern Maryland community of Lexington Park for WYRX. In late May, the station on 97.7 FM dropped oldies for alternative rock and then switched to mainstream rock.

    July 9, 2006
    "Nature" Narrator George Page Dies
    George Page, the creator and resonant on-air voice of the award-winning public television series "Nature," died of cancer on 6/28 at his home in Equinunk, Pennsylvania. He was 71. Page worked at NYC PBS station WNET from 1973 to 1998, and before that at PBS's headquarters in the DC area, where he served as assistant to the network's president.

    July 7, 2006
    Shedlick Rides The Zebra
    Tom Shedlick is the latest local Clear Channeler to jump to Redskins owner Daniel Snyder's Red Zebra Broadcasting. Shedlick had been Clear Channel's director of engineering for its DC radio complex until a few weeks ago, when he was shown the door in an apparent cost-cutting move.

    July 7, 2006
    Nats Seek Better Radio Deal
    The Washington Nationals baseball team have exercized an "out" in their radio contract with Bonneville's WTWP, Washington Post Radio, that allows the baseball team to shop around for a "better" deal next year. The Nats are in the midst of their first year of a three-year deal with WTWP. "The Nationals will be on WTWP for the rest of this season. Nats President Stan Kasten believes his team "could get more money, a larger network, and year-round baseball talk." Talks will proceed with Clear Channel (WTEM), ABC-Citadel (WMAL), CBS (WJFK-FM), Bonneville (WTOP, WTWP), and Redskins owner Dan Snyder's new Red Zebra Broadcasting. The word is that Snyder would love to snag the Nationals to boast Washington's two highest-profile sports franchises. Also, you could see a creative marketing plan that would allow for Nationals tickets and merchandise to be sold in Redskins stores throughout the region.

    July 6, 2006
    7's Christianne Klein To ABC News
    Channel 7/WJLA anchor and reporter Christianne Klein will become an overnight and early morning news anchor as well as a correspondent for ABC News, based in NYC. Klein used to anchor for WJLA, but was restricted to reporting duties after she got on the wrong side of 7's owner and British Royal Family fan Joe Allbritton when she allegedly included something unflattering in a report about Prince Charles during his 2005 visit to DC. Before coming to WJLA, Klein was an anchor and reporter at KUTV in Salt Lake City.

    July 5, 2006
    Dan Michaels Takes WBIG Helm
    Clear Channel names Dan Michaels as program director of classic hits WBIG, Big 100.3. Michaels takes over from Bill Hess, who shifted jobs in April to become operations manager for CC's DC AMers - sports talk WTEM, and talkers WTNT and WWRC. Hess remains program director of adult contemporary WASH. Michaels comes from adult alternative rocker KQMT in Denver and, before that, classic rock WMGK in Philadelphia.

    July 4, 2006
    Rod MacLeish Dies
    From Tuesday's Washington Post: Rod MacLeish, 80, a political commentator on radio and TV for four decades, died on 7/1 at his home in DC. A spokeswoman for the DC medical examiner said the cause of death is pending further tests. MacLeish spent many years as chief commentator for Westinghouse Broadcasting. Starting in 1976, he went on to do commentary for CBS News, National Public Radio, the Christian Science Monitor, and other media organizations.....

    July 3, 2006
    Helen Ward Dies
    From the Baltimore Sun: Helen Ward, who had a long career as an advertising copywriter after a stint as a Baltimore radio show host, died on 6/26 of pneumonia at the Blakehurst Retirement Community in Towson. She was 95. Ward had a radio talk show on WFBR from about 1934 to 1936 called "Mac And Helen." It was among the earliest call-in and advice talk shows.

    July 1, 2006
    Sneed Out At Radio One
    Mary Catherine Sneed (right), chief operating officer of Lanham-based Radio One, has exited. In a memo to Radio One employees, President Alfred Liggins said that he'll serve as interim COO. According to the Washington Post, Sneed, who left to pursue other interests, became an executive officer of Radio One in January 1998 and played a large role, helping oversee the business and music sides for the company. As supervisor of the program directors who decide what goes on the air, she was one of the most powerful women in urban radio.

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