Cubs run up The Score in radio ratings

Cubs Radio

Cubs Radio

Cubs baseball broadcasts catapulted CBS Radio sports/talk WSCR AM 670 to the top tier of Chicago radio stations in Nielsen Audio ratings released Tuesday.

The Score moved up from 18th place in March with a 2.5 percent audience share to a tie for ninth in April with a 3.2 share all the way up to fourth in May with a 4.2 share. The latest survey covers the four-week period from April 21 to May 18. Continue reading

ABC 7 moving ‘Windy City Live’ to afternoons, restoring 11 a.m. newscast

Ji Suk Yi, Ryan Chiaverini and Val Warner of “Windy City Live”

Ji Suk Yi, Ryan Chiaverini and Val Warner of “Windy City Live”

WLS-Channel 7 is moving the weekday morning talk show “Windy City Live” to afternoons and bringing back the 11 a.m. newscast it canceled three years ago, according to sources at the ABC-owned station.

Starting June 27, “Windy City Live” is expected to air at 1 p.m. weekdays, replacing the canceled “FAB Life” on the ABC 7 daytime lineup. Continue reading

Tribune Media sends WGN boss Easterly to New York

Greg Easterly

Greg Easterly

Greg Easterly, who’s been president and general manager of WGN-Channel 9 since 2014, is taking on a new role for Tribune Media in New York.

The company announced Tuesday that Easterly will serve as senior vice president/group operations for Tribune Broadcasting stations and interim general manager of WPIX in New York. Rich Graziano, current general manager of WPIX, has resigned effective immediately.

Until a replacement for Easterly is named at WGN, “Chicago’s Very Own” will be overseen by Larry Wert, Tribune Broadcasting’s president of broadcast media and a lifelong Chicago media veteran. Continue reading

Robservations: Columnist Shia Kapos ‘Taking Names’ for Sun-Times

Shia Kapos

Shia Kapos

Robservations on the media beat:

Taking Names

Taking Names

Good news: Shia Kapos, one of Chicago’s premier journalists on the celebrity beat, is bringing her newsy “Taking Names” column to the Sun-Times, where it will run twice a week, starting June 20. The move will coincide with the launch of her independent blog, also called “Taking Names.” Content for Kapos’s print column will be aggregated from her blog posts, according to Jim Kirk, publisher and editor of the Sun-Times. “It will be personality-driven,” Kapos said of her new blog and column. “I’ll be looking at what people do away from the office. You’re going to see more stories about the intersection of business and politics . . . and more scoops.” Until last March, Kapos was a fixture at Crain’s Chicago Business, where she spent 10 years as senior reporter and columnist. Before that she was Midwest correspondent for People magazine, staff reporter for the Chicago Tribune and a contributor to the New York Times. Continue reading

‘Invisible Man’ Dan McNeil on collision course with The Drive

Dan McNeil

Dan McNeil

Following a 10-day time-out for bad behavior, veteran Chicago radio personality Dan McNeil returned to Hubbard Radio classic hits WDRV FM 97.1 on May 23. But since then, you’d hardly know he’s back.

To listeners of the morning show he had co-hosted with Pete McMurray since March 2015, McNeil has become a nonentity. These days he turns up once an hour to deliver a straight three-minute sportscast — and that’s it. He is never mentioned during the rest of the show, and he no longer interacts with McMurray or producer Scott Miller, who has assumed a larger role on the air since McNeil was cut back. Continue reading

Robservations: Tribune Publishing meeting closed to press

Michael Ferro

Michael Ferro

Robservations on the media beat:

If fireworks erupt at the annual meeting of Tribune Publishing Thursday they won’t be witnessed by journalists. Reporters have been told they cannot attend the meeting, which is open only to shareholders. The event could mark a turning point in the battle between Tribune Publishing chairman Michael Ferro and Gannett for control of the company. Gannett and its allies have urged stockholders to withhold votes for management's eight board candidates — many with close ties to Ferro — to send a message in support of Gannett's takeover bid. The outcome could determine whether Gannett continues with its bid or walks away. Neatly summarizing the issue was Jim Cramer, host of CNBC’s “Mad Money,” who eviscerated Ferro in a nine-minute takedown last week. “By aggressively rejecting two increasingly generous takeover offers from Gannett, Ferro has destroyed value — all so that Tribune can remain his own independent plaything,” Cramer said.  Continue reading