Tuesday, September 11, 2007

Milwaukee TV schedule changes

For our friends north of the border, this week bring changes to TV schedules in Milwaukee, including Better TV, a new female-oriented lifestyle show airing on WTMJ at 3 p.m. Locally-oriented Morning Blend moving to 9 a.m. on the same station, Martha's move to WISN-TV at 11 a.m., a two-hour game show block n WMLW-LP in primetime, and WVTV slotting Judge David Young at noon, followed by an hour of Coach reruns. (Coach?)

Bob Costas makes humorous cameo on Fox NFL Sunday sketch

But NBC bosses were in the dark.

Come on, it wasn't that funny.... Mad TV's Frank Caliendo was in the sketch (okay, maybe it was... Costas knocks Caliendo on his ass...)

Doin' "The Barz"

Chicagoland Radio and Media titled a post "Dancin' With the Barz" (clever) on this Feder story, as Mike Barz from WFLD's Good Day, Chicago was doing some after-hours dirty dancing at a night club with a female staffer last Friday - and he actually won something - not a trophy, but a one-day time out from management.

And yes, The Barz is married with three kids.

Monday, September 10, 2007

Update to WCIU's fall schedule

Scroll down or click here to read post, with updated information on two shows (Becker, Girlfriends) that are no longer on the schedule (actually, it's information that I wrote on this blog before - this is WCIU's explanation of it...)

Oh yeah, I forgot. Happy belated birthday, My Network TV.

So did everybody else, it appears. But what you'd expect when not one show on this network - created by News Corp. after the WB and UPN merged - has been memorable? This story from B&C is about several My Network TV affiliates deciding to take matters into their own hands, as Meredith's KSMO in Kansas City decided to do. And it's paying off, with locally created shows by those stations attracting viewers - and advertisers - particularly those who can't afford to buy time on a big four station.

WPWR here, has wisely decided to do the same thing - by acquiring the rights to simulcast the Dec. 6 Bears-Redskins game from the NFL Network, and airing a few Northern Illinois football and Chicago Fire soccer games. For the last two years, WPWR has also aired IHSA high school football and basketball downstate tournaments, but no word if those will return to the station this season.

A website to check out: Here's an online example on how a My Network TV affiliate is promoting itself on the web: Raycom's WUAB-TV in Cleveland has My43.net, a My Space-like portal where people can post profiles, check out photo galleries, get info on nightlife, read and write blogs, and view videos. The site focuses heavily on local bands, where they can submit their material and listeners can download their mp3 for free (and without DRM, too!)

This is the best local TV website for a non-Big Four station (not affiliated with ABC, CBS, NBC, or Fox) in the country. Let's hope more stations (are you listening, Chicago?) take this novel approach WUAB has embarked upon.

New syndicated season starts today

Five new shows debut today, including the highly anticipated game show Merv Griffin's Crosswords and magazine TMZ . Other new shows include Temptation, Judge David Young, and The Steve Wilkos Show (which debuts in Chicago on WGN tomorrow at 2 p.m. A Cardinals-Cubs game is airing in that time slot today.)

Don't forget, the debut of two new off-network sitcoms as well - Two and a Half Men and Family Guy.

Merv Griffin's Crosswords, produced by the late Merv Griffin and syndicated by Program Partners, has key time afternoon periods on five NBC O&O's, including 4 p.m. on WNBC in New York and 2 p.m. on WMAQ in Chicago (Read a review of Crosswords here.)

Meanwhile, TMZ has nailed a hat trick of 6:30 p.m. slots on Fox O&O's WNYW in New York, KTTV in Los Angeles and WPWR in Chicago.

Former WBBM boss Applegate profiled

The Cleveland Plain Dealer profiled former WBBM-TV boss Bill Applegate last week at his latest venue as GM of beleaguered CBS affiliate WOIO-TV and My Network TV affiliate WUAB-TV, both owned by Raycom Media. Like WBBM, WOIO has struggled in the news ratings (placing fourth) and has credibility issues (such as news anchor Sharon Reed posing nude for a report on the station.) The interview also features Rob Feder of the Sun-Times, reminiscing on Applegate's days back at 'BBM.

WOIO and Applegate haven't made many friends in Cleveland, particularly with City Hall and the Cleveland Browns, who lost the rights to pre-season football games to NBC affiliate WKYC-TV after several controversial news reports.

The station, however, is starting to turn some corners. Recently, WOIO hosted an one-hour special to address the city's escalating homicide rate hosted by Ms. Reed titled "Taking Back Our Streets". The town-hall setting featured community leaders and city residents trying to find solutions to stem the growing tide of violence in Cleveland this summer.

WOIO and WUAB occupy the bottom rung of Cleveland TV stations ratings-wise. The duopoly is often accused of leasing too many time slots out to paid programming, or infomercials. WUAB, a former UPN affiliate, passed on the CW affiliation mainly because it did not want to pay "reverse compensation", or pay the CW, to hook up with them - plus, WUAB did not want to give up the 3-5 p.m. weekday time slots to the network to air reruns (The CW went to WBNX-TV instead.)

WOIO on UHF Channel 19, became a CBS affiliate on September 3, 1994 after losing its Fox affiliation to top-rated WJW-TV (Channel 8) in the New World-Fox affiliation deal. That deal saw twelve stations then owned by New World Communications - eight of them CBS affiliates - switch to Fox. Cleveland was the first market to switch.

Sunday, September 09, 2007

What a day in Chicago sports

The Bears lose, the Cubs fall out of first place, and the White Sox lose as usual. Right now, these three teams make any of the new fall shows look good by comparison. If these three were TV shows, they all would be gone after the first episode.

Anyone who watched Anchorwoman sure were lucky. Unlike these three, they didn't have to suffer through a second episode.

Welcome to the NFL season!

And as a public service, every Friday, we'll post NFL distribution maps, courtesy of J.P. Kirby's the506.com, to find the regional Sunday afternoon game in your area. Click to see Week 1's regional TV schedules:

Single game: CBS - Early games (no late games because of U.S. Open Men's Tennis Finals)

Doubleheader - Fox Early games Late games

Friday, September 07, 2007

A suggestion: Move Katie to 7:30/6:30 Central

Brain Steinberg of Ad Age reviews The CBS Evening News with Katie Couric, and makes a couple of suggestions, including moving the beleaguered network newscast to the 7:30 Eastern (6:30 Chicago Time) prime access time slot.

One problem with that - actually two: The affiliates won't go for it, because they would lose that lucrative ad revenue in the hour before prime time. Second, the shows in those prime access time slots on some CBS-owned stations - namely The Insider and Entertainment Tonight (which airs at 6:30 on CBS-owned WBBM-Channel 2) - are owned by CBS.

TMZ, CTV get the hook-up

The entertainment website TMZ and Warner Bros. International Television, has struck a deal with Canadian broadcaster CTV to provide the network with multiplatform content, including exclusive TMZ-branded material to air on CTV's Star! entertainment cable network and CTV.ca.

The deal is effective Sept. 10, the same day TMZ is launching in first-run syndication in the United States by Warner. CTV will air its own version called Scoop: TMZ.

This comes as CanWest Global is relaunching its CH over-the-air channels (including flagship CHCH-TV in Hamilton, Ontario - which is re-branded locally as CHCH News) as E! in a deal with Comcast's E! networks, effective today.

Cubs dominate the ratings

This summer's reality shows are taking a back seat to the ultimate reality show: The Cubs chase for the National League's Central Division Championship.

Wednesday night's Dodgers-Cubs game was the highest rated program in prime-time and the entire broadcast day in Chicago, according to Nielsen with a whopping 11 rating and 19 share (second item. Yeah, there's a first item, but it's pointless given the White Sox is out of the pennant race and the games are getting CW and My Network TV-like numbers.)

Most of this summer's reality TV shows have bombed in the ratings, and certainly to this White Sox fan, even the Cubs are more appealing than this junk. Fat March, anyone?

Thursday, September 06, 2007

WPWR gets more movies for weekends

Warner Bros. Domestic Television Distribution announced a deal with ten Fox-owned My Network TV affiliates, including WPWR-TV in Chicago, for their new 35-title movie package. It was also sold to 123 other markets, bringing the clearance rate to 90 percent of the U.S.

Titles include Batman Begins, March of the Penguins, Million Dollar Baby, Ocean's Twelve, and two Harry Potter movies.

Echostar to carry Big Ten Network

Now on to some real news... In a move that brings rejoice to Big Ten fans (and makes cable look bad), Echostar's Dish Network has struck a deal with the Big Ten Network to carry its collegiate regional sports network on its basic service. The channel will also be carried in HD.

Wednesday, September 05, 2007

Time to do the "Chicago Huddle"

A new local TV show is debuting this weekend on ABC affiliate WLS-TV. Starting this Saturday night, the station will air a new sports-variety show called Chicago Huddle, which is being taped at ESPN Zone in Chicago's River North area.

The program will air Saturday nights after the station's late news, at 11:05 p.m. (time approximate.)

WLS-TV, ABC, and ESPN are owned by the Walt Disney Corp.

The program is hosted by WLS' sports reporter Ryan Chiaverini and will feature a different member of the Chicago Bears as a co-host every week, and members from Second City will offer comedy segments.

Chicago drops to third place in total number of black homes in the U.S.

But Chicago remains in fifth place in Hispanic and Asian homes

Nielsen announced its top ten markets ranked by minority TV homes, and Chicago is now the third-largest African-American market in the U.S. , going from 598, 370 homes to 599,620 homes. It was surpassed though, by Atlanta which surged from 597,070 to 634,820 to claim second place. New York remains in first, of course with 1.2 million homes.

Among the total number of Hispanic homes in the U.S., Chicago remained in fifth place with 487,590. Los Angeles is first with 1.25 million. Chicago was also fifth in the total number of Asian homes with 171,060.

To access the top ten list of markets with the most minority homes (and for more information), click here.

Roll your eyes

And look at another useless television study from an useless right-wing organization, The Prick Tofu Crud. They know many homes have cable or a dish, right? Too bad they were busy spewing this crap to notice that there were fifteen or so murders in Chicago over the Labor Day Weekend (and maybe more in New York City- a teen was gunned down in the subway in Queens on Monday.) To the PTC, protecting the children only applies if you live in the "right" area of the country and you're not a minority... (yeah, I went there.)

Unbox with NBC and Amazon

NBC Universal and Amazon have come to an agreement to sell the company's TV shows through Amazon's Unbox service. This comes after NBC announced on Friday that it was dropping iTunes at the end of the calendar year, in which a few hours later, Apple announced it wasn't carrying any of the network's fall shows.

Pricing for the episodes of popular NBC shows including The Office, Heroes, and new shows Bionic Woman and Chuck, will cost $1.99 an episode - the same price iTunes offered for its downloads of NBC fare. Season passes will also be available. There were reports that NBC wanted Apple to sell episodes for $4.99 each.

Unbox will also offer fare from NBC's cable networks including Battlestar Galcatica and Monk.

Boston bloggers

Another day, another Boston TV story. Tomorrow, Red Sox pennant coverage!

Seriously, there are bloggers in the nation's seventh-largest market who dissect every detail about their TV stations - from ratings to news content to news anchor moves. This Boston Globe story (registration may be required) details the way bloggers update their sites on a daily basis.

Most local newscasts are targeted to the 25-54 crowd. But the people blogging about the newscasts are actually young males in their 20's - a group who are normally not considered news viewers. These guys watch every newscast, and they do their homework very well (and yes, some station managers even read their sites.)

Bill Rancic to host new talk show set in Chicago

Apprentice winner and Orland Park native Bill Rancic will co-host In the Loop with iVillage, a reincarnated version of iVillageLive, a show that aired on the NBC O&O's from Universal Studios in Orlando and flopped with viewers. The new version of the program will air live weekdays at 11 a.m. (CT) on WMAQ-TV here in Chicago from the NBC Tower.

Also joining the fun will be actress Kim Coles (In Living Color) and fellow Apprentice contestant Ereka Ventrini, who appeared with Rancic on the show's first season (along with another contestant named Omarasa, who was briefly considered for a talk show from Jerry Springer producer Richard Dominick. Thankfully, they went with Steve Wilkos.)

Ventrini was the announcer and sidekick on the now-defunct Tony Danza Show during that show's first season (2004-05).

The NBC Tower has been busy of late with TV production. In addition to iVillage, Steve Wilkos, and Jerry Springer, the NBC Tower is also home to Judge Mathis. Past shows shot at the studio include Jenny Jones and Kwik Witz.

Meanwhile, Rancic was married over the weekend in Italy to E! reporter Giuliana DePandi.