Monday, August 4, 2014

Farewell to Hartford's Big D

(l-r) Yours truly with recently released members of the
WDRC staff: Rockin' Ron Sedaille, Grahame Winters,
Mike Stevens, Floyd Wright & Jerry Kristafer
Connoisseur Media suddenly and unceremoniously ended a  57-year radio heritage the day they bought WDRC from Buckley Broadcasting and released practically the entire staff.  This was accompanied by a music format shift on their FM side from pop classic hits of the 70's and 80's to a more rock classic hits from the same general era.   The new company triggered a storm of protests on social media who missed the music and personality mix on the "Big D."   Meanwhile, Marlin's WCCC actually gave staffers past and present an afternoon to say goodbye to their rock audience last Friday before big religious broadcaster EMF came in and quickly added their "K-Love" contemporary Christian music network.   Some observations, if you please...

  1. The new "102-9 drc" format will probably gain a foothold in Hartford, with some Big D listeners staying put and WCCC classic rock listeners fleeing Christian music.   WHCN "The River" will benefit, too.  WRCH and WWYZ just got a big gift.
  2. Business is business and the new guys can do what they want, but the WDRC takeover was handled miserably from day one.  The Big D personalities deserved better.   Connoisseur didn't even handle the social backlash well.
  3. I can't help but think yet another shoe will drop before long as Connoisseur looks to get another Hartford FM and broaden its portfolio against two big corporate group competitors.   John Fuller's WMRQ 104.1 is the only one left.    I know John pretty well and he had tried to buy WDRC himself, but I won't try to read his mind.  
  4. The Big D appreciation party this past weekend was fantastic and I salute the fans who put this celebration together.   I hope they find suitable alternatives and don't depend on a return to the old format.
  5. Since I've experienced a less than storybook ending in some past radio terminations, I know time heals all and you focus on people and things that matter now.   Radio can take a personal commitment and an end to that can sting, but you really will forgive if not forget.
  6. Thanks for the memories, Big D!
     

Thursday, July 31, 2014

Foley Fails This Time

Tom Foley
Connecticut Governor Dannel Malloy is now the incumbent in a possible rematch with Greenwich businessman and GOP challenger Tom Foley.   Polls have indicated a virtual dead heat between the two.   Governor Malloy now has a record that many state residents see as fair game for criticism.   Tom Foley should be able to use his outsider status and Malloy's less than stellar approval ratings to his advantage.     It didn't work that way for him this week in eastern Connecticut.    

Foley saw the impending closure and 140 job losses at Fusion Paperboard in Sprague as a perfect media photo opportunity, but his attempt to point the finger of blame at Malloy administration policies was met with loud opposition by State Senator and Sprague first selectman Cathy Osten and several Fusion Paperboard employees.   Foley, clearly taken aback by the reaction, went on to blame local politicians as well.   Osten had her facts ready, and it was clear that state and local government had been on top of the situation and market forces had been the main reason for the announced plant closure.   Workers there backed her up.   The paper board business is changing and company owners have a right to make this regrettable decision, but charges of corporate greed may also be fair since the plant was still profitable.    When I discussed his impromptu twenty minute debate as I filled in for Stu Bryer on WICH AM 1310, I couldn't find one caller who felt Tom Foley prevailed with his talking points.   He'll have to do better if he wants to be the next governor.   Any more days like this may even cost him his party's primary, not to mention the gubernatorial race.

Wednesday, July 23, 2014

Radio Prime Time

It's been this way for decades.   "Morning drive" remains radio's prime time slot for most radio stations and their respective formats.   I remember a time when local TV stations and even most FM stations considered early morning shows such a throwaway that they sometimes barely bothered to sign on.   Now, radio tries to hold its own against a slew of local TV stations that vie for attention as early as 4:00 AM.    Who are these viewers?    At least radio reporters and entertainers only have to sound the part, but what special breed of media people get all dressed up in front of cameras at 4:00 in what's still the middle of the night?    Wasn't radio prime time early enough kicking off at 5:30?   Go back to bed!   

Morning radio can be an absolute blast even when sleep deprivation hits and I'm running on pure adrenaline.   Experience a string of sleepless nights like I have this week and it gets really old.   I'm genuinely excited to fill in on various morning radio shows, including this time around on WILI.   By day three of my insomniac state, those weird sports names get harder to spit out.  Wayne Norman has been the morning guy there for over 43 years.   How on Earth does he do it?    How did I do it for as much as four years at a clip?   During the summer, my "day guy" (as Jerry Seinfeld put it) really ends up paying for what my "night guy" fails to do right.  Honestly, I'm not taking caffeine in the evening or going out partying late.   Someone please tell my brain to stop racing at 10:00 PM!

Tuesday, July 15, 2014

Our Internal Border Dispute

Fence between Nogales, AZ & Nogales, Mexico
When I visited the Arizona side of the divided town of Nogales fifteen years ago, the long ugly wall on the Mexican border stood in stark contrast to the images like the Statue of Liberty that has welcomed immigrants for decades or our peaceful border with Canada.   The situation has only gotten uglier since the Mexican government's disastrous war on drug lords has seen massive corruption in what has basically become a "narco state" as America's drug habit fuels demand and our guns find their way into the hands of powerful drug cartels.   Millions of undocumented Mexicans who mostly come to make a better living have repeatedly risked everything to sneak into the U.S. to do jobs many Americans refuse to do.  Ask Alabama how well the crops got picked when they shut out Mexican workers a short while ago.

Now the face of the border crisis has changed.   Over 50,000 children fleeing horrible gang violence in Guatemala, Honduras and El Salvador are exploited by human traffickers as they make the trek across Mexico and give themselves up to the U.S. Border Patrol.   What do we get from do-nothing Congressional Republicans and GOP presidential hopefuls only concerned with their political base back home?    We get outrageous temper tantrums and lawsuits by Rep. John Boehner against the President as immigration reform arrives dead on arrival in the House of Representatives.    Two years ago, Texas Governor Rick Perry felt the sting of other right wingers when he went for a more moderate approach to education for undocumented children; Now he's towing their line.   A few weeks ago, former Connecticut 2nd District Congressman Rob Simmons ratcheted up his new-found harsh conservative rhetoric by saying on WICH that our border is not secure.   Does he think we should deal with desperate Central American kids through the barrel of a gun?   Does he deny that President Obama has greatly increased border patrol agents and become known as the "deporter in chief"?    Does he dispute the record of inaction on immigration by Congress?

I'll grant you that an appearance by Obama at the border would be good optics for his administration.   A photo op might appease critics, but I doubt it would take the place of action that includes more pressure on Central American regimes.

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

A Bittersweet Anniversary

Today marked forty years since I first did a radio show.    I nervously covered the 4-8:30pm shift on 1220 WKBK/Keene, NH... a 1000-watt local AM in a college town.   Today I marked the anniversary by filling in 6-10am on 1400 WILI/Willimantic, CT... another 1000-watt local AM in a college town.  The celebration - or absolute amazement I'm still on the air - was somewhat muted.  News arrived that the entire air staff was let go at the legendary WDRC-FM/Hartford.   This shocker came on the day 57-year owner Buckley turned control of WDRC AM & FM to Connoisseur Media based downstate.  I know these longtime WDRC people.   While I've been the target of termination plenty of times since 1974, this corporate housecleaning shook the broadcasting community in Connecticut.    I grew up on WDRC.   I worked at WDRC longer than anywhere else in my extensive radio past.   Baby Boomers have had a special connection to "Hartford's Big D" since 1960.   While the music may not change much, the air product will be a cloned corporate presentation similar to the new owner's B103/Long Island.   Will they get away with it?   Probably, but folks in the know around here realize that this was the day the Big D died.

Sunday, June 29, 2014

Parents Behaving Badly

Many chain restaurants seem to get critically seared.    While I'm not a big fan of the Darden Corporation that has owned Red Lobster and the Olive Garden, but during our last visit to a local OG over the weekend, it wasn't anything the restaurant did that really irritated us.   The incessant screaming of a toddler is a nuisance, even in a noisy and crowded restaurant.   However, the reaction of the parents proved to be the true annoyance.   They were right next to us.   At one point, the child let out a bloodcurdling shriek.   Do you think either parent seemed the least bit embarrassed?    Was there any attempt to take the child out of the restaurant at least for a little time out?   No, they responded by giving their kid soothing attention which only encouraged her to repeat the bad behavior.   Do they really need a degree in psychology to know they're reinforcing the screaming pattern?   No sooner did they leave when another party came in with a younger child with an equally healthy set of lungs.   The adults carried on as if nothing was wrong.   

I've also witnessed scenes at fast food places where parents were completely oblivious and even gave in to their kids acting like completely spoiled brats.   One time when an older couple asked some unruly hell-raisers to stop running running all over the place, the kids' parents actually told the seniors to mind their own business.    Another time, a hyperactive screamer repeatedly demanding ice cream got his wish.   Forget the rest of us for a moment.   Will these clueless parents ever learn to stop rewarding actions that especially drive them crazy?     

Monday, June 23, 2014

A Sorry Bunch

Former Vice President Dick Cheney
Am I the only one repulsed when I see former Vice President Dick Cheney and other architects of the 2013 invasion going on national media blaming President Obama for the recent military reversals in Iraq?    These "neo-cons" took the wheel of Bush foreign policy after 9/11 and managed to transform international support into resentment and domestic consensus into bitter divisions.   A previously contained tyrant, Saddam Hussein, was replaced by religious factions looking to even the score with each other after the Iraqi Army was disbanded.   Iran gained influence as their Shiite allies eventually shut out the majority Sunnis in forming a government.   Now an al-Qaeda-inspired faction (only more radical) called ISIS has been allowed to gain ground as they exploit Sunni anger.   Add 4,500 American military deaths and tens of thousands wounded, not to mention two trillion dollars spent on a war instigated by Washington militarists promising we would be welcomed as liberators and could pay for the war selling Iraqi oil.   Saddam's weapons of mass destruction never turned up either.

That all matters little to the politicians and media who dutifully followed the doctrine of a Bush administration that got it wrong every step of the way. Some of these people are even calling for a new Iraq invasion and blast Obama for removing all US troops.   For one thing, the thoroughly incompetent and corrupt Iraqi government refused to agree to a continued US military presence.   Our troops exited Iraq after paying with blood, but now a new threat looms to this country's mostly troubled existence.   The Sunni-Shiite fight has been raging since shortly after the time of the prophet Mohammed himself.    At the very least, America's Iraq War hawks could admit major mistakes were made.   To listen to their arrogance and lack of any sense of Middle East history, "sorry" isn't a word we can expect to hear.     


Monday, June 16, 2014

His Own Brand

To everyone who goes back a few decades either being in radio or loyally listening to it, the news of Casey Kasem's passing at 82  was a big deal.   My first memories of this American Top 40 countdown king go back to 1971 and Sunday nights on my favorite station at the time: WDRC-FM/Hartford.  I was in awe when I made it onto the "Big D" in 1993 and Sunday night became my first regular show time on this heritage station.   This used to be Casey Kasem's slot!    Of course, we played Baby Boomer oldies by the time I got to WDRC, and Casey had moved to a more contemporary station in the market.   

Radio had changed by then to the point where no one station could be a "catch all" for widely divergent music tastes the way Top 40 had been from the late fifties through early seventies.   Casey's show eventually adjusted to changing times with a more adult contemporary "non-rap" version of his countdown with a narrower playlist based primarily on station airplay instead of overall record sales.   Even with this evolution, Casey was still Casey.    There was no mistaking him for anyone else, and he consistently delivered what listeners expected of him right up to his last show.   In an interview, Casey himself pointed to another way that radio had changed.   With a smaller farm system for a training ground, there was less room for newcomers to "make their mistakes" and work on their craft.   With the exception of his hilarious outtakes that are infamous in our business (partly because we identify with them too), this radio icon made few missteps.   When I was at WBMW/New London in 2009 and Casey Kasem ended his show, I also offered to cover that Saturday morning time slot.   I wasn't going to do a countdown.   That act had already been done by the best.

Thursday, June 12, 2014

Stonington's Spirited Defense

James Tertius d Kay's Book
(on Amazon.com)
The advertising agency and printing company I've been connected with for the past twelve years has had an ongoing publishing relationship with one of New England's most active historical preservation groups.   The Stonington Historical Society covers the rich heritage of this small shoreline town perhaps best known for fending off a substantial attack in 1814 that led to an equally surprising withdrawal by four warships of the Royal Navy.  

On this 200th anniversary of this battle, a walk through the borough of Stonington reveals many vivid reminders of those dramatic three days during the War of 1812.  The local defenders and civilians refused British demands to surrender, which would have meant allowing their town to be burned to the ground.   Despite a heavy bombardment and an attempted landing, Stonington's defenders prevailed and all the casualties were on the British side.   How did the outgunned American side win?   For one thing, the borough residents saw no alternative, vowing to fight to the death.   To British Navy strategists, this was just one element of a military chess game designed to deflect American intentions away from attacking Canada.   When that strategy proved more costly than it was deemed worth, they pulled out.   To the Stonington locals, it meant everything.   This was their home and way of life... and everyone was involved.    

As we continue to scratch our heads these days over why the best military in the world finds victory so elusive when we exercise military options, perhaps we can take a cue from our own history.

Friday, June 6, 2014

No Soldier Left Behind

D-Day 1944 (Hartford Courant)
The 70th anniversary of the D-Day Normandy invasion follows a series of weeks dominated by military controversy.  Unlike today's commemorations, the latest outrages in the VA scandals take the spotlight away from our military heroes who deserve far better.    Before our short attention span news cycle takes us somewhere else, we need to get to the bottom of these matters.   Having a few heads roll and saying we acted should not be accepted as sufficient by the American public.   No major player in a position of power can claim the high ground or have sole responsibility for the low ground, since problems in the VA have been rampant for years.     Unlike World War II, we rely on a much smaller segment of our society to carry the burden of U.S. commitments overseas.   The postwar GI Bill made a world of difference to returning servicemen.   We owe today's heroes nothing less in the form of sweeping changes that will shake the VA system to its very foundation.

Next came word of the prisoner swap that ended Sgt. Bowe Bergdahl's five year imprisonment with the Taliban in exchange for five dangerous Guantanamo detainees.   The right has relentlessly been attacking the Obama administration for letting this happen while the President defends it as part of our "no soldier left behind" pledge.   To me, a commitment is a commitment, whether the circumstances of Bergdahl's disappearance give him hero status or not.   Dealing with characters we consider shady is not unprecedented.   Just ask Israel when they exchanged 1,000 accused terrorists for one Israeli soldier.   I'm disgusted at the wild accusations that have spread to the point of vilifying Bergdahl's family.   Let the justice system get the answers.

Finally, some folks are so bent on laying all blame for everything on Barack Obama.   No, Obama was not the first President since D-Day to never attend a commemoration at Normandy.   He's been there before, and he's there today.   People blinded by hate will fall for the most inaccurate myths.

Sunday, June 1, 2014

The Radio Learning Curve

Having been on six different Hall Communications radio stations in eastern Connecticut this past year, it may be a wonder that I've never yet confused one station with another on the air.   I think that's because I always try to have a mental image of what a particular station's target listener may be like and what they expect out of that station and me. Some air performers just bring their own act into a studio without much thought as to whether or not it fits.   I always try to fit in, even though that may not make me the next Howard Stern.   I'll never be the ultimate sports authority, but I do fill in at WILI-AM 1400 for Wayne Norman, one of Connecticut's most established and knowledgeable sports broadcasters.   You better believe I'm going to check that information several times over before it hits the air.  When I fill in at 100.9 Roxy FM, I make no pretense of being in the younger target demographic.   Instead I try my best to deliver show content relatable to that listener.   As long as people tell me I don't "sound" my age, I seem to pull it off.   

The challenge is also apparent on country giant 97.7 WCTY.   I admit it.   Country music is not exactly my area of expertise.   One male contemporary country artist pretty much seemed like another at first.   It was only recently that I learned that Blake Shelton was married to Miranda Lambert.   Show prep is a unique godsend here, because a country fan is as engaged in this music as a sports fanatic is with his or her team.   I know there are a few things in radio I wouldn't even attempt to pull off, like sports play-by-play or fired-up right wing political host, I think it comes down to a basic respect for the listener.   That's the main reason I keep doing this.    Otherwise if it's all about me it just gets stale.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

A Remarkable Man

John Waselik
John Waselik of Oakdale was described by everyone who knew him as a warm, soft spoken man who made a positive difference in many people's lives and never had a bad word to say about anybody.   John passed away unexpectedly a couple of weeks ago at 63 doing something he loved: biking as he was gearing up for a charity ride across Connecticut.   His giving spirit continued after his death as an organ donor.   I first talked to John in 1997 when his wife Betty-Clare, a high school friend, called me one day while I was on the air at WDRC.  John was a loyal listener fascinated with broadcasting.   He even dabbled in local radio later, but his career choice as a teacher had already been set in stone for some time.   For all of his roles in life - family man, teacher, mentor, church elder, local sports enthusiast and so much more - he made sure it was never about him.   He was genuinely interested in you.   I can't think of a more giving and selfless person, but he'd be the last to invite comparisons. Perhaps we can all learn to better accept each other the way John did.

Monday, May 12, 2014

What Makes Connecticut Special?

Half of us evidently want to get the Hell out of Connecticut...49%.   A Gallup poll conducted June-December 2013 shows only Illinois as the state its residents (50%) would rather be leaving.   People in Montana, Hawaii and Maine are most content to stay put.   Imagine that.   Mississippi scored more favorably than our fair state!   How can a state with so much wealth and a location in the middle of the bustling Northeast "Megalopolis" be deemed undesirable?   I know there's a general feeling that we've passed our prosperous glory days of sitting at or near the top of the heap due to the crushing cost of living.  Our outdated major roads and recent stories about railroad safety reinforce the sense that we are gradually being choked off from major markets so close to our doorstep.   While I applaud Governor Malloy for keeping us at the forefront of inevitable social change, I am concerned that his accomplishments is falling on deaf ears with an NRA-fueled level of hostility that even exceeds Governor Weicker's implementation of the state income tax over twenty years ago.   The level of income inequality is also taking its toll as the strapped middle class is less able to fuel demand.   As in Illinois, the disparity between desperately poor cities and opulent suburban wealth is tearing us apart.  There are just so many yachts to be sold to Greenwich millionaires.

While narrowing income inequality and a better managing of the message can work wonders, we as Connecticut residents are often at a loss to define what makes our little state special.   Casinos are popping up everywhere.   Reliance on giant defense contracts can be a slippery slope.   

When you think Montana, you think Big Sky Country.   Despite having one of the wackiest governors in the country, Maine evokes a unique image as a "Vacationland."   Hawaii?   I rest my case.   Connecticut does have a character.   It takes creative leaders to bring it out.   We have incredible diversity.    Oh yes, take a few cents off the stupid gas tax; the PR value alone is worth it.    This too shall pass... hopefully soon.   Did you really want to move to North Dakota anyway?        

Sunday, May 4, 2014

Better Now Than Later

A hospital visit is seldom anyone's preferred destination, but I knew my last bout of lightheadedness was nothing to ignore.   My blood pressure would drop dramatically after I walked up an incline or stood up quickly, mostly in the morning.   While my two-day visit to Middlesex Hospital in Middletown didn't conclusively reveal a connection between the feeling I was about to pass out with a cardiac condition, an irregular heartbeat was detected.   There's no indication of an immediate need for any emergency procedure, so I was sent home (where I could sleep a lot better) with a heart monitor while being put on a blood thinner to reduce a risk of stroke. On one hand, there are plenty of adults who have these heart conditions and operations like pacemaker implants are very common.   By the same token, even the most minimally invasive procedure involving one's ticker can be a little scary.   We should unravel more of my cardiac mystery over the next month.   For now, I'll just keep doing what I do.   I'm no health nut, but it's better to be proactive about this than facing bigger consequences later.

By the way, Middlesex Hospital care is second to none.   Unlike the common stereotype about hospital food, I ate every morsel and enjoyed every bite!    That said, I'm not anxious for a return trip to soon.   Hey, I just got married a year ago today.   There are still some quality living I'd like to do.      

Saturday, April 26, 2014

Just Plain Nuts

Another Stupid Unfounded Generalization
Liberal radio talk show hosts are nearly as extinct as the T. Rex, but I remember Boston's legendary Jerry Williams saying long ago, "By their words shall you know them."   He was talking about the fringe element callers who made for lively if crazy conversation.   Now, right wing talk hosts facing their own aging and declining audiences justify their own existence by routinely embracing the fact-check challenged ditto-heads.   From time to time, that strategy blows up in their faces the way their love of government-subsidized deadbeat rancher Cliven Bundy turned into a disaster with Mr. Bundy's publicly professed nostalgia for the good old days of African American slavery.    

We don't have to go to Nevada to get stupid comments from people with narrow political agendas.   Just yesterday, I heard a caller to a local radio station mention the fatal Milford school stabbing and reach for the ridiculous reaction of, "This may not sound nice, but now they're gonna want to ban all knives."   The host applauded her comment.   First of all, can the caller and host at least take a breath to express sadness over this tragedy before going off on interpreting the only constitutional amendment they seem to care about?    Let's be clear.   Nobody realistically expects to confiscate all guns, even in a state hit by the killing of 26 people in one school on one day.   The Milford stabbing had nothing to do with gun control.   Nothing.   It's not even about you.   Then again, what can a listener expect when another talk host often says thousands of dollars are wasted sending kids to colleges controlled by liberal professors that "brainwash" students?   That generalization is almost as crazy as denying global warming because we had a cold winter.   

Wednesday, April 16, 2014

Six For Six

I can now truly say I've done shows on all six Hall Communications radio stations here in eastern Connecticut.  That totally mind-blowing feat (to me, anyway) was accomplished last week when I subbed doing news on the Pete Nichols Breakfast Club on WILI-FM Willimantic, better known as i98.3.   I was told ahead of time that Pete might just interrupt me in the middle of what's more of an information update for something totally silly or edgy.   That really wasn't the case.   Pete's sense of timing and knowing how far he can push the envelope are better than that.    If you're looking for hard hitting, in-depth coverage of the weighty issues of the day, this station may not be your ultimate destination.    If you expect to hear talk about whether my wife thinks I've got "enough junk in the trunk" or phony phone calls to a place called "Transitions" revealing his regular newsman's sex change operation, then you've come to the right place.   It all may sound like he's flying by the seat of his pants, but Pete knows exactly what he's doing.  He's a seasoned entertainer who understands his target audience.   The more time I spend at WILI, the more impressed I get with the talent pool inside that building. 

Thursday, April 10, 2014

A Blow To A Brand

Former CT Gov. John Rowland
Former Connecticut Governor John Rowland abruptly stepped down last week from his afternoon radio show on WTIC News/Talk 1080.   Now we are learning of his indictment on federal charges in a campaign financing scandal.    This is the second time the once popular three-term Republican governor has faced the prospect of a prison sentence.   As a follower of political news, I think another conviction should take Rowland off the comeback trail for good.   As a broadcaster, I feel this is a serious problem for a once mighty radio station owned by a company that should know better.    Who will replace Rowland?   How much damage has been done to WTIC's image?

CBS isn't the only company to own a powerful heritage AM station that has transitioned to primarily conservative talk, but as a group they have kept things relatively classy.   Their WCBS/New York, WBZ/Boston, KYW/Philadelphia and other information outlets have stayed above the fray of bombastic right wing talking points.   Why can't WTIC do some variation closer to what these other CBS stations do so well?   It is the only 50,000 watt AM signal in Connecticut and used to get some of the highest shares of audience in any market.   Those exceptional days are long gone as moderate and liberal voices are excluded from all programs except newscasts.   Right wing ranters who champion Tea Party extremism are falling out of favor with younger adults and advertisers.   Does WTIC have no alternative other than Rush Limbaugh and Connecticut versions of him who fail to speak to the fastest growing groups in our society?    Now that Rowland's gone, maybe he can take Limbaugh with him.   Good riddance.      

Tuesday, March 25, 2014

This Is CNN?

Since the 1991 Gulf War, CNN has been my "go to" cable network for breaking news.   There is no lack of major news gripping the globe these days, yet lately CNN has been almost entirely devoted to wall to wall coverage of the disappearance and search for Malaysia Air Flight 370.   Every major issue surrounding this story is certainly worthy of exploring, but when did endless hypothetical opinions based on very limited information become the basis of "breaking news" while so many other stories get left off the air?   The Ukraine crisis continues unabated and the Washington state landslide claims dozens of lives while the overwhelming majority of news time goes to Flight 370.    CNN has some great anchors, and I can't imagine they seriously think they can fill time with questions about whether Flight 370 was swallowed by a black hole without pressure from above to do so.   If this is a way to recoup lost ratings, it's a flawed strategy.

To be "fair and balanced", Fox News has not set the bar high on this story either.   Although other stories get more equally in the mix, they can't even air what little is known about the Malaysia Air disappearance without attacking President Obama.   One anchor's understandable call for patience on getting to the facts on this story was totally shattered by some red meat for their fundamentalist Christian viewers that "it took thousands of years to find Noah's Ark."   No, Fox, they never found it.   MSNBC has been pretty good at perspective, but I can't consistently look to them for breaking news when they spend half their weekends running prison documentaries and their 6:00pm slot has the most polarizing host on TV: Reverend Al Sharpton.   I find his yelling at the camera hard to take, even for my liberal views. 

Monday, March 17, 2014

More Than Luck

I've had a lifetime to contemplate my Irish ancestry.   Yes, my father's parents came over from County Sligo and County Leitrim over 100 years ago while my mother's side can be traced to both Northern Ireland and the Republic of Ireland.  Glenn is my mother's maiden name.    I'm about as Irish as you can get.   While I'm proud of what my ancestors had to go through to allow me to live a better life, I find the Irish experience to be a lesson in humility too.   From the Vikings of the Middle Ages to the horrible British administration during the 1850s Potato Famine, conquest and occupation have taken their toll on the Emerald Isle.   As with many people repeatedly conquered by bigger neighbors, the Irish have coped in positive ways such as their special sense of humor and through darker means exemplified by alcohol abuse and religious strife.   Beyond all its varying degrees of ethnic stereotypes and debates over who should be allowed to march in a St. Patrick's Day parade, this day should represent hope and triumph over historic adversity for any nationality. 

Sunday, March 9, 2014

Connecticut's First AM & FM Stations Sold

At WDRC-FM in 2000 
The Buckley family has owned all or part of WDRC radio in Hartford for the past 57 years.   It is also remarkable in this notoriously changeable business that WDRC has only had two owners since radio pioneer Franklin Doolittle first set up shop in New Haven in 1922.   This heritage itself is a good enough reason why the sale of WDRC AM & FM along with three other Connecticut AM outlets is a big deal.  A relatively new company, Connoisseur Media, will be purchasing Buckley's Connecticut stations in the next few months.   

While some radio folks may bemoan the loss of another independently owned cluster of stations to a larger and growing company, I see it as a good fit.   Buckley had already made significant cutbacks as it competed with a standalone FM against two of the biggest corporate players in the industry.  CBS and Clear Channel have dominated the Hartford market as owners of multiple FM stations.   Connoisseur seems to have a good reputation already in Connecticut operating WPLR, WEZN and more in the New Haven/Bridgeport market(s).    That should bode well for the staff at WDRC.   Yes, we've heard the "no big changes" falsehoods in the instances of other radio station sales, but I think WDRC has been largely on track for some time now.   They've had to make some tough decisions. That should make them positioned for a better transition now.   As a former employee, I hope I'm correct.   Some of the people I worked with from 1993-2002 are still there.   WDRC, a station so many of us grew up with, was a highlight of my years in radio.     

Monday, March 3, 2014

Understand Russian Nationalism to Understand Ukraine

While our short attention span news cycle focuses for now on events unfolding in the former Soviet republic of the Ukraine, it is easy to want to compare the Russian incursion to the Cold War years and put Vladimir Putin in the same category as Stalin, Khrushchev or Brezhnev.    Since nobody of any authority in the US or EU is calling on NATO military action, we in the West really need to understand the mind of Russia's authoritarian president and the challenges Russia faces from ethnic separatist and Islamic fundamentalism movements that resort to terror.   In Putin's view, he has one trump card that has historically been effective at rallying his supporters: Russian nationalism.   That seemed to work in Russia's war with neighboring Georgia... another region with a big Russian ethnic or Russian-speaking  population.   Regional insurrections within Russia itself have even seen spillover into the United States.   How many Americans had heard of Dagestan a year ago before last year's Boston Marathon bombing?   Terror, whether through Syrian chemical weapons or al-Qaeda, must be a concern of every civilized nation.
 
For all the differences between Russia and the West, there are strong economic ties that bind beyond the ongoing threat of terror.   Look at how the Russian markets have already been negatively impacted by Russia's aggression while worldwide stocks take a hit.   Business hates instability.   Europe needs natural gas to travel from Russia through the Ukraine while Russia disparately needs the revenue.   The Ukraine is also a breadbasket for much of Europe.
 
Meanwhile, Republicans take cheap shots at the Obama administration's "weak" response.   Do they really think sabre rattling between two nuclear powers should be option number one?   President Obama never got credit for standing steadfast against Russian-backed Syria's use of chemical weapons.   During a major international crisis, we owe it to ourselves to be united at home.    We don't have to approve of what "Mother Russia" is doing, but we have to have some understanding of it.

Friday, February 28, 2014

Practicality Over Extreme Ideology

Arizona Governor Jan Brewer made the only realistic decision when she vetoed a broad resolution that would have allowed businesses in her state to use their religious beliefs as a pretext to discriminate against potential customers.  This shameful and reactionary bill had already been approved by Republican majorities in both legislative branches.   As a law, SB 1062 would definitely have impacted the LGBT community, and it wasn't clear how far it would have reached beyond that.   A leading gubernatorial candidate to succeed Brewer was pressed by CNN's Anderson Cooper about whether or not businesses could use the law also deny service to, for example, divorced people.   All he could say was that he didn't know of any businesses in Arizona that discriminate!    

As word got around and light began to shine on this right wing abomination, many Republican state legislators who originally backed the bill began running for cover, dodging media and even changing their position.    Pressure from business concerned about the law's impact on Arizona's economy proved to be the bill's undoing.   Don't think Arizona has been alone in attempting to send civil rights back to the 1950's.   Other states with similar bills in the works reacted to the negative publicity by pulling back their own discriminatory initiatives.   Labeling this a "religious freedom" bill is just a smokescreen, akin to calling Southern opposition to civil rights fifty years ago a "states rights" issue.   The right wing has proven themselves to be the more extreme side of America's political equation.   Some have even made Russian president Putin a hero and even praised Uganda for trampling on gay rights.   What in desperation will they pull next?   

Monday, February 24, 2014

No Thanks To Putin

The Sochi Winter Olympics are officially over.   NBC had great ratings of its coverage, but I didn't watch any of the events.   Social media and news "spoiler alerts" kept many, including me, sufficiently in the loop.   Russia under President Putin proved itself to be inadequate for many hosting tasks which are now legend.   International tensions have escalated after Putin moved against so-called "gay propaganda" and made that already persecuted group a scapegoat to deflect from Russia's massive corruption, support of Syria's Assad and jailing of political opponents.     All the trouble in the nearby Caucasus region and in several former Soviet republics did cast a shadow over this outrageously expensive yet hastily constructed resort on the Black Sea.   Thankfully no terror threats materialized.   
 
There were positives.   The USA scored impressively in total metal count.   Athletes from here in Connecticut made us all proud.   Even in this stressed environment, inspiring stories of individual achievement and teamwork managed to shine through.    Somehow they always do.

Thursday, February 13, 2014

A Troubling Pattern

Griswold Dog Pound - from The Bulletin
We've been down this road before.   What's changed?    It seems like only yesterday, but it must have been over five years ago when folks were calling in to our morning radio show with reaction to the reports of poor conditions at the Griswold Dog Pound.   I don't know about you, but stories about poor treatment of animals really disgusts me.   News stories depicting neglect or abuse or even that Animal Planet channel show Animal Cops are especially hard to watch.   It reflects on how we treat the most helpless creatures and in this case the image of a community.  
 
Griswold's Animal Control Officer has not been getting rich with what the town has budgeted for his salary.   Meanwhile, the physical plant at the pound is clearly in need of updating.   On comes a TV news story showing neighbors who want to help out, only to be confronted by an overly defensive sister of the longtime Animal Control Officer.   She was tending to the four dogs there while he was away, and it was clear she was acting way above her pay grade in any public relations capacity.   These willing volunteers are rightly upset over conditions there while their offers to assist have been stymied by town officials.   There should be a proper screening process for prospective helpers, but is there any doubt that their hearts are basically in the right place?   The problems here are nothing new.   Pay the ACO more, replace him, get community help, get the facilities past the standards of the seventies, publicize adoptable pets more, bring strays to a regional shelter or do all of the above.   Beyond the disturbing details, the most outrageous part of this sad story is the fact that the town has known about this for years and still waited for it all the news (and the fan) yet again.  

Saturday, February 8, 2014

It Was Fifty Years Ago Today

Were you around half a century ago?   America was steeped in the throes of Beatlemania and the first wave of the British Invasion on this day in 1964.   The Fab Four had just arrived in New York City February 7, 1964 and were preparing for their February 9th performance on the Ed Sullivan Show.  There was no doubt at the time we were witnesses to the greatest moments in rock n' roll history that week.   I remember thinking their sound was the most exciting music to hit the airwaves in my childhood memory.   Sure, rock n' roll had already been popularized, but the original impact of Elvis and other early pioneers of the genre happened when I was only a toddler.    Although I wasn't initially a fan of the Beatles' mop-top hair, I was an enthusiastic convert to their music right from the start.   

Their timing was perfect.   We had just gone through the Kennedy assassination and the loss of the chief symbol of youthful energy and idealism.   The Fab Four filled a void in so many ways.   Flash back to the music charts right before the Beatles' arrival and you get an idea of how stagnant rock n' roll had become.   Bobby Vinton had spent weeks at number one with an easy listening standard that failed to speak to kids raised on Elvis, Buddy Holly or Bill Haley & His Comets.   For every Four Seasons, Beach Boys or "Louie Louie" there was the Singing Nun or Pat Boone.   The Beatles provided a rock n' roll infusion we hadn't seen since 1956. 

Monday, February 3, 2014

America Deserves A Raise

$7.25 an hour was considered good money while the minimum hourly wage was $1.85 forty years ago.   $7.25 was already considered low income by 1994.    $7.25 will not come close to lifting anyone out of poverty as the national minimum wage today.   These are not just kids getting their first taste of the workplace getting this hourly rate.   Many of these low income workers are adults over 30 with families to support.   The government subsidizes many service industry and other employers because their underpaid employees have to make up the shortfall with a variety of government assistance.   That amounts to corporate welfare while conservatives espouse the unfounded idea that paying a living wage will discourage employers from hiring.   Does anyone really believe President Obama's proposed minimum of $10.10 an hour will break Walmart or McDonalds?
 
They are the same ideologues who say keeping extended unemployment benefits will allow job seekers to get lazy.   Where's the evidence of this?   While they're mounting a lobbying campaign against the first minimum wage increase in years and blocking emergency unemployment compensation, they have no problem cutting food stamps while buying into the right wing talk radio propaganda that accuses America's neediest of bleeding this country dry.   The Pope, our President and noted economists like Robert Reich and others warn how income disparity has approached alarming levels.   We can't afford to assume they're wrong.   History is full of what happens when a tiny percentage of society controls an outrageous chunk of its wealth.     

Thursday, January 23, 2014

"Lazy" Business Decisions?

Lazy Burrito, Mystic (The Day)
When Lazy Burrito came here to Colchester a few years ago, I thought the name was lame and based on negative stereotypes of Mexicans.   In spite of a restaurant name that needed more thought, I gave them a try.    It was not worth the money and I was hit with a hefty surcharge for adding guacamole.    When I left information there several times about direct mail advertising, nobody responded.   In fact, I never saw or heard advertising anywhere for this new business.    I was hopeful this new arrival would succeed, but my less than impressive firsthand experience coupled with their "lazy" attitude toward marketing made the news of their closing unsurprising. Lazy Burrito reopened in East Lyme in a store that had no atmosphere whatsoever and again no advertising.   The Mystic location didn't look too impressive, either.   Now all Lazy Burrito stores have been suddenly shut down as news breaks from The Day about how the owner received a $49,502 grant and a $100,398 loan under Gov. Dannel P. Malloy's Small Business Express Program in June 2012.    This state aid yielded a net gain of three temporary jobs, and none of the loan has been paid back.   Why did State Representative Linda Orange of Colchester recommend this aid?   The owner had only been in business since 2009 with the now-defunct Gilbertie's Restaurant in Colchester.   The Colchester Lazy Burrito was opened next door in 2011.    The track record was - and is - questionable.   I hope this is not typical state management of this program.   There are other local entrepreneurs who have better business plans and deserve some help.    As taxpayers, we should get this loan money back.

Sunday, January 19, 2014

Life After a Heart Transplant

Beth Bradley
I had an opportunity to get an update on the story of a one-time radio colleague of mine who suddenly had to give up her career about ten years ago when she had a minor heart attack at age 48.   Beth Bradley went to the hospital, and during an angiogram they destroyed her heart. She was then put in a medically induced coma and had an artificial heart machine attached to her body for close to two years before getting a donor heart.    It wasn't so long ago that a heart transplant was a pioneering operation with little chance of recovery.   Her story of life after a heart transplant is such a testament to Beth's strength and outlook on life.   While she may not know the exact identity of her donor, she does know he was young.   Beth feels that her donor lives on in some way because she has his heart.   I've followed her impressive progress over the past few years thanks in part to her Facebook page.   It was great to hear from Beth as a call-in guest when I filled in Friday for Wayne Norman on 1400 WILI Willimantic.   You can find out more about the importance of organ donation by going to www.donatelifenewengland.org.    

Thursday, January 9, 2014

"Bridgegate"

Have you ever had the pleasure of driving from the New Jersey Turnpike over the George Washington Bridge into Manhattan?   This trip is crazy enough on a "normal"  travel day without New Jersey officials blocking off local access roads on the Fort Lee side of the world's busiest bridge for a political retaliation disguised as a traffic study.   New Jersey Governor Chris Christie's response in his press conference today was a compelling performance, but too many questions remain about his choice of direct subordinates, the ruthless and petty culture of too many members of his team and the unresolved question of how many people were in on it.    This was not a case of one staffer gone rogue.   It suggests something deeply planned to have one high placed Christie appointee say it's "time for traffic problems in Fort Lee" and the recipient of that email answer with "Got it."    Planning massive gridlock in Fort Lee simply because its mayor wouldn't endorse Christie's reelection bid is more than shameful.   It's dangerous and criminal.    I've given Governor Christie credit for being more bipartisan than most Republicans these days, but what we know about "Bridgegate" so far doesn't pass the smell test... yet. 

Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Staying On This Road

The other day, I made a routine visit to my doctor.   One of the women working in the office remarked on how bad 2013 was in a way that assumed everyone felt that way.   Maybe she dreads Obamacare or had a personal experience that colored her perception of the whole year.   While 2013 had its bumps along the way, I consider myself fortunate.   After all, in May I married someone who continues to amaze me.   While my family is not very extended, everyone is healthy and I even had a chance to reconnect with a cousin I hadn't seen in 45 years.   When I left one radio company in February to free up my weekends, I had no idea I'd get a call from the competition five months later and getting a ton of fill-in slots on five stations.    Meanwhile, my direct mail advertising venture marks twelve years and counting.   Even my old dog remains happy and healthy!
 
While I'm not exactly on the road to riches, arthritis seems to affect me in more ways than I'd like and one person really let me down, 2013 is not worthy of being swept  under the rug.   I've never been one to forget the past because it's still a part of me.   As long as I don't obsess over the negative things, most of my baggage takes the trip with me into 2014.   Happy New Year!     

Tuesday, December 24, 2013

Artificial Indignation

Phil Robertson (SI.com)
In this season where we hope for "peace on earth, good will toward men" there are enough actual problems that we face without manufacturing more.   The media deserve their fair share of the blame with the crises and controversies that would never gain any momentum without them.   
 
Phil Robertson, the patriarch of TV's "Duck Dynasty" Louisiana family that manufactures duck calls got in hot water with the reality show's cable channel (A&E) over some anti-gay comments.   Cracker Barrel restaurants briefly stopped selling some Duck Dynasty merchandise, much to the chagrin of the popular show's fans.   This is a rare case in which I agree with one suggestion by Mike Huckabee that A&E and Cracker Barrel should have merely issued statements saying the comments were his own opinions and not necessarily their own, but don't get me wrong.  The high profile suspension was something A&E had every right to do.   If I went on one of the radio stations I work on and made these comments, my employer could suspend or fire me.  However, A&E's action only served to unleash a torrent of conservative protest over an alleged violation of his free speech rights.    To my friends on the left, I say we need to cool our jets over how offended we are with something a duck call maker says.   He's not the President or the Pope, and it wasn't so long ago when that was more of a majority opinion.   There has been real progress against homophobia.   To the right of the spectrum, the Duck Dynasty guy is no poster boy for free speech.   He doesn't merit this mentality of being a victim of political correctness.   This non-issue needs to go away quickly.   Chill out and have a Happy Holiday OR Merry Christmas... whatever you prefer.    

Thursday, December 19, 2013

Memorable Radio Interviews

Peter Noone
I saw a radio blog post asking folks in the business, "Who was your favorite interview?"   The bulk of respondents really raved about how nice and down to earth country artists have been.   That was certainly the case when I talked with Ronnie Milsap in the eighties.   Rockers got mixed reviews.    I never thought of myself as primarily an interviewer.   That is partly because I've always had more of a passion for programming music (a dying art) and reporting news.   I also have a secret terror of sounding like a discussion went way longer than it needed to go, but over the years a lot of interviews come to mind.    My very first interview was folk rocker David Bromberg at my college station.   As with anything I do for the first time, I was very uncomfortable.   Through the years, I had many chats with politicians and civic leaders and learned a lot at a station I programmed - WLAD/Danbury, CT - from the midday talk show host Rhoda Daum whose show I produced.   I also got to see firsthand how Brad Davis at WDRC/Hartford handled some big name personalities back in the day like Johnny Cash, Andy Williams and Bobby Vinton.   Listen and learn.
 
My favorite interview was from my WDRC-FM days.   Peter Noone - Herman of Herman's Hermits - stopped by our studio before his headlining performance at out daylong Big D Oldies Fest in 1996.   He rolled so well through whatever I and the crowd of fans threw at him.   It was the fastest and most fun twelve minutes of my radio career.   Some recorded interviews can take a strange twist.   Rebecca Morse Whitten and I once talked with singer Andrea Boccelli at WBMW.   His English was very rough, so I edited it so thoroughly that he sounded fluent!     The worst interview?   Let's just say I never want to deal with a certain WNBA team again.    

Friday, December 13, 2013

Fitting Tributes, Little Policy Change

It is right to let the Newtown community mark the one year anniversary of the Sandy Hook massacre by staying away from private memorial observances in a town that has seen so much tragedy.    It is proper to respect the wishes of the victims' families by lighting a candle and performing random acts of kindness.   While access to that day's 911 tapes is part of our freedom of the press, it is also fitting that most media outlets responsibly kept these disturbing recordings off the air or greatly restricted them from public exposure.  
 
Yes, we have had many comforting words, wonderful gestures and good deeds in the wake of the Newtown shooting, but the disturbing issue remains.   Gun related violence remains as American as apple pie and is still a taboo subject among too many policymakers thanks to well funded gun manufacturer lobbies refusing to include access to assault rifles in the public debate.   Nationally this year, there have been many more initiatives to loosen gun laws than to tighten or enforce them while another 31,000 people died in gun violence.   The NRA and others shift all the blame on violent video games or access to mental health care while supporting the same politicians who cut mental health funding.   Connecticut politicians could no longer ignore this.   Do we have to wait for a bigger incident to rekindle even a discussion to include guns?   

Monday, December 9, 2013

Greatness

Former South African President Nelson Mandela passed away last week at 95.    This iconic figure personified hope in a society once legally defined by racial divisions under the brutally repressive system of apartheid, reconciliation under his presidency and a peaceful transition of power when he stepped down after one term.   All this happened on a continent where democracy and the rule of law have been more the exception than the rule.   That being said, the extreme right wingers have been very critical of the man as a "terrorist", working with radical organizations advocating the violent overthrow of the white-dominated South African regime fifty years ago.  
 
Wait a minute.   Didn't George Washington lead us in a bloody revolution against colonial rule and then preside over the founding of our country?   Didn't Abraham Lincoln oversee a bitter civil war to free the slaves and then call for malice toward none and charity for all?   Don't forget many members of the Jewish underground in Palestine who resorted to violence before establishing the democratic state of Israel.   In what way was Nelson Mandela different?    Examine the totality of his life and even when you factor in that he was not exactly always like Gandhi, he is undeniably deserving being called a great man.           

Monday, December 2, 2013

The Decision

Put on a smile.   Grow a thick skin.   Think only positive thoughts.   Get on with your life.   A lot of people have it worse off than you.   
 
People prone to depression hear these bits of advice from others who may mean well but aren't geared the same and don't understand the depths of this affliction.    From time to time, I get to feeling depressed.   It could happen during the holidays or the middle of summer when we're told to make the most of a joyous time and I'm just not feeling it.   It doesn't mean the same garden variety sadness that everyone gets.    It can affect someone's energy level and overall health.    It can be an isolating feeling that is not diminished with a few words of admonition, pep talk or pop psychology from friends.    I admit to some bouts of mild to moderate depression, most notably in my late teens when it felt like I was missing out on life.   If I knew how to snap out of it at will then I would have done it, but I did experience a moment of clarity almost 40 years ago to the day when the word "decision" really hit me.   It may have been subconscious thinking, but on some level I had made the decision to let this dark force rule my life.   Then I made a reverse decision to take control of what I could and not let depression rule over me.   Depression would return from time to time, but only when I temporarily forgot the lesson of 40 years ago.   
 
To friends and loved ones of people who suffer depression, please remember that a few simple supportive actions or words can be the best remedy you can offer.    Lincoln and Churchill suffered from depression, so don't assume their feelings are from some shameful character weakness.    Check this video equating depression with a "black dog".   Hopefully the depressed person will realize how much of their destiny is under their power when they take a step in the right direction.