GMA Gets Nervous as NBC's Today's Ratings Trend North

Looks like the Today Show's surge in the ratings is making the folks over at ABC's Good Morning America a bit nervous.

GMA still has the lead in total viewers, but NBC is winning the demo race and that has GMA staffers a bit worried.

An ABC insider explained to Page Six, “ ‘GMA’ may still be on top, but the mood behind the scenes is as if they are under siege. ABC News president James Goldston has been making regular appearances in the control room, and there are regular meetings with the anchors trying to stem any further slide.”

A second source added, “This is the war of all television — the morning shows are the most competitive of all, so if the ratings drop, it’s always treated seriously. We may be going into a slower summer season, but people are working harder than ever.”

Sources tell us that ABC News execs have been trying to figure out how “Today” has been able to close back in on “GMA” after holding a lead of more than 250,000 viewers last year. Theories include Matt Lauer “being more likable again because people have forgiven him [for the Ann Curry debacle],” and fears that “GMA” may have become too “tabloidy and showbiz-led.” A source added “GMA” has “gone too far with the entertainment themes that have made the show a success.”

Who Says you Can't Make Money on the Internet?

Katie Couric is staying on at Yahoo and is getting a raise to boot.

Not only a raise, but a $4 million raise.

Yahoo, which obviously has money to burn, is kicking Couric's annual package from upwards of $6 million to $10 million. 

A spokesman for Couric confirmed that the perky one would be continuing with Yahoo, but neither Couric's flack or Yahoo would give additional specifics about the deal or about Couric’s compensation.

Couric signed with Yahoo in late 2013 to become its global news anchor. Two years later, we still don't know what that is, but it obviously pays well. 

 Hiring Couric was an effort by CEO Marissa Mayer to convince advertisers that Yahoo is a media destination. 

And while internet surfers haven't really bought into that, someone is falling for it, because Couric is laughing all the way to the bank. 

In a May interview with Fortune, Mayer called the Couric hire “a very profitable and good investment.”

Really?

She added: “But I will say, to me it was really more about raising that journalistic standard, getting our name out there as people who really want to participate in news and participate in the dialogue in a different way than just republishing content.”

H/T ReCode

Closing Arguments in the N-Word Trial Start Today

The testimony in the case of the former WTXF Fox Philly Anchor Tom Burlington against the station wrapped up on Friday. 

Burlington claims he was fired for using the N-word in a staff meeting even though he says other black staffers did the same. Burlington is white. 

Current and former Fox Philly employees, both black and white, testified that they were both offended and shocked when former anchor Tom Burlington chimed in about colleague Robin Taylor's story on symbolic burial of the notorious racial epithet by the Philadelphia Council of the NAACP.

"Does this mean we can finally say 'n----r'?" Burlington said during the meeting.

Burlington, who is white, claims the station discriminated against him because of race when they declined to renew his contract on July 12, 2007. He claims there was a double standard that allowed other employees to use the word and other racial epithets with impunity. He is seeking unspecified damages.

Burlington's former colleagues differed on whether the word should ever be uttered, in any format, even if not directed at a particular person.

Former editor Becky Rogers, who was in the meeting with Burlington and other employees that day, said she doesn't feel there's a difference between "n----r" or "n---a" and if she hears the latter uttered in a hip-hop song, she turns it off.

"It's a horrible word and it makes me feel uncomfortable," Rogers, who is white, said in a deposition read aloud yesterday in U.S. District Court.

Former Fox 29 employee John Jervay, who is black, said he could differentiate between the reality of the word and how it's used in television and movies.

"The word is offensive to me no matter what, unless it's fantasyland," Jervay said in his deposition.

Jervay said he knows what it's like to hear the word in the real word, directed toward him with hate. He said he'd been called a "n----r" twice in his life, both times by white people. When Burlington used the word several times in the meeting and later in an attempted apology, Jervay said he was mostly in shock.

"I feel if he was black, it would have been the same outcome," Jervay testified. "I would have been offended no matter what they looked like."Jervay said he "was not sure" whether Burlington was racist or not.

Nicole Wolfe, a Fox 29 producer who is black, testified that Burlington's use of the word cast a weird, uncomfortable vibe through the meeting.

"The tone of the whole day changed," Wolfe testified.

Burlington attempted to apologize to Wolfe as well but she said he repeated the hurtful words.

"I said, 'Tom, you really need to get away from my desk'," Wolfe said.

On Wednesday, another former Fox Philly employee at the meeting said he didn't believe Burlington's apology was sincere.

The all-white jury will hear closing arguments in the case on Today. 

H/t Philly Daily News

Former Atlanta Anchor Returns to the Air Tonight

Former WAGA Anchor Amanda Davis is returning to the air Tonight on WGCL. Davis is one of 10 former Atlanta Anchors that will be giving brief commentaries at the end of WGCL's 5PM newscast.

Davis will be first up as the segment kicks off Tonight and she will be talking about Bruce/Caitlyn Jenner.

What Davis is not talking about is her DUI arrest and traffic accident back in November 2012. She was pulled from the air after the crash and then resigned. 

She is still being sued by the driver of the other car that she hit. Davis was found not guilty of DUI, but was found guilty of failure to maintain a lane. 

Davis did talk about her life after the crash with radio station V-103 and says that she was depressed after the crash and sought therapy and the Lord for help. 

"I was injured, I was devastated and I became very isolated and I was depressed after awhile," Davis says after the crash. 

She played it off mainly as a woe is me. She also felt like many of the viewers abandoned her after the incident. 

She will hit the air on WGCL at 5:56PM tonight. 

Former KNBC Weather Hottie to Resurface in Houston

FTVLive was the FIRST to tell you that KNBC Weather Anchor  Elita Loresca was being pushed out the door.

We know of more than one guy in LA that was sad to see Loresca go.

But, there should be some guys in Houston that will soon be happy. Word is that Loresca is heading to KTRK as the station's Weekend Morning Meteorologist.

What is LA's lost is Houston's gain. 

Can Someone Get This Cleveland Weatherman Some Xanax?

Ever since the Cleveland Cavaliers have made it into the NBA Finals, WEWS Weatherman Mark Johnson has spent quite a bit of time harping on the NBA Refs.

It seems that Johnson feels that every bad call goes against Cleveland and he has been using his weather forecast time to complain about it.

Here is his latest stunt:

Seriously! This was a Local TV News Story

This morning, WRIC (Richmond) morning Anchor Amanda Malkowski read a story about what position you should be in when you take a poop.

No shit....This really was a new story.

If this doesn't have Emmy written all over it? I don't want to live anymore. 

By the way, as long as my buddy C.W. takes in the can, if he squatted instead of sitting, he would have the strongest legs in the world.

Just saying.... 

ABC, NBC Reporters Cited for Violating Rules during Hastert's Arraignment

A couple of network Reporters are in hot water with a Chicago Judge. 

ABC's Brian Ross and NBC's Gabe Gutierrez face possible sanctions in federal court in Chicago for allegedly violating media security rules by trying to question former U.S. House Speaker Dennis Hastert during the media frenzy at his arraignment Tuesday on criminal charges.

Ross and Gutierrez were ordered to appear before U.S. District Chief Judge Ruben Castillo on July 28 to explain their actions. If Castillo decides sanctions are appropriate, he has a range of options, including letting them go with a warning, hitting them with a fine or banning them from the courthouse.

According to the three-page filing naming Ross, the veteran news reporter tried to interview Hastert while the former speaker was going through a metal detector in the courthouse lobby and again while Hastert was walking to an elevator bank.

Ross' actions — which were captured by various news crews filming Hastert's arrival at the courthouse and later shown on newscasts — violated the general order prohibiting interviews anywhere other than in a roped-off media bullpen in the lobby, according to the filing.

A separate filing accused Gutierrez of attempting to interview Hastert as he left the courthouse after pleading not guilty to the charges. Several deputy U.S. marshals and court security officers "observed Gutierrez run in the wrong direction through a closed security checkpoint in an attempt to interview" Hastert, the filing said.

Neither news organization could be immediately reached Thursday night for comment.

H/T Chicago Tribune

Roger Ailes: I Report to Rupert

Although Rupert Murdoch is ready to step down from the Fox empire and hand it off to his kids, one guy is having none of that.

Fox News boss Roger Ailes isn't going to report to some kid, even if he is the boss. 

“My job is to report to Rupert, and I expect that to continue,” Ailes told Variety.

It appears, old Roger doesn't seem to have much respect for Lachlan or James Murdoch who will be taking over for his dad as the CEO of 21st Century Fox.

Ailes has clashed with Lachlan Murdoch in the past, enough so that Lachlan left the company in 2005, before coming back. 

“Rupert will need to appease Roger,” said Tuna Amobi, an analyst with S&P Capital IQ. “Even if it means that Roger Ailes is essentially given the freedom to run his own kingdom.”

Oh boy! This could get fun.

Stay tuned..... 

It Goes from Bad to Worse at Al Jazeera America

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FTVLive has been telling you about all the problems going on inside Al Jazeera America.

Internal shake-ups, firings, layoffs and lawsuits have become the norm at the low rated cable news channel.

Well, now you can throw another lawsuit on the fire. 

A former Al Jazeera America exec is taking legal action against the channel, with a fired employee saying she witnessed those at the channel forgo “journalistic objectivity” to “advance a pro-Arabic/Middle Eastern agenda, often at the expense of Jewish people.”

The suit is being filed by Shannon High-Bassalik, who was formerly the senior vice president of programming and documentaries at Al Jazeera America. High-Bassalik also accused the network of discriminating against female and non-Arabic employees.

“The allegations made against Al Jazeera America are by a former employee whose conduct and performance went through a full process of investigation led by an external law firm before her employment ended, during which Ms. High-Bassalik made none of the allegations she makes in her complaint,” the channel said in a statement on Thursday.

“Al Jazeera values and respects all of its employees, and has zero tolerance of any form of discrimination,” the statement goes on.

The suit was filed in federal court in Los Angeles, and also alleges that management at the channel pushed a 9/11 conspiracy theory that the CIA was behind the 2001 attacks. High-Bassalik was fired from AJAM in February.

This new lawsuit is only the latest complaint for the troubled network. Al Jazeera America dismissed another lawsuit filed by an employee earlier this year. Former senior vice president of outreach Marcy McGinnis said she resigned to escape the “culture of fear,” and former executive vice president of corporate communications Dawn Bridges and former vice president for human resources Diana Lee also left the company, with High-Bassalik saying in her complaint that the “discriminatory and hostile work environment” drove them out.

In the new suit, High-Bassalik brings up several examples in which she allegedly witnessed sexism in the newsroom, and said when female employees complained, Al Shihabi said they “were simply being emotional… asking them why they ‘didn’t love me anymore.'”

H/T Variety 

Farmer Wins $1.8 Million Dollar Lawsuit against Sinclair CEO

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Sinclair CEO David Smith has lost a lawsuit filed against him by a farmer. 

A jury awarded Stephen Pieper $1.8 million dollars in the lawsuit that he filed against Smith in a land dispute.

Smith purchased property back in 2013 from a local farm. Pieper had leased part the land through the previous owner to use to grow crops. 

He planted his crops on the land that he was leasing and according to the verdict, Smith unlawfully hired someone July 20 to plow under a corn crop that Pieper planted and did so "willfully and with malice."

Pieper was awarded $1.5 million in punitive damages and $325,000 in additional damages related to the crop destruction.

"It's been a rough couple of years," said Pieper, who leases about 1,000 acres of farmland in Baltimore and Harford counties. "I hope this outcome protects farmers in the future in similar situations."

An attorney for Smith said he is preparing post-trial motions asking the court for a new trial or to reverse the jury's decision.

"We don't think it bears any relationship to the evidence," said Francis R. Laws of Thomas & Libowitz. "We obviously have a different view, and there are some things we feel fairly strongly about."

Thomas C. Beach III, an attorney for Pieper, said his client feels vindicated.

"You don't knock down 95 acres of corn to make a point," said Beach.

Somewhere, there are some ex-Sinclair employees with big smiles on their faces. 

H/T Baltimore Sun