Archive for May, 2009

No Fox 66 for most of ‘Idol’ finale

SINCE WE ARE TALKING OFF-AIR STATIONS: Just a reminder that WQLN-TV & FM will be off the air for about six hours today beginning at 8:00 AM while they install a transfer switch for their emergency generator system. WQLN is the lead station for the area’s Emergency Alert System.

YourErie.com is reporting that the digital transmitter for WFXP finally came back online just minutes before the winner was announced for the 2009 American Idol season, the nation’s perennial ratings leader. If over-the-air and distant cable viewers were keeping an eye on when the station came back online, they would have seen the announcement of Kris Allen as the new American Idol.

Here’s the release from YourErie.com, posted at 10:11 Wednesday evening:

The transmitter for WFXP Fox 66 went down just before 8 pm Wednesday, May 20th. The transmitter was back up and running just before 10 pm. The problem was an electrical issue that was through no fault of station employees or management and caused through forces beyond our control. We do appreciate your patience as Fox 66 engineers worked endlessly to identify the problem with the transmitter.

Time Warner Cable customers were able to continually receive the Fox 66 signal due to a fiber link that directly connects the station signal with Time Warner.

Viewers who receive the signal through other ways were without service.

In order to rebroadcast the season finale of American Idol, WFXP would have to receive permission from Fox Network.

If permission is granted and WFXP rebroadcasts the show, you will be notified ahead of time on YourErie.com, WJET Action News 24, and on WFXP Fox 66.

You can just feel the stress the management and engineers were navigating as they were down during the most important hours (except for the Super Bowl) of their broadcast year.

Editors’ note: much thanks to Dan Rapela, watching our back from Metro D.C., for the tweet alert while I was switching between the Cavs/Magic on TNT and Idol on Fox.

What the…Buzz?

When we talk around here about politicians and other public figures leveraging the new media, we’re not exactly talking about this. Anthony “Buzz” Andrezeski, in his run for County Executive, has turned to talking to the voters directly through Christian Lestat Bussiere and his Spotlight TV.

Both the content and the context of these videos have become the biggest controversy of today’s Municipal Primary election.

Even though our media-saturated culture isn’t shocked by too much we view, it was a jaw-dropping moment for me when in a video supposedly created to “stand up” for county controller Sue Weber, Andrezeski repeats a rumor about Weber and her private activities that supposedly came from the current County Executive, Mark DiVecchio. Beyond the salacious, what Andrezeski is talking about in the at least nine videos are rambling accusations, alleged conspiracies, and nasty name-calling.

Here’s one of the more tame videos, where Buzz answers his critics from the media and blogosphere:

Then there’s the context of Spotlight TV, where the open to most of the videos is a loop of a clip from the drunk Erie Cop video to the tune of “do the spanky leg.” Citizen journalism is new to Christian Lestat Bussiere, whose YouTube user name is “ErieParties“. He’s more comfortable as a Jeff Spicoli wannabe sharing his weekend exploits than trying to be the next Carol Pella.

Buzz said that he wanted to reach out to young people, to a new audience to make his case why he should be the next County Executive. Dude, this is not how you do it. He could have created his own YouTube channel, had a friend with a camera help him make quality position videos with good sound and no profanity. He could have Twittered before each public appearance and Facebook friended the entire county.

Yeah, whatever.

Poll: how relevant are media unions in the current environment

I must say that I’m a little perturbed about results of last week’s poll, which asked whether folks would be willing to pay for premium local content online. The “No” beat “Maybe” 60-40 with no one voting “Yes” with any certainty.

Now I know that these polls are not scientific and may have no relevance to what would happen when reality hits, but what frustrates me is that the same people who are not willing to pay for any content on the web are the ones paying $90 per month for cable/satellite, $75/month for cell service and $2.99 for a ring tone! Add that to the fact that the majority in an earlier poll refuse to click or even look at online advertising and you have an untenable business model for financing the production of content on the web.

Moving on: in the last couple days the NABET union representing workers at WSEE has taken a beating on the comments here at The Press and Tower for their apparent lack of protection of those jobs that are being eliminated this month. We have yet to hear first hand from union representatives regarding what role they did play in ensuring severance and other measures.

Meanwhile, let’s ask the question about the power of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians, the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists, The Newspaper Guild, and others.

Given the massive media layoffs nationally and locally, on a scale of one to three, how relevant are media unions currently?

  • 1: the unions are totally impotent in the current media environment and are getting rolled over by media owners (65%, 22 Votes)
  • 2: the unions are arranging for some protections for current and laid off members (21%, 7 Votes)
  • 3: the unions are totally engaged in the process despite the downturn and are saving members from conditions that could be much worse (14%, 5 Votes)

Total Voters: 34

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Deep Background for May 17-23, 2009

What can we say? I had a feeling that this would be a big week for Erie media, but I honestly had no clue how momentous it would be.

Not only have we been trying and talking about the elimination of almost all on and off-air personnel at WSEE, but we haven’t even broached the whole Buzz Andrezewski/Spotlight TV debacle!

As always, your support and participation in this blog is greatly appreciated and never taken for granted. If you need to go really “deep background,” as I’m afraid several folks are thinking that way even now, you can message me in confidence at joel@nataliemedia.com or DM @pressandtower on Twitter.

BTW, I hope that you are following me on Twitter, because as I wrote earlier in the week, that’s where you’ll get up-to-the minute media news that may or may not appear on posts on the blog.

Embrace the chaos!

Not a merger, but a massacre

We are watching Darwinian Theory play out before our eyes here in Erie television.

Lilly Broadcasting has determined that the essence of what is WSEE is too weak to survive, so it is being eliminated from the species. If Gerry Weiss’s reporting from this morning turns out to be true, any strong elements left from the old WSEE will be transferred to the Alpha Male, WICU, in a quest for survival of the fittest.

As we reported Thursday, nine people who worked off camera at WSEE were given their notices that their employment would cease by June 1st. Now it is apparent from comments here at The Press and Tower that many if not all on-camera personnel will also go away, in direct contradiction to what Brian Lilly told the newspaper last month. What’s also apparent is that the NABET local here is impotent on these moves.

The sticking points on who stays or goes on the on-air side is the existence of personal contracts. It seems likely, but we can’t be sure, that each station will have separate identifiable anchor teams. There are also the tasks that the 35 crew, including the very popular island-shirt-wearing Joey Stevens, does for the CBS Caribbean satellite feed that need to be taken into account.

The massacre doesn’t end with the staff. The better programming schedule will also go to WICU, according to sources quoted by the paper. Most egregious is the proposed move of the “Wheel of Fortune”/”Jeopardy” franchise to channel 12, in exchange for a 7:00 newscast and “Two and a Half Men.” It doesn’t matter that ICU has poorly programmed Prime Access for decades since dropping its own 7 PM Hotline News, they get rewarded the big ratings from Wheel/Jeopardy in the spirit of the AIG bonuses.

Finally, as we’ve conjectured, WSEE will run a recycled newscast at 11 PM that it airs live on its CW affiliate. I guess if there’s any accidents on I-90 or fires, they’ll just have to take the live show from WICU. It’s easy to predict that evolution will lead to just one live cast on two or all three channels at 11:00.

It is difficult to not get emotional when you see friends and colleagues who have given blood, sweat, and tears to a job and a company get tossed aside. But this scenario is playing out not only in media outlets across the country, but at companies throughout our region as well. We may as well be talking about the closing of IP or GAF, however the difference here to our P&T readers is that it is happening to our family, the Erie media family. Plus, it comes after the 9% workforce buyouts at the Erie Times-News, and the decimating of the radio staffs at Connoisseur and Citadel.

It just hurts.

Decision day for WICU/WSEE merger

UPDATED: Lilly Broadcasting apparently has no place for the off-air employees of WSEE. The gist of continuing individual meetings with WSEE employees is that all non-on camera personnel are being released by Lilly Broadcasting before June 1st.

In my opinion, this is the end of what makes WSEE an individual or independent television station. Gone is the competitive spirit of three newsrooms. Gone is the individual and sometimes award-winning excellence shown by commercial production and promotion departments. Perhaps even gone is the drive to shoot things a little bit better, light sets more artfully, and the ability to create a product that stood on its own.

I don’t say this as a slap on the remaining hard working production staff at WICU, but given the workload those folks will be under very shortly, quality will inevitably suffer.
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Drinking the Twitter Kool-Aid

While prepping for this post, I looked up all of the P&T posts I tagged with “Twitter“. I found a series of comments by Danny Lucas on a post from only four months ago educating us about the phenomenon and benefits of Twitter.

I have to admit that from the little I knew of Twitter, I didn’t like it. As much as I love my friends, I didn’t necessarily need to know when and where they were going to lunch, or what show they were watching at the airport. I didn’t get it.

Fast forward four months, and I’m hooked.

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