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Soledad O’Brien to Receive 2024 Insight Award at NAB Show

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The Library of American Broadcasting Foundation has announced it will bestow longtime journalist Soledad O’Brien with the 2024 Insight Award at the NAB Show in Las Vegas next month.

The Insight Award recognizes individuals or organizations that “show an outstanding artistic or journalistic work or body of work that enhances the public’s understanding of the role, operation, history, or impact of media in our society.”

Previous winners of the award include LaVar Burton and 60 Minutes.

“Soledad O’Brien is an outstanding journalist and documentarian whose award-winning work represents the best of broadcasting,” said LABF Co-chairs Jack Goodman, former NAB general counsel and longtime DC-based communications attorney, and Heidi Raphael, Beasley Media Group chief communications officer. “We are excited to honor Soledad with the Library of American Broadcasting’s Insight Award at NAB Show. This honor is well-deserved, and we look forward to celebrating her incredible work.”

O’Brien currently hosts Matter of Fact with Soledad O’Brien, a nationally syndicated public affairs news show produced by Hearts. She also has previously hosted a podcast for iHeartMedia, and has worked with CNN, MSNBC, ABC, CBS, National Geographic, BET, PBS, and HBO. She has won four Emmy Awards, three Peabody Awards, four Gracie Awards, and was inducted into the Broadcasting+Cable Hall of Fame in 2023.

Cable TV Only Medium to See Drop in Political Advertising in 2024, BIA Report Shows

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BIA Advisory Services has shared its political spending projections for 2024, and the news is encouraging for the media industry, as spending is expected to grow exponentially. But cable TV won’t be a benefactor of that growth.

While spending from political campaigns and PACs is expected to reach $11.1 billion, an uptick of 24% compared to 2022 and 15.5% compared to the last presidential election, cable TV is the only media channel that will see a decrease in revenue.

The medium is forecasted to see a drop of nearly $183 million in 224 compared to the last two major political cycles. It will still, however, reach $1.1 billion in ad spending in 2024, according to the BIA report.

As with past elections, over-the-air TV will see the major revenues with political ad dollars forecasted to reach $4.6 billion. Another $4.9 billion will be spent on TV digital.

Steve Cochran: It’s ‘Disturbing’ That We No Longer Trust Experts

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We live in an increasingly divided world. Facts are often argued for validity, while opinions have become more prevalent in news. WLS 890 AM host Steve Cochran laments one avenue of media coverage.

Cochran welcomed NBC News and MSNBC legal analyst Barbara McQuade, who has authored a new book called Attack From Within: How Disinformation is Sabotaging America. In the discussion, Cochran noted that the lack of faith in people who are truly experts in subjects has been a downfall of American media.

“One of the things that’s really disturbing to me — and I think it’s at the core of the problem — is we no longer trust experts,” Cochran said. “And I always use the analogy if I get on a plane, I’m not going to tell the pilot ‘I watched a YouTube video, I think I can take it from here.’ But we don’t trust doctors, or we say we don’t. We don’t trust experts any more.”

McQuade agreed, saying it’s a “really dangerous thing” before adding that hopefully talking about the issue will make news consumers understand how important it is to trust those with vast experiences.

Steve Cochran noted knowing what he doesn’t know has always been a strong suit.

“I don’t even know what stage I am in other than if you make the logical conclusion, and I’m giving you credit for logic, that no doctor is trustworthy or anybody that you heard because of a Facebook post isn’t trustworthy. How do I get you to the point where you at least consider they went to medical school, you didn’t. They know how to fly a plane, you don’t. I know how to be on the radio. I know how to do a talk show, you don’t. I mean, that’s the whole basis of society.”

Steak Shapiro: The Best Filmmaking and Storytelling are Happening in Sports Docs

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Steak Shapiro said on 92.9 The Game in Atlanta that he took his partner Sandra Golden’s advice and started watching Full Swing Season 2′ on Netflix. “I think it’s good, but I think it’s good like all of them are,” Shapiro said. “Like The Dynasty is really good…like the NASCAR stuff is really good, like the tennis one that just came out recently, the Messi documentary is out, the Giannis documentary is out.”

Golden mentioned the Formula One show on Netflix, Drive to Survive, which has produced six seasons. About that show, Shapiro said, “The Formula One show kind of set the standard in terms of quality…and by the way, just announced, the Wide Receiver, not QB, this year it is going to be Wide Receiver.”

Shapiro asked his co-host, “So, what do you think it is that Apple and Netflix and Hulu and Max and they are all leaning in like crazy…?”

Golden immediately said, “Because it doesn’t just relate to ‘guy in car that’s a sports fan,’ it relates to a guy and their gal sitting on the couch and they get you in immediately, by involving the family, the wife and the kids…and their houses.”

Shapiro replied, “Their houses are interesting, but listen…It’s always going to come back to – tell a great story. And athletes and teams and coaches have fascinating stories. I’ve been saying for years, the greatest reality show of all-time, we all know what it is, it’s sports, because you have no freaking idea what’s going to happen. They understand that and they take you behind the scenes. These are also elite athletes, so you get to understand what it takes to be that, the strain it takes on the family. The stories in golf – the good, the bad and the ugly, right?”

The discussion turned to what these documentaries are succeeding at with their viewers, which is getting more than just the sports fans in the household to watch. Shapiro said his wife and daugher, who would not normally watch much sports programming, are watching along with him when he puts on The Dynasty or Full Swing.

“The best filmmaking and storytelling are happening in sports documentaries,” Shapiro concluded. As they wrapped up the discussion, they talked about how much they are looking forward to Receiver and what Omaha Productions ends up doing with the Caitlin Clark documentary they are working on.

Cenk Uygur Offers to Moderate Debate Between Don Lemon and Elon Musk

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There continues to be a strong media reaction to the interview between Don Lemon and Elon Musk. The Young TurksCenk Uygur is offering to mediate and moderate a conversation between the two.

One of the biggest criticisms Lemon received from conservative media members was his line of questioning about Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion to the billionaire.

That portion of the conversation led The Young Turks host to want to hold another conversation between the former cable news star and X owner.

“After watching the interview, I wanted to almost moderate a debate on race — which is a whole different topic — between you and Elon,” Uygur told Lemon during an appearance on the digital video show.

“Let’s do it!”, Lemon responded.

“That would be amazing and I’d love it,” added Uygur.

NESN Celebrates 40th Anniversary with Live Sports, Four-Part Special

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NESN turns the big 4-0 this year and the network is celebrating in the only way it knows how — by airing live and pre-produced sports content. The network will celebrate the 40th Anniversary of its first live sports broadcast with two live sports broadcasts, an Original 6 matchup between the Boston Bruins and New York Rangers, and a spring training game between the Boston Red Sox and Baltimore Orioles.

The Bruins broadcast will feature dedicated NESN 40th anniversary coverage during the pre and postgame shows, the Sox game will show footage from NESN’s first broadcasted spring training game on March 21, 1984, integrated into the telecast, airing on NESN+. Historical footage from the past four decades will be integrated into live Red Sox and Bruins games on the network throughout both seasons.

NESN will also air a four-part special, called “NESN Favorites,” highlighting content from the network by decade, starting with the 1980s through the 1990s, 2000s, and 2010s. The four-part special will feature four 30-minute episodes dedicated to each of the four decades, consisting of archival footage of key moments from the decade with reaction from NESN talent and employees, athletes and legacy sponsors.

NESN viewers can also relive memorable moments from the station’s past when it airs 40 of the most impactful NESN telecasts over the course of the year, starting in April and airing at 10 a.m. ET on Sundays. There will even be an oral history of the network on NESN.com, spotlighting watershed moments from past NESN broadcasts, re-lived through the eyes of people who covered those moments on the network.

The festivities begin today and will continue throughout the year. NESN will also feature unique 40th Anniversary logos and branding throughout the year.

Ian Eagle: Days Leading Up to NCAA Tournament Are “Most Angst-Riddled of the Year”

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Ian Eagle will be making his debut as the lead play-by-play announcer for CBS during this year’s NCAA Tournament. Before the games got underway, he had the chance to visit with the Bernstein & Holmes Show on 670 The Score in Chicago.

They conversation went right to the heart of the matter when Eagle was asked, “What does this mean to you that you’re the guy now?”

“I don’t know if I’ve actually gone their mentally,” Eagle said. “I am treating it like I would treat every tournament in terms of preparation, in terms of trying to study and trying to jam this information into your head. Probably the week of the Final Four itself, the flight to Phoenix, walking into the arena that night. It’s probably going to hit me more.”

Eagle is no stranger to calling tournament games, he has been doing that for over 25 years. He was asked about the preparation with the quick turnaround of the NCAA Tournament. “It feels like an information avalanche in many ways,” Eagle responded. “The fact that I’ve done it for so long would make you think, ‘oh, he’s got it down, he has the system, he found the secret sauce.’ No, it feels the same way every year.”

Eagle says during other times of the year when he is juggling multiple sports, both locally and nationally, he can work ahead. For the NCAA Tournament he said, “There is no way to do that. There’s no idea of who you are going to have in the opening round…until you get the phone call or the text or the email Sunday night after the selection show. So, a lot of it is just managing the stress levels…the two or three days leading up to the tournament, I must admit, are probably the most angst-riddled of the year because it’s a little bit out of your control.”

Asked about his relationship with his partners Bill Raftery and Grant Hill, Eagle said he has worked over 600 games with Raftery, many of those when the two were the broadcast team for the then New Jersey Nets. He also told the show about his history with Grant Hill which includes Hill’s first game as a broadcaster when they worked a Notre Dame-Duke basketball game together.

Speaking on the chemistry with his crew, Eagle said, “That part of it has not been hard or arduous, it has been really easy, it’s been really comfortable…There’s a real excellent, built-in trust already in the fact that we did three games this past weekend for the Big 10 championship and a game the previous week, Tennessee and Kentucky, it just feels like we’ve hit the ground running already.”

Kara Swisher Tells Don Lemon: Elon Musk Was Bored During Interview

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Don Lemon welcomed Kara Swisher to the second episode of his digital video show, and the longtime journalist and podcast host shared where Lemon’s interview with Elon Musk went wrong.

During the debut episode of The Don Lemon Show, Lemon sat down with the billionaire owner of the X platform. The interview turned contentious at times, with Musk going as far as to suggest Lemon should “choose his questions carefully”.

On the second episode of the program, Lemon asked Kara Swisher for her thoughts on the interaction, and she had two main takeaways about where things got off the rails.

“I thought it was an excellent interview. I thought it was very fair. I think two things happened. One, he is so surrounded by people who kiss his ass all the time or lick him up and down all day, that he’s not used to any pushback whatsoever anymore. He used to be, by the way,” said Swisher. “This is not a new, fresh thing for him to be pushed back on. But he doesn’t like it at all. So that’s one.

“Two, he’s easily bored. I know it sounds crazy, I don’t think you were boring, I don’t think your questions were boring, but he was bored, and so he got irritated. He got irritated that he had to ask questions or play word games with you. He did a lot of those, by the way. And then he got irritated that he had to pay you,” Swisher posited. “He doesn’t like media. So he thought ‘Why am I paying this guy for this bulls—?’

“He didn’t like your questions. They weren’t sycophantic and he likes a little bit of a fight, and you were being very fair. Unusually fair. He doesn’t deserve the fairness you gave him in a lot of ways.”

Later in the interview, Swisher lamented that things went wrong between Elon Musk and Lemon. She claimed Musk is “such a brilliant guy”, but added that he’s “just another egomaniac tech guy” suggesting “he’s just like everyone else” in the space. She added that she admires his ability to “handle big ideas.”

Hallie Jackson to Take Sunday Anchor Chair of NBC Nightly News

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NBC News has tabbed Hallie Jackson to step into the anchor chair voided by the departure of Kate Snow on the Sunday edition of NBC Nightly News.

Jackson has worked at NBC News since 2014, rising through the ranks of the network after beginning as an embedded reporter with the presidential campaign of Sen. Ted Cruz (R-TX). She eventually ascended to hosting programs on MSNBC and became NBC News’ chief White House correspondent. She has occasionally filled in for Lester Holt when he has been on assignment for NBC Nightly News.

“Hallie is an exceptional journalist and an extraordinary broadcaster, representing the very best of NBC News. She is a natural fit to anchor our flagship newscast on Sundays,” said NBC News Executive Vice President of Programming Janelle Rodriguez.

In addition to her new role hosting the network news program on Sunday, she will continue to host her two-hour nightly streaming show Hallie Jackson Now on NBC News Now.

Jackson steps into the chair that was vacated by Kate Snow last month. Her final episode leading the program was February 25th, with NBC News using a rotating cast of anchors before settling on Jackson as the permanent replacement.

Jackson’s first show leading the new program will be Sunday, April 7th. The news of her appointment was first reported by Variety.

Iconic Caller ‘Mark From Gastonia’ Needs Help and WFNZ Is Stepping Up

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Look across the country and you will find no shortage of listeners that have become an integral part of their favorite sports radio station. More than any other format, ours thrives on interaction with the community. As a result, the people that call in and make time to show up to events have a way of becoming our friends. That’s what happened for Mark Baker with the staff of WFNZ.

“Mark from Gastonia” as he is known to Charlotte sports fans is currently battling serious illness and his favorite radio station was never going to let him do that alone. Morning co-host Travis “T-Bone” Hancock has made it his personal mission to make sure Mark knows that he has the love and support of people in the Charlotte metro area and beyond.

It’s not an obligation for T-Bone. He sees it as returning the favor, because in his lowest moments, a depression he slipped into before the pandemic, it was Mark that always had time for him.

“I could call Mark and say, ‘you want to do lunch?’. Keep in mind, he also was often in between jobs, so, he was always around,” he jokes. “But if I wanted to go to lunch, Mark was there. Want to go to dinner? Mark was there. There’s no judgment with Mark. There’s no, like, peppering you about what’s wrong. He’s just a kindhearted soul that just was glad to be there. It just became like he was there for me at my lowest point, and he’s a big reason why I was able to sort of overcome that.”

So, what is T-Bone doing for his friend? He has been organizing an effort to get people from across the country to record a message of encouragement that he can share with Mark. 

Some of those messages have gone straight to Mark. Others have been shared with Mark on air for listeners, who are rooting hard for him, to be able to hear.

“I have known Bone for almost 2 decades and in that time, he has proven to be a great radio partner and an awesome friend.  But what I have seen from him the last couple weeks, has been next level,” says Chris McClain, T-Bone’s partner on Mac & Bone.

Sports fans across North Carolina would see a veritable who’s who list if they looked over the names that T-Bone has connected with Mark via short video and audio messages.

The man loves his Braves, Hornets, Panthers and Tar Heels. His parents are both Florida State graduates, so he also has a soft spot for the Seminoles. Legends from all of those teams have reached out.

John Smoltz, Larry Johnson, Luke Kuechley, and Roy Williams, who joked that Mark has been carrying WFNZ “for a long time,” have all made time to make videos for the star caller. That is just a sample. It seems anyone that has ever picked up a ball or a microphone and has passed through North Carolina has taken time to offer words of encouragement.

“He has been relentless in setting up videos from sports figures to offer words of encouragement for Mark,” McClain says of T-Bone’s efforts. “He was in constant communication with Mark’s family when he was in the hospital so all of our listeners could have the latest information. He has been tireless about getting the word out about the GoFundMe for Mark’s family. You see how much Mark means to him and it has been amazing to watch.”

Bone says the joy Mark gets from every new video is genuine. It’s not just joy, but appreciation. It’s not lost on Mark that he needs all of the support he can get right now.

It’s something Bone says he thought about the first time he felt like he was hitting a wall.

“I had a media friend tell me ‘Think about how Mark feels right now, because right now, if you stop, what if he stops?’ And that’s when that next run here of Kuechley and Larry Johnson and Mugsy [Bogues] and Roy came. I said, ‘You know what? That’s a powerful pep talk for me because I was starting to get a little worn down. Right? I’m starting to run out of resources here.’ And that was like, ‘okay, you’re right, I can’t stop and we’re not gonna stop fighting for him. So yeah, if I text somebody and they don’t answer it is what it is.”

Compared to Bone, McClain and Mark, program director Jeff Rickard is a relative newcomer to Charlotte. This will be his second year at WFNZ and he says that no one that knows Mac & Bone the way he does would be shocked to see what the morning show is doing for Mark.

“Radio loves a person who unapologetically moves to their own beat and when you combine that with the obvious love he displays for his teams and the station – the boys instantly recognized that he had a part to play in our sports community. They’ve grown to love and laugh with Mark and so from their perspective it was a no brainer to do whatever they could to make his journey a little easier.”

The effort hasn’t just affirmed his beliefs about his morning show. Rickard says that it has been a good reminder of the power passion for teams and players can have in a community. 

“Whether it’s a team or an athlete, once they are repping the city or university with their jerseys and their commitment, we are reminded that sports can unite an otherwise divided community like nothing else.  It’s cliché but you have an arena, or a stadium packed with people who are brought together for one cause.  Mark is one of them and they’ve gotten to know him as an individual over the years so as he’s progressing through his journey – Charlotte, North Carolina Fans have easily become ‘Mark from Gastonia’ fans simply because he’s one of them.”

Other broadcasters have recognized it too. Name a network. Someone from there has sent Mark a video.

From ESPN, it’s been Paul Finebaum, Rece Davis, and Marty Smith among others. From Fox, it’s been Greg Olsen and Tim Brando. Charles Davis from CBS has reached out. If you ever doubted that this business cares about the audience, it should make you smile.

What makes McClain smile is that listeners have joined celebrities in their investment. Mark’s progress and comfort matter to the people that tune in every day. 

“From the well wishes on social media to the GoFundMe for the family, you can see how much they care about him and his wellbeing.  It shows the power of radio. We have created a WFNZ community. Yeah, we might argue about sports takes most days, but when a member of our radio family is suffering, you are there for them. It makes me proud to be a part of it.”

Bone’s smile comes from WFNZ being able to do something like this for a Mark. When he started with the station in 2005, T-Bone didn’t think any one listener could ever stand out and get the attention and support they might need. He certainly never thought he’d see the day where WFNZ’s cause was something that would get emotional investment from other media outlets in the community.

“The fact that WFNZ was on the front page of the Charlotte Observer with a caller that shows you how far relationships have come. That wouldn’t have happened years ago,” he says. “That’s not anybody’s fault. It’s just the way it was, but the fact that an FNZ caller was the front page of the Observer and, per what I heard yesterday, it’s one of the most trafficked stories of the Observer of the entire year? The whole gamut, from 2005 till now of what FNZ was to where it is, I’m just so proud that we’re not some outsider, outlaw, rebellious thing in the community, which worked at the time, don’t get me wrong. We are now a part of it all. It warms my heart to see Mark and the amount of support for him and FNZ as we’re all trying to fight this with him.”

Mark Baker is fighting stage four cancer. It’s scary for him, his friends and his family. Fighting is nothing new for Mark though. This is a guy that was born with two holes in his heart, a guy that doctors said would be lucky to make it six months.

Fighting is something Mark from Gastonia has never stopped doing and T-Bone and WFNZ are more than happy to be in his corner, doing all they can to keep the fight going.