Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Amy Jacobson. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Amy Jacobson. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

What was she thinking?













What's WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson doing at Craig Stebic's house? Wearing that?

It's been a weird time in media lately (both locally and nationally), with firings, resignations, fake "deaths" and real deaths, and not-so-pleasant surprises. (It's been enough to keep this blog busy, even though this weekend.) And it's now getting weirder....

Amy Jacobson, a reporter for NBC-owned WMAQ-TV was found on Friday on the property of Craig Stebic in southwest suburban Plainfield, who is the husband of Lisa Stebic, who's been missing for the past two months. The Stebics were in the middle of a divorce.

Ms. Jacobson went to a pool party at Stebic's house, showing up in a two-piece bikini, with her two young children in tow.

In Rob Feder's column in the Sun-Times today, Jacobson told her bosses that she was on her way to a health club on the near north side of Chicago when she received a phone call from Mr. Stebic, indicating that he wanted to come to his house to talk about the case.

But wait. This gets better.

From next door, a photographer shot video of Jacobson wearing a bikini top and a towel wrapped around her waist on Stebic's property and sent it CBS-owned WBBM-TV. The station was deciding on whether or noteto air the video. The station decided to air clips this morning and posted a report on the station's website.

(As of 2 p.m. the clips were also posted at WBBM-TV 's website.)

Many in Chicago's journalism community are asking whether or not Jacobson's actions are a conflict of interest. Others are asking whether or not WBBM should show a tape of someone from a competing station doing something unethical, for a ratings advantage.

Meanwhile, Jacobson's bosses at the NBC-owned station are expected to discipline Jacobson, ranging from either suspension to termination. Jacobson was also advised to get a lawyer. She's has since been taken off the Stebic case.

Officials at WMAQ declined comment on the matter, saying "it's under review".

This is the second time in the last few weeks that there has been a ethics breach in local journalism.

A female news anchor for Telemundo's KVEA-TV in Los Angeles was caught in an affair with Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa, thus breaking up his marriage in the process. The controversy has created a firestorm in L.A., and the female anchor has been placed on paid leave.

Both NBC and Telemundo are owned by General Electric.

More: Eric Zorn posted this story on his Chicago Tribune blog, with the humanoids commenting on the controversy (including some guy named T Dog).

updated (now with photo!) at 4:00pm on 2007-07-10

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Amy Jacobson heads to WLS-AM

She's back... and she didn't even have to be banished to Rockford, Peoria, or Cheyenne, Wyo. to find work... Call it a career reboot...

Amy Jacobson was hired Friday by Citadel Broadcasting's WLS-AM to join Roe Conn's top-rated afternoon show as a sidekick, beginning in May.

As you recall (or probably sick of hearing about), Jacobson was fired by her previous employer (WMAQ-TV) after she appeared on a tape shot by rival WBBM-TV at Craig Stebic's house wearing a bikini top and a towel around her waist in 2007. Stebic has been a suspect in the disappearance of his wife, Lisa Stebic.

Since then, Jacobson has lost her house and her husband left. She filed a lawsuit against CBS Corp. for damages related to the videotape. Since then, management at the Chicago chapter of The Church of Tisch has changed with GM Joe Ahern and news director Carol Fowler both being shown the door.

Jacobson has been working very hard to get her career back on track. She had been filling in on numerous Chicago radio stations in the last few months, including WLS and WIND-AM. Apparently, the fill-in gigs have paid off.

With the new gig at WLS, let's hope Amy Jacobson can put all this ugliness behind her. And it just proves with some persistence, you can get your foot back in the door.

Saturday, September 27, 2008

Stebics hit WBBM-TV with lawsuit

As what Amy Jacobson did a few weeks ago, the Stebic family has now followed "suit" with a suit of their own.

Craig Stebic and his family filed suit against CBS and its owned TV station here (WBBM-TV) and a couple of principals involved, including GM Joe Ahern and news director Carol Fowler. Also named in the suit was anchor Rob Johnson and reporter Alita Guillen.

Stebic's sister Jill (Webb) and her husband Robert filed suit in Cook County suit against the broadcaster for $40,000, charging the station has presented their relationship with former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson was "false, malicious, and illegal" and also claimed the fiasco has suffered "severe emotional distress". The video created an impression that Jacobson and her children were attending a "pool party" at the Stebic house.

As you recall, on July 6, 2007, Jacobson appeared at the Stebic house to interview Craig Stebic about his missing wife, Lisa, which many suspect he had a hand in. Jacobson appeared at the Stebic house in a bikini - which was secretly videotaped by a neighbor and handed over to WBBM-TV, which aired the footage. Jacobson was subsequently fired from WMAQ.

So they're suing The Church of Tisch for only $40,000? That amount won't even cover their house payment. But it more than covers minister Ahern's marble showers and expensive lunches. If CBS is liable, look for The Church of Tisch to ask their congregation for another "mandatory donation".

The T Dog Media Blog Archive: What was she thinking?

T Dog's Think Tank: Local media blows it again

Wednesday, March 12, 2008

Jacobson: "Law & Order" episode no laughing matter

An episode of tonight's Law & Order: a reporter, looking to get to the bottom of a story regarding a man suspected of killing his wife, shows up at one point in the episode with a bathing suit on.

Sounds familiar?

To Amy Jacobson, it does. All too familiar, and she's not pleased about it.

Tonight L&O features Chicago native Lara Flynn Boyle as a reporter, who according to the preview from NBC, "uses her sexuality to break the case".

As many of you recall, former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson was spotted by a crew from WBBM-TV last July at Craig Stebic's house wearing a bikini. Stebic is a suspect in his wife's Amy disappearance. Jacobson lost her job shortly thereafter.

Jacobson blasted Law & Order and creator Dick Wolf in today's Sun-Times, saying the episode is "a reminder of the high price I had to pay for doing my job. Hollywood takes things like this out of context all the time." She has no plans on watching the show.

So, its been eight months since she's been out of work and apparently, she's still not all the wiser. And certainly, if Law & Order and Wolf has to rely on "ripped from the headlines" stories to get plots for his program (which is in its eighteenth season), then we all know this program has run out of ideas. But it's all about surpassing Gunsmoke for the longest-running drama of all time, right? Keep in mind The Simpsons (an animated comedy) still has a step ahead of Wolf & Co. in the race with Gunsmoke for longest-running scripted program of all time.

Classic Post: What was she thinking? (July 10, 2007)

T Dog's Think Tank: Local media blows it again (July 15, 2007)

Wednesday, July 11, 2007

Amy Jacobson tells her side of the story

Amy Jacobson made the media rounds today telling her side of the story, first to Robert Feder of the Chicago Sun-Times, who broke the story yesterday, and then went to WGN-AM, and talked with Spike O'Dell.

Jacobson defended her actions, and criticized WBBM-TV for the way they edited the video that someone sent in to the station, to make it seem like she was having an affair with Craig Stebic. She called WBBM's tactics "a cheap shot."

Jacobson did apologize (sort of), saying she made "a terrible mistake." She is evaluating legal actions.

Some are comparing this to the lapse of ethical judgment former WBBM-TV reporter (and former Access: Hollywood co-host) Giselle Fernandez made in 1988 at WBBM when she covered drug dealer John Cappas surrender, in which between the interview and his surrender to federal agents, she went on a boat with him and brought him pizza.

Russ Ewing she wasn't.

Here's the memo that was sent to staffers at WMAQ-TV yesterday about Jacobson's release.

Thursday, July 19, 2007

Amy Jacobson settles with WMAQ-TV

Amy Jacobson, who was caught in the Stebic household two weeks ago tomorrow (thanks to a videotape shot by WBBM-TV) has settled with her former employers, according to the Chicago Sun-Times. She had four months to go on her contract.

She also may be pursing legal action against WBBM, who videotaped her without consent.

In that interview with the Sun-Times, Amy Jacobson took exception to the comments made by many on internet message boards and blogs, saying that she was a bad parent.

"What really bothered me most was people saying that I'm a bad parent, and questioning my parenting skills," she said. "I would never, ever do anything to harm them.", she sold the Sun-Times.

Welcome to the 21st century.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

T Dog Media Blog Think Tank: Local media blows it again

From the blog that gave you "The NHL blows it again" and "Radio blows it again", now we proudly present "Local media blows it again."

Yes, we now have a “blows it again” franchise.

As you know by now, Amy Jacobson, a reporter for NBC-owned WMAQ-TV in Chicago was fired from her job after a video surfaced of her at Craig Stebic’s house in Plainfield wearing a bikini top and a towel wrapped around her waist. That video that was submitted to CBS-owned WBBM-TV a rival of WMAQ’s. (It’s not NBC 5 or CBS 2, people. Enough with this branding crap.)

She appeared on radio shows on Wednesday and was interviewed by Robert Feder of the Chicago Sun-Times, who broke the story on Tuesday.

Craig Stebic is the husband of missing woman Lisa Stebic, who vanished two months ago. Mr. Stebic is a controversial figure in this case because he has not cooperated with authorities, though he is not a prime suspect. The couple was going through a divorce. They also have two children.

Jacobson apologized, but defended her actions. She says that she got a call from a relative, asking her to come over and discuss the case. Ms. Jacobson, who was with her two children at the time, was own way to a health club on the city’s north side.

So she went to Plainfield – with her kids in tow - to the Stebic house - 40 miles away – the same distance that separates Baltimore from Washington D.C. to do a story. She told Feder, “It was a way for me to do my work and to have fun with my kids”.

First of all, it was her day off. Who works on their day off? To paraphrase a quote from the movie “Friday”, (ironically, the day all of this occurred) “How can you get fired – on your day off?” She should have gone home, popped in a DVD of “Friday”, and hung out with Chris Tucker and Ice Cube.

What she was going to prove by getting a scoop on her day off? By being a fool?

Couldn’t Jacobson have told them that she was off, chillin’ at the crib with the kids, and talk about the case when she was on the clock? She’s not an intern. Why drag your kids out to a place where they sure as hell they don’t want to go? And yeah, you can do a story in a bikini top. That’s real professional. A lot of people get messed up by mixing business with pleasure.

And she broke journalism ethics in the first place by getting too close to a subject of the story. The Stebics said that she was an ally in this story, in this situation. That’s not a journalist’s job. Your job is to report the story and that’s it. Nobody’s paying you to become a victim’s advocate. The public isn’t interested in that.

This brings us to our next aspect of the story: the tape.

When Jacobson was in the Stebic talking on a cell phone, someone next door shot video of her. That video was sent to WBBM-TV, a rival station and they did what Potsie was told to do on Happy Days – sit on it – for four days. That's wasn't cool, according to The Fonz.

On Tuesday, station officials decided to air the tape (raw video) and put it online, where it has received close to 200,000 hits. After that video aired on Tuesday night, Amy Jacobson was released from her reporting duties at WMAQ.

Carol Fowler, the station’s news director, told Feder: "This is a tape that fell into our lap," "It was certainly provocative, but I wasn't sure we were going to do anything with it. A lot of questions had to be asked before we put it on the air. . . . We didn't see much compelling reason [to air it] because it wasn't germane to anything in the case."

But when Feder and Tribune media reporter Phil Rosenthal reported that a tape was circulating around, WBBM aired it anyway.

Jacobson, in her interviews, called the move by WBBM “a cheap shot”, and said that “Channel 2 took extreme measures to get me off the story.

WBBM didn’t reveal where it got the tape.

So why did WBBM decide to air the tape? For a ratings advantage?

Yours truly thinks so (well, duh?)

And let’s not let WMAQ-TV off the hook, either. While WMAQ was right to discipline Jacobson, they went too far by firing her. A simple suspension would have been sufficed.

These scenarios reminds me why most young viewers like me don't watch local news. We expect crap like this from Fox News and CNN, but local news is different. They connect to our communities. Or at least they used to. To sum it up: Everybody involved in this - from Jacobson to the management at both stations screwed up. Three wrongs don't make a right. Young audiences gave up on local TV news (and local radio) long ago. No wonder more of us watch The Daily Show with Jon Stewart. His fake newscasts are better and more informative than any "real" local newscast.

WBBM’s decision to run that tape was totally bush-league. Stations usually don’t take lobs at each other. That may work with Fox News and CNN and their nonsense, but not here with our stations. We don’t play that game here in Chicago. We don’t go there.

And it’s not like both WBBM and WMAQ have had ethical lapses themselves over the years. Submitted for your review: WBBM’s erroneous reporting on the shooting death of Fred Hampton in 1969 (those "bullet holes" in his apartment turned out to be ordinary holes in a wall); The station’s decision to cover a “pot party” in 1971; Harry Porterfield’s firing in 1985; Giselle Fernandez’s speed boat date with a drug dealer in 1988; and then news director Bill Applegate’s decision to introduce tabloid newscasts in the early 1990’s, not to mention Jerry Springer showing up at WMAQ to do commentary ten years ago.

Yes, yours truly reached back to 1969 to point out this isn’t a new problem.

And then there’s weathercaster and licensed pilot Jim Tilmon, who set a benchmark by unjustly getting fired from both stations.

You can say WBBM-TV is the Chicago Blackhawks of broadcasting, since the public don’t seem to care for neither. Both have had glory days until stupid decisions ruined them both. You sure Bill Wirtz isn’t running this station a well as WMAQ?

There's a reason why WLS-TV is number one in the news ratings. They win by default. They've dominated the market for 21 years and will do so for another 21 (they somehow managed to survive the awful “Happy Talk” format in the ‘70’s that featured weathercaster John Coleman, who often brought a live turkey to the set at Thanksgiving. Oy!) WLS is at least doing something right.

Meanwhile, WBBM and WMAQ’s news operations pretty much reflect the inept management at NBC and CBS. NBC has a lousy prime-time lineup and executives like Jeff Zucker and Kevin Reilly (who has since moved on to Fox) who make Fred Silverman's time at the network (in the '70's) look like a success. Whoever thought that two bombs from that era, Pink Lady and Jeff and Supertrain, would be better received than much of the network schedule now? (Actually, those two stinkers weren’t well received at all.) Yep, NBC is partying like it’s 1980 over there, with the chimp from BJ and the Bear serving as guest of honor.

CBS isn’t anything home to write about, either. Look at the low ratings for WCKG-FM and for Jack (WJMK). And don't get me started on Les Moonves. How many CSIs are on the network schedule again? Remember, this is a network that was screwed up by former owner and penny-pincher Larry Tisch and is now only starting to recover. In fact, WBBM started falling apart right around the time he took over the network. CBS should have been better off being sold to Ted Turner, who tried to mount a takeover of the network.

After reading blogs’ comments section about this story, you can feel a lot of anger and mistrust with traditional media. On Eric Zorn’s blog, there were nearly 1,000 comments made about the Jacobson story, and most of them were negative. Local television has let them down, and the brain trust doesn’t seem to care.

The network news and the cable news channels are no better, where propaganda is the order of the day. Shoutfests, finger-pointing, and downright mean behavior is common on these shows. And it’s for… you guessed it. Ratings. What does it say when your biggest cable news star is someone everybody hates? (Initials – B.O. Yes, I went there.)

The television and radio businesses keep taking their audiences for granted. Both are losing audience share to other media (the Internet, DVDs, iPods, etc.), and the suits are panicking. They don’t know what to do. So they get desperate. They stunt for ratings. But they backfire, and badly. Remember what happened to that mother of two in Sacramento last year in that radio stunt where she drank all that water? She’s no longer walking with the living.

As a result, radio and television and their executives have a poor image with the majority of the public, especially among young audiences. But as long as that money keeps rolling in – through higher ad rates, unnecessary expansion of local news, and more and more commercials, nothing is going to change. And viewers and listeners are taking their act elsewhere.

From Vince McMahon’s “death” to Chris Benoit’s real death, from Howard McGee’s firing to the cancellation of Studio 60 and Veronica Mars (and the renewals of junk like National Bingo Night), from to high gas prices, to poor transit service to the shameful antics of FCC and the RIAA, one could wonder if the public is getting fed up with being treated like shit. How much more screwing over the public can take before we reach a boiling point? I think we’re close to it, and when it’s reached, it’s not going to be a pretty sight.

Television and radio executives - especially here in Chicago – you better wake up before it’s too late. The next generation of media users are already ignoring you. You not as invincible as you think.

Monday, July 07, 2008

Amy Jacobson sues Channel 2

Former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson has sued CBS Corp. and its owned-and-operated station here in Chicago (WBBM-TV) for airing a video of her last year in the backyard of Craig Stebic's house, wearing nothing but a bikini top and a towel around her waist.

Craig Stebic is the husband of missing woman Lisa Stebic, who vanished over a year ago, and some have supsepcted that he had something to do with her disapearence.

The tape, shot from a neighbor's backyard, led WMAQ to fire Jacobson after eleven years and has claimed the incident has kept her from finding work. She also claims she and her husband were forced to move from her North Side home and move to a cramped apartment across the street.

Jacobson claims the tape was edited in a way "to create the appearance of an ‘illicit’ relationship,” according to the lawsuit.

Named in the suit are station boss Joe Ahern, news director Carol Fowler, anchor Rob Johnson, as well as a Channel 2 reporter, a Northwestern University Assistant Professor, and the next door neighbor who let Channel 2 shoot the video.

T Dog's Think Tank: Local media blows it again (language advisory at bottom of post - hey, I didn't put it there...)

Tuesday, February 17, 2009

Amy Jacobson vs. CBS: Round one goes to Amy

A Cook County judge is allowing a lawsuit filed by former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson against CBS and its O&O here (WBBM-TV) to go forward after the station videotaped her at Craig Stebic's house in July 2007. The tape aired on the station and cost Ms. Jacobson her job. Stebic is a suspect in the disappearence of his wife, who still hasn't been found.

Four of the eight counts in the lawsuit are going forward, including "Intentional inflection of Emotional Distress" and "False Light".

Thought: Not about this case (I've said a lot on that already), but to the linked article and the haphazard way this story was written: Come on Eric Zorn, can you do a better job in writing this? The second paragraph of your story looks like it was written by someone in the sixth grade. You can do better than that!

Thursday, December 04, 2008

Amy Jacobson speaks

Former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson speaks out in candid detail in this interview conducted by Chicago Magazine's Lucinda Hahn. Ms. Jacobson talks about the events that led to a downfall of her career - and her personal life, including the infamous videotape shot by rival WBBM-TV (the management running the station at the time has since departed) while she was at the Stebic household wearing a bikini top and a towel wrapped around her waist.

Wednesday, August 08, 2007

The Viewer Alienation Plan

That's what former Chicago Tribune television critic Steve Johnson said about WBBM-TV in the 1990s, for its tabloid-like newscasts.

Today, the plan seems to be still pretty much intact.

The CBS-owned turned in another pitiful performance in the recently concluded July sweeps according to Nielsen, with WFLD's new 10 p.m. newscast tying it for third among adults 25-54 and finishing ahead of WBBM in adults 18-49. The 10 p.m. newscast in households finished behind a weakened WMAQ-TV and the market leader, WLS-TV, and was down 31 percent in households from a year ago (you think it's time for WBBM to call Carol Marin back? Ratings for her newscasts at 10 were better than what they got now....)

The station's 5 and 6 p.m. newscast also took ratings hits, with the 5 p.m. newscast down 30 percent.

Of course, the Amy Jacobson debacle (not to mention an unpopular anchor change at 5 and 10) contributed to WBBM's downfall, eroding what's left of the station's credibility, which started to evaporate in the mid-1980's, when ratings started declining for WBBM's newscasts.

But there's more to this story about Amy Jacobson and the Stebic household. Ratings for late news, as well as all of local news - are down from a decade ago. People are getting their news from other sources like the Internet, but many- especially younger viewers - are fed up with what passes for local news these days and the select material they use for stories.

For example, a few weeks ago, a 17 year-old was shot in killed in a gang-related shooting in the affluent Wicker Park/Bucktown neighborhood. On the same day, a robbery and shooting took place at the River Oaks Mall in working-class Calumet City, which injured two people.

Guess what story got the most attention? While the Tribune and Sun-Times reported the Wicker Park/Bucktown shooting, it wasn't mentioned on any of the local news stations' websites, or on the air, but the Calumet City shooting received gords of attention.

Think about that. And that's one of the reasons why viewers are tuning out local news. But since news (and the mindless crime stories that come with it) is cheaper to produce than acquiring syndicated programming, and with demand from advertisers continuing to skyrocket -particularly from deep-pocketed political candidates buying ads for next year's elections - it's not going to make much of a difference.

Reel me in: In referring to Steve Johnson's reporting on WBBM-TV, Feder in today's column said that the Tribune used to cover local television. Um, if that is the case, then I assume Phil Rosenthal writes about fishing in the Tribune business section on page 3 every Wednesday, Friday, and Sunday. Mmmmm, that's some good trout....

Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Amy Jacobson out at WMAQ-TV

It looks like the other shoe has dropped: WMAQ-TV has fired reporter Amy Jacobson, for her lapse of judgment and a breach of ethics after she appeared at a pool party at the home of Craig Stebic - the husband of Lisa Stebic, who has been missing for the last two months. Video of her was captured by someone who sent the tape in to rival WBBM-TV.

Meanwhile, on WBBM's 6 p.m. newscast, the station reported that the video had received more than 100,000 hits on its website.

Tuesday, October 14, 2008

Ahern out at Channel 2

One of the deacons at The Church of Tisch has been shown the door.

WBBM-TV General Manger Joe Ahern was fired today after six years at the CBS-owned station, this after they moved into new digs on Washington Blvd. in the Loop and started broadcasting their news in HD.

Replacing Ahern is Bruno Cohen, who is currently GM at CBS' duopoly in Sacramento, KOVR-TV and KMAX-TV.

Ahern was brought in to boost the ratings for the perennial low-rated station in 2002 by conducting talent raids, purchasing more viable programming (including Rachael Ray, Judge Judy, and stealing Dr. Phil from crosstown rival WMAQ-TV), and increasing the station's presence in the community.

But it was all to no avail as WBBM continued to struggle in the ratings, well behind the station he used to work for, ABC-owned WLS-TV.

Ahern recently made headlines for all the wrong reasons from having employees foot the bill for an expensive lunch to marble showers installed in his private bathroom. He was also named in a lawsuit by Amy Jacobson and one member of the Stebic family, for secretly videotaping Jacobson at their house and putting the video on the air. As a result, Jacobson lost her job at WMAQ.

Thought: For anyone who thought Joe Ahern turned WLS-TV into a powerhouse and thought he would do the same for WBBM, you're wrong. Keep in mind when Ahern started at WLS in 1985 succeeding Dennis Swanson, Wheel of Fortune, Jeopardy!, and The Oprah Winfrey Show were already there - not to mention WLS' hiring of familiar faces like Jerry Taft, Linda Yu, Roger Ebert, and John Drury. All of this happened under Swanson's watch. He bought the shows, he hired those personalities, he turned WLS around from a laughingstock to a ratings dynamo. When WLS took over the top spot in local news in March 1986, Ahern was only there a couple of months.

Give Ahern credit though, for keeping WLS on the top of the ratings charts during the twelve years he was there. Though he acquired hit syndicated shows under his watch (Win, Lose, or Draw and Inside Edition), there were misses as well (game show strip The Challengers, and talk shows hosted by Carnie Wilson and Byron Allen.)

But one of the most asinine things he did at WLS was forbade the station's personalities from appearing on local telethon or on WTTW's Chicago Tonight because they aired on competing stations. It's understandable for your talent not to appear on your rivals - but not for a telethon or a non-profit public TV station? Give me a break.

When Ahern arrived at WBBM, he did acquire Judy and Phil - but accomplished little else (he did hire Diann Burns away from WLS. Does that count?) There was no Oprah Winfrey to groom (that was Swanson's job, anyway.) There was no Wheel or Jepoardy! -type of blockbuster for them to air. The station is no better off before he arrived.

If he really wanted to accomplish something, maybe he could have improved both the analog and HD over-the-air signal (which I still can't get) for WBBM. Instead, he did nothing and decided to dump WBBM's signal on Channel 22 on cable for Comcast subscribers. One person from Indiana noted on a local message board that he can get a clearer signal on nearby WSBT-TV in South Bend than over WBBM where he lived. And WSBT is on an UHF channel.

It's a shame America's most watched network is ranked fourth or fifth in the ratings locally. Poor programming decisions have been part of the problem, from whomever decided to schedule the schlocky Real TV at 3 in the afternoon back in 1998 to canceling the 6 p.m. newscast for Hollywood Squares two years later (and the all-time toppers - airing the very horrid Dr. Joy Browne and Dr. Laura afternoon talk shows in 1999 and 2000, respectively.)

And oh yeah, the newscasts. When the station debuted in HD on September 22, the station unveiled what I thought was the worst news set I've ever seen in any market. Are all those monitors behind the anchors really necessary? Or is that the legacy of Joe Ahern in the back? (or perhaps Bill Applegate?)

No, Ahern's legacy will be remembered as a tyrant who made people do what he wants the way he wanted it. Whether it's making you pay for his lunch or his marble shower, he symbolized the boss every employee loved to hate. And to think this man was employed by the same people who employed Bill Kurtis, Walter Jacobson, and Walter Cronkite. But when the ownership changed from the legendary William Paley to Larry "Cheapskate" Tisch, everything started to suffer. And much like the days when Tisch ran CBS - and into the ground mind you - someone had to take the fall when things go wrong. And that's true not only under current CBS ownership, but of all the major broadcast networks and a few broadcast groups (like Sinclair.)

You know what they say: What goes around - comes around. Ahern may be gone - but his stench remains and will take a lot of time to get rid of. With the ghost of Larry Tisch hanging around, it's not going to be easy.

T Dog's Think Tank Archive: The Mess at Channel 2

Friday, July 13, 2007

Jacobson briefed police on Stebic

Chicago held hostage, Day 4....

Former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson briefed Plainfield police on Craig Stebic and did so without telling her bosses, and that's one of thr reasons why she was terminated from the station, according to Phil Rosenthal in today's Tribune.

According to the article, she's had other run-ins with station management, including promising the family of a boy killed in an accident at Midway Airport in December 2005 that she would pool their interview with other stations in the market, but broke it when she decided to hold it as an exclusive.

Meanwhile, the story has garnered some national attention, being discussed on CNN and Fox News' Hannity & Colmes, where Geraldo Rivera criticized Jacobson's actions, and called her dismissal "a no-brainer." (This coming from Mr. Ethics himself.)

Monday, October 22, 2007

WBBM-TV continues to struggle in the ratings

This week's issue of Crain's Chicago Business details the continuing ratings struggle of CBS-owned WBBM-TV. Joe Ahern, who helped rocket competing WLS-TV into a ratings powerhouse in the '80's and '90's, is finding it a difficult task to repeat the same feat at WBBM.

At issue is the station's poorly-rated newscasts, which places behind not only ABC-owned WLS and NBC-owned WMAQ-TV in the time period, but also CW affiliate WGN-TV and Fox-owned WFLD-TV in a few time periods. The newscasts aren't delivering viewers to CBS' prime-time lineup, which ranked behind other CBS-owned stations and CBS affiliates in most major markets.

At a time when formerly moribund Tiffany network affiliates such as CBS-owned KCBS-TV in Los Angeles and New Vision Broadcasting's WIAT in Birmingham, Ala. are finally starting to show some life, WBBM continues to go downward. In fact, one week last month, WIAT drew higher ratings in prime than WBBM did. Yes, that WIAT - Channel 42, or the former WBMG-TV, whose 10 p.m newscasts once finished behind reruns of Sanford & Son and The Andy Griffith Show.

Shows that are talked about most in Chicago are Dancing With The Stars and Desperate Housewives; CBS programming such as Survivor are hardly talked about at all.

To be fair, CBS prime-time traditionally has not fared well in Chicago. In the 1986-87 season for example, WLS' prime lineup was number one despite the fact that ABC finished a distant third in the ratings with a schedule that featured such sinkers as The Charmings and Life With Lucy (Lucille Ball's comeback sitcom - and you thought Cavemen was bad.) CBS, which finished second behind a dominant NBC nationally, finished a distant third in Chicago.

In May 2007, WBBM finished fourth in total-day ratings, just like it did in the May 1987 book.

WLS still has The Oprah Winfrey Show, Wheel of Fortune, and Jeopardy! in its lineup - the very same lineup the station had when Ahern ran the station. And now, like then, WLS dominates the ratings, and not even the introduction of the Local People Meters in 2005 - which measures demographic information on an overnight basis - has changed that.

Thanks to corporate cousin CBS, the station has upgraded its afternoon lineup, which once showcased outdated programs such as Real TV and Hard Copy and reruns of Who's the Boss? The station currently runs Rachael Ray, Judge Judy and Dr. Phil in early fringe. However, that syndicated lineup has not delivered viewers to its newscasts, particularly at 6 and 10 p.m.

Also not helping the station's image is last summer's fiasco involving former WMAQ-TV anchor Amy Jacobson, in which WBBM secretly taped her in the backyard of Craig Stebic's house in a swimsuit. Mr. Stebic, of course, is the husband of Amy Stebic, who has been missing for several months.

Add to that the station's over-the-air signal woes and a channel number on Comcast even higher than PBS affiliate WYIN in Northwest Indiana and you have a recipe for disaster.

The situation is just as bad now as it was in the early 1970's, when the station's newscasts were fourth in the ratings (the average share was 8), and Walter Jacobson and Bill Kurtis came in the door with the working newsroom as a backdrop, the minicams and ENG (Electronic News Gathering) and changed everything. But those two and any new revolutionary concepts aren't walking through that newsroom door anytime soon.

But what is coming is a brand new street-side studio at State and Washington, which is set to open next year. The station hopes that the new studio will be a promotional platform for everything CBS, including its local news programming (no word on whether or not if the newscasts will be shot in HD when the new studio becomes operable.) WBBM has been broadcasting at its McClurg Court studios since 1956.

And on the good side, the station has increased its share of revenues and its' 10 p.m. newscast no longer finishes behind entertainment programming in households.

CBS management apparently is willing to be patient with Ahern and the rest of station management, particularly with the new studio coming. But are they really being patient? Or are they writing WBBM off as a lost cause? After all, an O&O group is the most profitable of any part of the network. Only time - and from the look of things, a whole lot of it - will tell.

Monday, January 11, 2010

T Dog's Grab Bag... News and Notes

As of this writing, the "Groovy" is being dropped from "Grab Bag" title - but it is still newsworthy nonetheless: 

...The Winter Television Critics Association press tour is currently taking place in Pasadena, Calif. Among the non-Jay Leno/Conan O'Brien items going on:

- Simon Cowell made an appearance at TCA today to officially announce his departure from American Idol  to focus on the his new X-Factor talent show, which will also appear on Fox. It is scheduled to debut in 2011.

- Fox has also renewed hit freshmen series Glee for a second season.

- CBS has officially canceled Three Rivers, but is introducing a new Friday night medical drama Miami Medical. Also, Rules of Engagement will return to CBS' Monday night line-up soon, replacing Accidentally On Purpose, which moves to Wednesday to replace Gary Unmarried, which now goes on hiatus.


- NBC has picked up eighteen pilots for developement, and is in talks to develop a Law and Order series set in L.A. (but yet, they cut Southland loose. Typical NBC...) Also, America's Got Talent has replaced David Hasslehoff with Howie Mandel as the third judge on the show. This leaves Piers Morgan as the only person associated with the show from the start, which consisted of judges Hasslehoff, Brandy Norwood (since replaced by Sharon Osbourne) and host Regis Phillbin (since replaced by Jerry Springer - and in turn, replaced by Nick Cannon.) Talent returns this summer.

- Speaking of NBC, its New York City station has clearly seen better days. WNBC-TV's newscast finished third in households at 11 p.m. last month (thanks to Leno, of course), and in essence, letting former perennial doormat WCBS-TV finish first for its newscast - for the first time since the early 1990's.


Meanwhile, here's what's going on locally...

- WLS-AM dropped Amy Jacobson from Roe Conn's program on Friday. As first reported by Chicagoland Radio and Media, Ms. Jacobson was being moved to a reporter position with the radio station in anticipation of adding Cisco Cotto to Mr. Conn's show, effective today. Cotto comes from WIND-AM, where he was paired with John Howell.

Last month, WLS-AM severed ties with WLS-TV anchor Ron Magers, who did news reports and made contributions to Conn's program.


- Fox-owned WFLD-TV has added Sun-Times columnist Bill Zwecker and sports anchor Lou Canellis to its news team. This is Zwecker's second tour of duty with WFLD, where he was from 2000-03. He left for CBS-owned WBBM-TV where he contributed to the station's morning show from 2004-09. Zwecker will be the entertainment reporter for WFLD, mainly focusing on American Idol.

- On a sad note, WVON's Wesley South died Saturday at his Hyde Park home. He was 95. Born in Oklahoma, Mr. Smith came to WVON in 1963 and hosted a very popular call-in talk show simply titled Hotline, which ran for several years. The program was especially instrumental in the days after the assassination of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, which sparked rioting on Chicago's West Side.  He and Pervis Spann teamed up to buy WXOL-AM in the mid-1970's (in a split-signal arrangement with WCEV at 1450AM) and flipped the format to all-talk in 1986. (WVON's call letters were actually still at the 1390 frequency until 1984 when then-owner Gannett changed them to WGCI-AM. Meserrs. South and Spann reclaimed the WVON calls and moved them to the 1450 frequency shortly thereafter.)

The wake will be this Saturday at Good Shepard on 5700 S. Prairie in Chicago at 10 a.m., with the funeral  taking place shortly thereafter.

Thursday, July 12, 2007

WBBM, WMAQ drop the gloves

The gloves are off in a battle over the videotape that cost a local television reporter her job.

According to the Sun-Times' Rob Feder, the general managers of the stations involved- Joe Ahern of CBS-owned WBBM-TV and Larry Wert of NBC-owned WMAQ-TV were involved in a shouting match over the phone Tuesday, regarding WBBM's decision to air a "misleading and inneudo-filled version" of the videotape of now-former WMAQ reporter Amy Jacobson at the Stebic house.

The brouhaha here is being compared to the often nasty feuds between Fox News and CNN.

Television stations involved in turmoil with each other is nothing new. In 1989, two staffers at a Tampa-St. Petersburg television station were involved in a computer tampering scandal, hacking computers at crosstown rival. Terry Cole, a news director for then-ABC affiliate WTSP-TV (now with CBS), hired news manager Michael Shapiro away from then-CBS affiliate WTVT (now a Fox O&O). Shapiro managed to break into his former employers' newsroom database using a modem in his home with Cole's knowledge. Both men were arrested, fired from WTSP, and sentenced to probation by a Florida court.

Had the recent controversy brought more viewers to WBBM-TV? According to Nielsen household ratings, the station's 10 p.m. newscast on Tuesday averaged only a 2.2 rating.

Channeling Bill Kurtis and Walter Jacobson (or Lester Holt and Linda MacLennan...)

The humanoids respond: Click here to read reactions readers sent in to the Sun-Times...

Wednesday, June 24, 2009

WBBM-TV plans newscast overhaul

CBS O&O WBBM-TV plans to overhaul its news operation. Again.

According to this article at B&C
, WBBM General manager Bruno Cohen plans to once again remake the station's newscasts, which ratingswise, lag behind others in the market.

Cohen, who came from sister station KOVR-TV in Sacramento, said the station is underperforming in many time slots. Despite the fact the station airs nationally top-rated syndicated and network fare, WBBM has not performed well in the ratings locally. This is not a new problem: for most of the last 20 years, the station had lagged behind NBC's WMAQ-TV and market leader WLS-TV, an ABC O&O - not to mention Tribune's CW affiliate WGN-TV and Independent WCIU-TV at times.

Cohen didn't offer any details, but he hopes the talent in place at the station gels in the right way. Cohen plans to offer a different presentation of news from other Chicago TV news outlets.

Ratings sagged further after a scandal developed after the station taped former WMAQ reporter Amy Jacobson at the house of Craig Stebic, who is a suspect in the disapperence of his wife Lisa. The station aired the tape, and was roundly critized in journalism circles for the decision.

Recently, the station made changes in its news and syndicated programming lineup - though questionable decisions. Rob Johnson is now anchoring the news solo at 6 and 10 p.m. , with former co-anchor Anne State now a reporter. The station laid off several staffers, incluidng long-time station faces Joanie Lum and Howard Sudsberry and discontinued weekend morning newscasts.

As for its syndicated lineup, the station moved Judge Judy - who recently won the first-run syndication crown for the third straight week - to 4 p.m. for a better news lead-in while Dr. Phil moved to 3 p.m. The station decided not to renew Rachael Ray, which moves to WGN-TV at 10 a.m beginning September 14. Ray had been airing at 2 p.m. for the last three years, where it has not had much success.

The station does have some things going for it - since the switch to all-digital on June 12, the station's over-the-air signal has improved (though some homes still are having trouble.) Before, the over-the-air digital signal has been hard to receive. On the same date, Comcast moved WBBM's channel position from Channel 22 to Channel 2. With an improved reach, ratings for the station are expected to inch upward, while continuing to clean up the mess Joe Ahern left behind.

Some experts in the past blamed the station's ratings woes on the station's traditionally inferior analog signal on Channel 2 - though it did not stop WBBM from dominating the news ratings from the mid-1970's to the mid-1980's, when Bill Kurtis and Walter Jacobson were the star anchors.

In fact, Channel 2 wasn't even WBBM-TV's original channel allotment. Until July 1953, WBBM was Channel 4 in Chicago - but was moved to Channel 2 so it wouldn't interfere with WTMJ-TV in Milwaukee, which moved from Channel 3 to Channel 4 - so it wouldn't interfere with WKZO-TV (now WWMT) in Grand Rapids (which was Channel 3.)

Filed under "Church of Tisch".

Thursday, September 27, 2007

T Dog's Think Tank: We are pissed

The FCC came to Chicago last Thursday, for public hearings on media consolidation and diversity.

The whole thing was webcast for the world to hear on the FCC's website, and yours truly hooked it up to listen for eight hours. Eight loooong hours...

The FCC was there at Operation PUSH, and if you listed to the webcast- hell, you'd think Bears QB Rex Grossman was one of the commissioners. Grossman and the FCC have a lot in common - both apparently suck at their job.

We're just about as happy with the media as we are with the CTA. Both are run by pomous windbags who don't seem to care about the public. And both are in broken-down condition.

Media consolidation over the past decade has been blamed for the rise in taseless programming in prime-time (mainly of the reality kind) to layoffs at media outlets, from less local programming to voicetracking at radio stations.

All of this and more was complained about Thursday night. With the event held at Operation PUSH, you know racial overtones were the order of the day. Of course, with Chicago being one of the most segregated cities in the nation, this came as no surprise as the issue of race (from the Grant Park Children's Museum to O.J. to McNabb to the Jena 6) dominated the headlines all week.

Many complained about how the local media treats the areas of the city's West and South Sides, both with almost predominately African-American neighborhoods.

On the local news, it is not uncommon to see it start off with stories about crime from these parts of town, which has been the case for decades. Every time you turn on the news, or log on to the city's two newspapers' websites, you see stories about who got murdered, shot, or raped. One murder reported on one of the papers' websites recently even got the location wrong. What is the point of this? To drive web traffic? For TV ratings?

You are correct, Oh great one!

And the media bias even extends into the South Suburbs,which are being portrayed as "economically struggling", even though Flossmoor, Olympia Fields, Richton Park, Country Club Hills, and Matteson are among Chicago suburbs with the highest incomes, with many of those high-income earners African-Americans. Is racism at work here? Well, duh?

Then there was the issue of minority hiring at these outlets and the way minorities are treated there. One lady who spoke at the hearing claimed that she is being racially harassed at a TV station she works and had to file a complaint with the EEOC.

Another issue was minority ownership. Chicago is the largest major market with the fewest minority owners in the country. The only black radio station owner in town is Melody Spann-Cooper, who owns Talk outlet WVON-AM, and broadcasts on 1690-AM through a sub-leasing deal with Clear Channel. The historic Chicago Defender is on life support and now run from Detroit. The new media incentives on the paper's website heralded by publisher Roland Martin (such as video and podcasts) were disassembled after he left. Many are calling for the restoration of the minority tax certificate, which was abolished in 1995.

There were a host of other issues as well. There were complaints about radio, particularly with many local independent artists and labels, slamming local stations for refusing them airplay. One even charged the industry with payola, with an artist claiming that a local mixer at a station was charging them $25,000 for one play. Others complained about the same songs being played repeatedly and too many commercials. Even old-school rapper KRS-One called out WGCI.

And to top it off, radio is giving talentless hack Britney Spears a shot to return to her former glory. You know you smell a rat when her single Gimme More has been declared a "success" by a dying medium. You don't know which one is more desperate. Even in her decrepit condition, she can get on the radio while more deserving independent artists can't. That rat must be paying for Spears' freight.

And yes, there were complaints about cable TV, from lack of a la carte to how minorities are portrayed on BET and VH1.

Hispanic broadcasters didn't go unscathed, either. One Hispanic individual complained about the domination Univision had over the Spanish-speaking market; others complained about NBC Universal's ownership of Telemundo, and layoffs at its WSNS-TV in Chicago.

And there was the subject of the Iraq War. Many complained about how news have become nothing but propaganda machines - not allowing contradicting views of the war. Many want the Fairness Doctrine restored.

And there were more complaints, from the lightning to how many minutes people got to speak.

But there were defenders of the media there as well. Many TV and radio stations trotted out their employees and charitable organizations that works with these companies. Former WGCI boss Marv Dyson blamed radio's problems not on consolidation, but on the "me too" attitude that plagues the medium. He supports consolidation, but not until a significant amount of minority ownership has been achieved.

But one thing that irked yours truly were the number of those praising the corporations that owned these media outlets - people who are truly hacks. The lone exception was WGN-AM host John Williams, who made a good point about the radio station losing its localism if it was forced to be sold off .

As you know, The Tribune Co. is in the process of being sold to billionaire Sam Zell, and he needs FCC approval to keep his properties - WGN-AM, WGN-TV, and the Chicago Tribune - intact. While the cross-ownership rules bar one company from owning a radio, TV and a newspaper in one market, Tribune's combo was grandfathered in - they owned the properties before 1975 when the rule took effect.

Zell got support from many prominent Illinois politicians, including Democratic senator Dick Durbin, and chances that the Tribune will be busted up is unlikely.

The interesting thing about the meetings Thursday is what wasn't brought up. The XM/Sirius merger for one - how is this going to effect customers of satellite radio? What about the shoddy reporting of the Sun-Times- who like the rest of the media- don't give a damn about Chicago. Who else could give Jay Mariotti a prominent position at the paper so he can use it for personal attacks?

Or WGCI's firing of morning personality Howard McGee for syndicated lout Steve Harvey? A clear example of getting rid of a local voice for one from New York and one who doesn't know much about Chicago, despite having a local show here in the mid 1990's. McGee's firing came despite the fact he was number one in adults 18-34 demo for his morning show.

And of course, what about former WMAQ-TV reporter Amy Jacobson appearing at the Stebic house last July wearing a bikini, caught on tape by rival WBBM-TV, which was there in the neighbor's yard only to embarrass her. WMAQ didn't do itself no favors, by firing Jacobson.

XM/Sirius aside, all of this demonstrates that Chicago is sick of big media, their antics, and the way they treat our communities. We are tired, mad as hell, and we are not going to take it anymore!

The sad part about all this is the FCC (at least the commissioners not named Adlestein or Copps), looked like they were hardly interested. They acted like we were a bunch of whiny individuals who need to get a life.

Bullshit. Chicago's residents - from all walks of life - all colors, all religions - want better from the companies who serve us through the public airwaves - the airwaves WE OWN. The FCC mission is to make decisions regarding telecommunications that serve the public interest, not major corporations.

While the FCC is hell bent on answering for right-wing groups like the Parents Television Council on indecency, it won't do a damn thing for anyone else, particularly minorities, who clearly lack representation in media and is a more pressing issue. You guys are not doing your job.

Let me cut to the point: either do your job to serve the public interest, or we'll elect politicians in 2008 who will no doubt replace you.


To listen to some of the testimony from the hearing (and KRS-One calling out WGCI), click here (thanks to StopBigMedia.com)

Sunday, September 16, 2007

The season in review, Part II

Continuing our look back at the season that was....

Sam Zell wins Tribune auction (Apr. 2, 2007)


- The biggest media story in Chicago so far this year.

WLS-TV leader featured by Sun-Times (April 4, 2007)

- This post features The T Dog Media Blog Gold Club, a list of dominant local TV stations in their market, which includes WLS-TV in Chicago.

Let's Get into it. (Apr. 8, 2007)

- Let's not.

Is anyone really surprised? (Apr. 12, 2007)

- I wasn't, but a lot of people was.

Shut up already, Damn! (Apr. 12, 2007)

- The Imus controversy brings out the worse - and the mouth - in everybody.

Read This (Apr. 13, 2007)


- From Mark Roberts, who hits the nail right on the head...

Sniff 'n' S*** (May 3, 2007)

- My views on the state of the sitcom and the Blackhawks. At least there's some hope for one of them...

Grow Up, Chicago (May 19, 2007)

- And yes, we still act like a dysfunctional bunch of buffoons. No offense.

Bachelor's a hit again... Aw hell, naw! (May 22, 2007)


- Should we thank Hillary for this? So much for empowering women...

Howie Mandel heads back to daytime (June 11, 2007)

- A short bit on the history of syndicated game shows.

Mr. McMahon is dead. Dewey Defeated Truman, too (June 12, 2007)

- The dumbest wrestling angle of all time. Made worst when there was a real-life death in the WWE with tragic consequences.

Stupid is as Stupid does (Jun. 16, 2007)


- The top story on June 16, 2007 according to Channel 2's website: A baseball brawl at Wrigley Field. Slow news day?

Must Flee TV (Jun. 27, 2007)


- White Sox lose, viewers flee. Finally, something the CW and My Network TV can beat in the ratings that is not named the Blackhawks.

WTBS to become Peachtree TV (Jul. 1, 2007)

- A detailed history on WTBS and the future of the station, as it changes to WPCH-TV and splits from cable TBS.

NBC cutting originals on Fridays? (Jul. 5, 2007)

- Talking abut Friday night TV, where there hasn't been much to talk about lately.

The craziness ends here (Jul. 6, 2007)

- Howard McGee is axed at WGCI and Tom Joyner may be on his way out at WVAZ.

National Bingo Night to return? WTF? (Jul. 8, 2007)


- Ratings don't mean anything anymore. Do they? (If not, then cancel American Idol.)

What was she thinking? (Jul. 10, 2007)


- Amy Jacobson wasn't thinking. Neither was Channel 2. And Chicago journalism jumps the shark yet again.

Local media blows it again (Jul. 15, 2007)

- Another in our "blows it again" series...

Tom Snyder tributes (Jul. 31, 2007)

- A look back at the career of Tom Snyder.

The Viewer Alienation Plan (Aug. 8, 2007)

- Mostly applies to Channel 2, but you can slap that label to all TV news operations in town. Who watches this crap anymore?

Merv Griffin dies (Aug. 12, 2007)


- A true class act passes.

Twista fires back at Pflager (Aug. 15, 2007)

- And Chicago media hits yet another low point.

Get out of town, Harvey (Aug. 16, 2007)


- And Chicago media hits yet another low point. Did I just say that?

Is the off-network sitcom dead? (Aug. 20, 2007)

- Yes.

Nine FM's not an alternative (Sept. 1, 2007)

- And perhaps that's why the station has no ratings or no advertising.

Another Chicago message board shut (Sept. 6, 2007)

- Even Charlie Brown thought this post was a snooze...

The Cutout Classics:

- A Think Tank on Grey's Anatomy and the WWE called Blew the Limo, Capsized the Ferry, was posted on June 25 and pulled hours later after news on Chris Benoit and his family's death became public. The Think Tank was never reposted.

- A post about Joel Hollander destroying CBS Radio was deleted after I criticized Felicia Middlebrooks and somebody in the comments section roasted yours truly on it (my response was too awkward and decided just to blow the post up)

- A post on the Blackhawks was deleted because it contained too much salty language.

- A comment left on the B96 Summer Bash post was cut after the poster ripped yours truly and I told her where to go. To Philadelphia.