Fox fumbles on McPherrin move

Corey McPherrin

Corey McPherrin

Just when you thought they couldn't screw things up any worse at WFLD-Channel 32, they've done it again.

After letting Corey McPherrin twist in the wind for more than a week, bosses of the Fox-owned station have decided to redeploy the former sportscaster and current "Good Day Chicago" host as solo anchor of the noon newscast.

But rather than announce it officially and allow McPherrin an opportunity to comment on his fate, they hurriedly leaked the news late Thursday to the website TVSpy and ran back in their foxholes for cover. "The move is supposed to take place in December with McPherrin also reporting for the station’s 9 p.m. newscast," TVSpy's Kevin Eck reported. Continue reading

Feder photos: Anchors for the ages

Linda MacLennan, Bill Kurtis, Carol Marin, Ron Magers, Mary Ann Childers and John Drury (1993)

Linda MacLennan, Bill Kurtis, Carol Marin, Ron Magers, Mary Ann Childers and John Drury (1993)

Twenty years ago, I invited the anchors of Chicago's three 10 o'clock newscasts to assemble for a group photo at the Museum of Broadcast Communications. The gathering was captured by the great Sun-Times photographer Rich Hein.

There they were: Bill Kurtis and Linda MacLennan of CBS-owned WBBM-Channel 2; Ron Magers and Carol Marin of NBC-owned WMAQ-Channel 5; and John Drury and Mary Ann Childers of ABC-owned WLS-Channel 7.

The picture was taken to illustrate a Sunday spread about local TV news that included lots of fancy charts and graphs about viewership patterns, competitive strategies and stuff like that. But as it turned out, none of what I'd spent months researching and writing mattered. The photo became the story.

Continue reading

Guild vows to fight Sun-Times layoffs

ChicagoSun-TimesThe Chicago Newspaper Guild warned Tuesday it would "exhaust all legal options" to block additional layoffs among the editorial ranks of the Sun-Times.

“Any further layoffs in the editorial department on the part of Sun-Times Media will be at its own peril," executive director Craig Rosenbaum said in a statement posted on the Guild website. "Moreover, from a practical standpoint, I really cannot see how the Sun-Times can put out a viable product with any further layoffs in its editorial department.” Continue reading

Lisinski turns into 'Jax' at US 99.5

Joel Lisinski (aka Jax)

Joel Lisinski (aka Jax)

Ladies and gentlemen, here's . . . Jax!

The new evening personality at WUSN FM 99.5 introduced himself Monday to listeners of the CBS Radio country music station simply as Jax.

Although his real name is Joel Lisinski — and he was known on his last radio job in Milwaukee as Joel Sheridan — Jax has been christened as his nom de air from 7 p.m. to midnight Monday through Friday.

When Lisinski's hiring was announced last month, US99.5 program director Jeff Kapugi solicited suggestions from the staff for a new name. Continue reading

Jewish sportscasters in the spotlight

Disc JewkeysI've been a fan of the Chicago Jewish News since it started, but this week's cover story on Chicago's Jewish sports talk show hosts may carry its worst headline ever.

Disc Jewkeys? Give me a break.

That unforgivable clunker aside, Pauline Dubkin Yearwood's profile of six prominent local sportscasters offers some unique insights into why talking about sports on the radio seems to attract so many nice Jewish boys (you should pardon the expression).

Here's what some of them told Yearwood about how their ethnic heritage figures into their work: Continue reading

Feder flashback: My friend Walter

Walter Cronkite

Walter Cronkite

Each year just before his birthday on Nov. 4, I would send Walter Cronkite a tie. And each year on that day, the anchorman of "The CBS Evening News" would wear the tie on the air before his audience of millions.

Walter and I kept up that tradition all through my high school years and well into college. It was his personal signal to the fan club I had started in his honor when I was 14 years old.

"Cronkite had good reasons for embracing Feder's club," historian Douglas Brinkley wrote in Cronkite, his 2012 biography of the anchorman. "The mimeographed newsletter was an excellent way to build a loyal fan base in those pre-Internet days. It was like a Facebook page or a Twitter account before its time. It was one more confirmation that by 1972, Cronkite had become part of the popular culture."

The Walter Cronkite Fan Club ran its course, but we maintained our friendship for the rest of his life. Today would have been his 97th birthday. Continue reading

TV Academy adds six to Silver Circle

Carol Cooling-Kopp, longtime special events director at NBC-owned WMAQ-Channel 5 who died last week, will be inducted posthumously into the Silver Circle of the Chicago chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.

Also named Silver Circle honorees for 2014 were: Jerry Bryant, founder and producer of "JBTV," the longest running music television show in the country; Carole B. Cartwright, former manager of community programs at NBC 5 and former general manager of Chicago City Colleges' WYCC-Channel 20; Rich King, sports anchor at Tribune Broadcasting WGN-Channel 9; Mike Leonard, former Chicago-based reporter for NBC's "Today"; and Larry Yellen, news anchor and reporter at Fox-owned WFLD-Channel 32. Continue reading

Trapped in elevator, WGN host goes on

Steve Dale

Steve Dale

Did you hear the one about the radio host who got stuck in an elevator?

That's what happened to Steve Dale on his way to hosting his Sunday morning "Pet World" show on Tribune Broadcasting news/talk WGN AM 720.

With the help of "Sunday Spin" host Rick Pearson and engineer Bob Ferguson, Dale wound up hosting his full 30-minute show via cell phone while trapped inside his Wrigleyville apartment building elevator. "This is as live and local as it gets," he said.  Continue reading