Trump Back Attacking Megyn Kelly

Megyn Kelly returned from her vacation and as soon as she did, Donald Trump launched the attacks again. 

Trump continues to carry a grudge (not exactly a good asset in a US President) against Kelly for her tough questions during the debate almost 3 weeks ago. 

Trump supporters also chimed on Twitter against Kelly. One writing, “The bimbo back in town” which Trump retweeted. 

There is no doubt that in the battle between two very arrogant people, Kelly continues to stay on a much higher road than Trump.

And when it comes to the question of, who Trump make a good President? Ask yourself this, if a cable Anchor can get this much under his skin, what the hell would someone like Vladimir Putin do?

Scary thought, don't you think? 

Ummmm.....

ESPN's coverage of the Little League World Series had quite a funny moment. To help viewers understand the players from all over the world, ESPN asks the players a few questions, so viewers can get to know them better.

Problem is, many of the players don't speak English. So when they asked Nagiru Hiramatsu who his favorite singer was? He told them it was "One Direction."

I don't think ESPN quite understood him.

Just saying....

Seattle News Director Headed to Dallas

The Seattle TV market is losing to news executives.

KING News Director Mark Ginther is leaving the station to take the ND job at KXAS in Dallas. Ginther's wife, Sarah Garza is leaving her gig as the Assistant News Director at KOMO to follow her husband to Dallas. 

Both are no strangers to Dallas, Ginther worked as the News Director at WFAA before heading to Seattle. Garza was the Deuce at KTVT from 2007-2009. 

Ginther replaces Susan Tully who was named GM at NBC O&O WVIT in Connecticut.

He starts his Dallas gig next month. 

Former Cincy ND to Resurface in South Carolina

Back on June 22nd, FTVLive told you that WKRC (Cincinnati) News Director Kirk Varner was parting ways with the Sinclair Owned station. 

Varner was in the Natty for just over 4 years and now he is headed back to his home state. 

Yesterday, Varner was introduced today to the staff of WSPA-TV & WYCW-TV as the new VP of News for the CBS & CW stations.

"It is one of the state's best newsrooms with a welcoming bunch of professionals that I am excited to become part of and work with," Varner said on Social media. 

Gone Fishing

WFAA Investigative Reporter Byron Harris is hanging it up and casting a line.

Harris is signing off from WFAA on Oct. 9th. Why that day? It's his 69th birthday.

Harris has been at the Dallas station for 40 years and he plans to "go flying-fishing in Slovenia with my wife (Linda), who’s my fishing buddy,” as soon as he retires Harris said to Ed Bark. 

“Byron’s body of work is so extensive that it is nearly impossible to adequately portray the impact and changes his reporting has produced,” said WFAA GM Mike Devlin.

Harris says that he still doesn't get social media.

The television news business now requires reporters to tailor their stories for three separate “platforms” -- TV, the Internet and “social media” (Facebook, Twitter, etc.).

“It’s kind of like re-writing it in French,” Harris said of retooling a TV story for the Internet. “Television relies on pictures and the Internet is like writing a print article. You have to re-think the whole thing in many cases. But it doesn’t do any good to wish for the good old days. There are never any good old days in anything. It’s only today and tomorrow. Is it a pain in the neck to have to do an Internet version? Yes, but ultimately more people read the print story than look at the TV story. You have a great reach on the Internet. But social media is frankly still mystifying to me.”

It mystifies a lot of TV people Byron, so you are not alone.

New Name, Same Crap

FTVLive was the FIRST to tell you (by months) that WOIO in Cleveland was going to change their branding from 'Action News' to 'Cleveland 19 News'.

The station made the name change yesterday and the ratings were up by over 70% over the old name.

OK...maybe not. 

So why did the station change their station brand?

“Cleveland 19 News is committed to becoming the most relevant and accurate newscast on local television and on digital and social platforms,” says news director Fred D’Ambrosi. “Our core belief goes well beyond just headlines. We will listen to what our viewers need and we will deliver content that will help make their lives better. It will take hard work to earn their trust but with experienced journalists like Romona Robinson, Mark Nolan, Denise Dufala, and Carl Monday, plus the rest of the Cleveland 19 News team that we are building, we are more than up to the task.”

Really?! Who talks like that in a real conversation?

Leaving TV News for PR

WHNT (Huntsville) Reporter Daniela Perallon is leaving the station and TV news altogether. 

 Perallon has accepted a role as the Public Relations/Marketing manager for The Arts Council which is just down the road from the station. 

“We hate to lose Daniela.  But, we are thrilled for her,” said Denise Vickers, WHNT Station Manager and News Director. “She has done a tremendous job for us since joining our team.  And, will soon be able to apply her multimedia background and skill set to do tremendous work for The Arts Council.”

The Arts Council works to promote local arts, culture, and entertainment, as well as educate the community about different artists and events.

“We have so enjoyed working with Daniela during her time at WHNT and we respect her passion for Huntsville’s arts and entertainment community,” said Allison Dillon-Jauken, President of the Arts Council. “We’re eager to bring her digital storytelling and communication skills to The Arts Council along with her passion for our Huntsville region.”

"To my family here at WHNT News 19, this station has given me so much personally and professionally, and for that I am forever thankful. It’s a comfort to know this ‘goodbye’ is only taking me a few blocks away," Perallon said in a note. 

Leaving TV News for History

WWNY (Watertown, NY) Photojournalist  Diana Page Jordan leaving TV news to become the Jefferson County Historical Society's next executive director.

“We were looking for someone with proven public relations skills and the Historical Society needed someone to restore our position as a prominent organization in the city of Watertown,” he said. “I think we can do a lot better working in the community, and I think Diana is the kind of person that can help accomplish that.”

It looks like she will not have to deal with big crowds in her new job. The museum averaged only one visitor a day during January, February and March of 2013.

“It’s a challenging and thrilling opportunity,” she said. “What excites me about this is that it’s a chance to bring the museum out into the light,” Jordan said. 

Before she joined WWNY-TV in February 2014, Ms. Jordan worked as a producer, anchor and reporter for several radio stations in Los Angeles, New York City, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, and Portland, Ore.

Ms. Jordan said history has always been an interest of hers. By using tools such as social media, she said, she hopes to draw the interest of the community, both young and old.

“Today’s news is tomorrow’s history,” she said. “To be able to create a better history for our people is a tremendously wonderful duty to take on. We can use all the current media to get kids and parents into the museum.”

Hell, if she can get just two people to come to the museum this winter, she will have doubled the audience. 

H/T Watertown Daily Times

LA Union Member Fired After Holding Up Sign Behind Live Shot

Back a few weeks ago, FTVLive told you that the union was photobombing KTTV's live shots as negotiations between the two sides have not been going well.

Now, one union members says that she was canned for holding up a sign behind a KTTV live shot. 

Cheryl Bacon, a KTTV staffer of 39 years was holding up a couple of signs in support of the union and says that a week later she was fired from her job. 

The union says that the veteran video editor, microvan operator and satellite operations staffer is also the secretary of Local 53 of the National Association of Broadcast Employees and Technicians-Communications Workers of America says protesting at live shots is protected by the National Labor Relations Act.

The union plans a rally outside the West Los Angeles studios of KTTV on Thursday.

It's getting ugly now. 

H/T LA Observed

All Trump All the Time

CNN's former Media Critic and now full time Donald Trump Reporter Brian Stelter took his Trump obsession to a whole new level.

Stelter watched the network newscasts on ABC, CBS and NBC to see just how much time they were giving to Donald Trump in their coverage. 

Surprise, Stelter found out that the media is giving Trump way more coverage than anybody else. CNN put together this nifty little graphic to show you just how much TV time Trump is getting:

A few people of social media asked Stelter, why do just the real networks and not the cable networks like CNN?

So, FTVLive watched CNN and put together our own graphic:

Former NBC Staffer is Coming Out of Retirement

Back in March of 2014, NBC News Correspondent Jamie Gangel said she was retiring after 31 years at the network.

“After 31 years as an award-winning journalist at NBC News and the Today Show, Jamie decided to retire. We are grateful for her many contributions and we wish her the very best,” an NBC News spokesperson said at the time.

A number of NBC insiders wondered if Gangel was really retiring, or was she pushed?

Well, this might answer the question, it was just announced that Gangel is joining CNN as a "Special Correspondent", whatever that is? 

Sex for TV Sales.... That's a Lawsuit

A sales person at Gannett's.....errrrrrr......Tegna's KTHV (Little Rock) says that her boss order to have sex to nail down a car dealer's account, and he fired her when she refused, she claims in court.

Kelly Easby-Smith claims her boss went so far as to demonstrate the "grossly immoral" sex acts he wanted her to perform to keep the auto client, who was "on the fence" and considering advertising at another station.

She has now sued the station in court. She also sued Arkansas Television Company, its president Michael Caplan, and her former supervisor Byron Wilkinson, the station's sales director.
     
Courthouse News reports that, in her suit, Easby-Smith says she had 30 years experience in the industry when Caplan recruited her in 2013 to sell ads for . She says Wilkinson came onboard as KTHV 11's director of sales in 2014, becoming her immediate supervisor.

"Defendants did not want employees to question policies or directives by white male supervisors and management, including defendants Wilkinson and Caplan, when it came to business judgment in obtaining accounts in the automotive and advertising market," Easby-Smith says.

This year the company became "desperate, because of competition," and pressure built to increase ad sales, particularly with a large auto client who was considering moving to another station.

"Defendants were at risk of not obtaining this lucrative, advertising business account. It was during this time of high stress and pressure to obtain this account that plaintiff was requested to perform sexual acts or favors for potential male clients to obtain advertising business for defendants," she says.

There was nothing subtle about it, Easby-Smith says. She claims that Wilkinson "specifically requested and pressured plaintiff to bypass the adverting agency, contact the large, potential client directly, call immediately, and do whatever was necessary to obtain their business for defendants, including performing inappropriate sexual acts or favors. Defendant Wilkinson verbally requested and demonstrated the type of sexual acts that he said plaintiff should engage in to obtain the large, advertising client for the monetary advancement of defendants' business."

Easby-Smith says she became "physically sickened, shocked and stunned by the request," which she refused.

When they lost the client, a meeting was called with Gannett's corporate representatives, at which Easby-Smith confronted Wilkinson and Gannett's corporate HR director with her allegations, but they both "deliberately avoided and ignored plaintiff's grievance concerning her direct supervisor's grossly immoral, illegal, unlawful and wrongful conduct," the lawsuit states.

She says Gannett conducted no further investigation into her complaint and then, "contrary to its own employment policies, Arkansas law, public policy and reasonable modern business behavior, terminated the victim of the wrongful conduct - the plaintiff."

"Defendants concealed, suppressed, and omitted the material fact that once plaintiff was employed at THV 11, defendants would require her, as part of her job duties and responsibilities, to identify and obtain advertising clientele, at all costs, including trading herself to advertising clients for sex or sexual favors, or find serious repercussions from the defendants, including termination and discharge from employment," the lawsuit states.

Gannett/Tenga did not reply to a request for comment.

Leaving Little Rock

Speaking of KHTV....

KTHV Morning Anchor Ashley Blackstone is leaving Little Rock, but on a bit better terms than the saleswoman.

Blackstone is headed back to her  hometown of Charleston, South Carolina. Blackstone is joining WCIV as an Anchor/Reporter. 

Blackstone joined KTHV in 2006 and was promoted to morning anchor in 2011. In addition to anchoring the morning show, she handled features and did investigative reporting for KTHV.

“We’re proud of all that Ashley accomplished here, from reporting to anchoring Arkansas’ leading morning show,” said KTHV News Director Dave Parker

Her last day at the station is Sept. 25th.