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Whatever happened to… Jeff Hullinger?

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Jeff Hullinger

When Jeff Hullinger ended his final WAGA-TV broadcast on May 31, 2002, he had established himself as one of the biggest sportscasters in town after 18 years on the job. A slew of Emmy Awards. Play-by-play announcer for the Falcons when they made the Super Bowl. Sub for CNN’s “Talk Back Live.” Prominent radio gigs at 96rock and WGST-AM.

At age 43, with a rock-solid resume and brand-name appeal, he figured he’d have no problem finding another TV job in Atlanta.

He never did. After calling games for ESPN on a freelance basis and two years toiling in Tampa, he nabbed a job reading the news at WSB-AM in 2006. But the news/talk radio station inexplicably cut him last summer. (No comment from WSB-AM program director Pete Spriggs, per policy.) He is now unemployed.

Jeff Hullinger
  • What a great broadcaster! He needs to be back on the air in some way, shape or form now!
  • His time has passed. Move on.

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Hullinger has gotten nary a nibble from any of Fox 5’s rivals. Nothing close, he said. (Management at those stations did not return calls and emails or declined to comment.)

“I’ve been mystified,” said Bill Hartman, retired WSB-TV sportscaster. “If I were one of the other TV stations besides Fox 5 and WSB, I’d hire him in a minute to be my newscaster – not my sportscaster, my newscaster.”

The local radio sports stations don’t seem interested either. “He’s really talented but I don’t think sports talk is an ideal format for him,” said Steak Shapiro, co-owner and morning host at 790/The Zone.

Hullinger, when he was younger, had a reputation of being brash, brusque and a bit remote.

“He had a lot of self confidence,” said Doug Richards, veteran former WAGA-TV reporter now at WXIA-TV. “Some put that off as arrogance. But there’s nobody who does live better than him that I’ve ever worked with. And every time I thought I knew something, Hullinger would leapfrog me and know a little bit more. It baffles me why people aren’t beating down the door and hiring him.”

“Southside” Steve Rickman, who worked with Hullinger at 96rock for three years in the mid-1990s and is now part of the Regular Guys on Rock 100.5, said Hullinger “was very guarded at first. But by my second year, we became friends. He doesn’t let you in easily but once you’re in, you’re in.”

“Jeff,” he added, “is too talented to be silent.”

Hullinger’s former boss at WGST Gabe Hobbs said there was friction between Hullinger and Fox 5 General Manager Gene McHugh when Hullinger was juggling jobs at both places. “I got a feeling from Gene,” Hobbs said, “that he was never terribly thrilled with Jeff doing radio. He [McHugh] was never as cooperative as we would have liked to have seen.”

McHugh declined to comment about Hullinger’s current status or why he let him go in 2002.

Former colleagues at WSB-AM mostly praised him, said he was a team player and actually called people to thank them after he was dismissed. “I loved working with him,” said Kerry Browning, a reporter who was let go from WSB in 2008. “He could handle anything you could throw at him. He was creative and showed great wit in his writing. Sometimes it was subtle. You had to know it to appreciate it.”

Now at age 50, Hullinger is at a precarious point in terms of his TV career.

Though he was massively popular in 2002, metro Atlanta has added about one million people since then who don’t have a clue who he is.And most broadcast news operations has been paring down staff and even when they’ve hired people, they’ve tended to be younger and presumably, cheaper. (The CBS affiliate WGCL-TV just outsourced its sports coverage to 790/The Zone and no longer carries sportscasters. I plan to write a blog entry update about that next week.)

“It’s been a difficult and humbling experience,” said Hullinger. “I have two children and a wonderful wife. I’m hoping better times are ahead.” He said he still gets recognized all the time. Heck, two parents at his son’s school asked him what was up today. “It’s like a singer getting asked to sing the same song over and over,” he mused.

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‘Extra’ host Mario Lopez interview at WXIA-TV

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Mario Lopez-extra

“Extra” host Mario Lopez swung by the WXIA-TV studios Wednesday as part of a Southeast tour of “Extra” affiliates.

Your favorite Mario Lopez role
  • “A.C.” Slater on “Saved by the Bell”
  • Dr. Mike Hamoui on “Nip/Tuck”
  • Host of Animal Planet’s “Pet Star”
  • Dancing on “Dancing With the Stars”
  • Host of “Extra”
  • Dr. Christian Ramirez on “The Bold and the Beautiful”

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He looks as young and cut as you’d expect. At age 36, he has a few crinkles around his eyes but otherwise looks more or less like he did during his “Saved by the Bell” days (minus the mullet.)

I got a few minutes with him, which I captured on video below. He was bemused by my name, said he has plenty of friends here in Atlanta and he’s thrilled about becoming a dad. Nothing TMZ worthy.

He hadn’t seen enough of the current season of “Dancing With the Stars’ to proffer an educated opinion. (He was a runner up on the show a few years back.)

He had nice but generic things to say about Stone Mountain’s Jungle Boogie, eliminated from “America’s Best Dance Crew,” in which he’s the host.

He also has a book in May coming out called “Extra Lean,” which features recipes and ways to eat that isn’t too restrictive but can help you lose weight.

Lopez also held a meet and greet with station employees, advertisers and station contest winners. Virtually the entire room was full of gaga women thrilled to get their pictures taken with him. His assistant said a lot of folks know him, surprisingly, from “Pet Star,” which he hosted seven years ago but continues to run in repeats on “Animal Planet.” (Apparently, the show petered out after two seasons because they ran out of good pets to feature.)

Else, most Gen Xers love him as Slater, while MTV denizens know his hosting duties on “Dance Crew.” And most graybeards met him first on “Dancing With the Stars.”

Amusingly, I ran into WXIA-TV reporter Doug Richards (who does the Live Apartment Fire blog) in the hallway, who had no idea who Lopez was. Refreshing!

He, of course, knew Thurbert Baker, the state attorney general who I ran into in the green room. Baker happened.to be there to tape a segment for Chris Matthews on MSNBC after several Republicans in the state demanded he be impeached for not following the Governor’s request to sue the government over the health-care reform bill.

That was a serious contrast between frivolity and serious news.

On TV
“Extra,” 7:30 p.m. on WXIA-TV
“America’s Best Dance Crew,” 10 p.m. on Thursdays on MTV

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Jeff Hullinger gets a new gig at WXIA-TV

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Jeff Hullinger

Eight years after popular sportscaster Jeff Hullinger left WAGA-TV in a bit of a cloud, the Emmy-winning broadcast veteran has found his way back on Atlanta TV news on WXIA-TV.

“I’m grateful to [WXIA-TV news director] Ellen Crooke and I look forward to being part of the Channel 11 team,” he said. He starts his job tomorrow and will be on air for the first time Monday, June 21.

“I’m really glad to hear that,” said Pete Combs, a former colleague at WSB-AM, when told the news. “He’s one of the fastest guys in the world, a real news junkie.”

Jeff Hullinger on WXIA-TV
  • A great addition!
  • His time has passed.
  • Who?

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“It’s about time,” said Gabe Hobbs, his former boss at WGST-AM. “Glad to see them take his value and equity and leverage that against the market.”

Hullinger’s departure from WAGA-TV in 2002 was a less than happy one. After he left, he freelanced for ESPN, worked briefly in Tampa and did news at WSB-AM, but he had been unable to find another gig in local news in Atlanta. I wrote a piece about him in February pondering why he was unemployed and quoted several folks saying the very same thing.

His fans and supporters extol him him as a great broadcaster and an utter pro. Critics found him, at worst, arrogant and remote, especially in his younger, brasher days. WAGA-TV management reportedly was unhappy that a decade ago, he was juggling multiple jobs, including a radio job and subbing work at CNN. He seemed to be everywhere at one point.

After his WAGA departure, some fans believe he was blackballed in Atlanta for many years.

Hullinger’s new boss Crooke, who read the February article, noted that two of his defenders in the story now work for her: Doug Richards, a former WAGA-TV vet and blogger behind Live Apartment Fire, and former WSB-AM newsman Kerry Browning, who she hired very recently. Although Crooke wasn’t in Atlanta during his heyday, she heard Hullinger was a great live broadcaster and “smart as a whip.”

She plans to make him a political correspondent. “Sports and politics aren’t all that different,” she said.

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Former 11 Alive weather forecaster Paul Ossmann has had a rough summer

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Paul Ossmann's current Facebook profile photo

Paul Ossmann’s current Facebook profile photo

By Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com, filed August 11, 2011 (ignore the incorrect filing date above.)

Paul Ossmann’s life appears to have crumbled like a building under siege by a raging torrent of flood water.

The TV weather personality filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection in February. He lost his $900,000 Alpharetta home to foreclosure last month. He and his wife Faith separated at the same time. And on July 22, 11 Alive (WXIA-TV) let him go after 13 years at the station.

But Ossmann, 54, is not a man to drown in bitterness, especially toward his former employer.

“I don’t regret anything,” he said over lunch recently at the busy Jason’s Deli at Cumberland Mall. “11 Alive gave me a great opportunity. I have great friends there.”

Amiable and approachable, Ossmann may not have the gravitas and expertise of Glenn Burns at Channel 2 Action News or the steady longevity of Ken Cook at Fox 5. But he has his share of fans.

Dave Cohen, an Atlanta actor, said Ossmann came across as “genuine. Hated those ridiculous shirt collars he used to wear but enjoyed his sincerity in presenting the weather.”

Shawn Reynolds, a producer at the Weather Channel, worked with Ossmann while he was at 11 Alive from 2005 to 2009. “I always felt confident that we were given the right forecast when he was on the air,” he said. “He’s always willing to try new things. I’d work with him again in a heartbeat.”

And his 11 Alive buddies check up with him regularly to make sure he’s okay. “I try to talk to him every day,” said Ted Hall, 11 Alive morning anchor. “I send him Bible verses every once in awhile to help him out.”

Ossmann said he received his first ever negative job evaluation last December. Research, he was told, indicated he wasn’t as popular as he used to be. He also wasn’t doing enough of his own graphics work.

A month later, management told him his contract would not be renewed when it was up in June. But the station gave him enough advance notice to give him time to seek another job. Unfortunately, none of the other local networks bit by the time his contract was up.

Ultimately, he said he wasn’t sure why he was let go, but news director Ellen Crooke hired a more hard-nosed meteorologist in Mike Francis from Little Rock. Ark. The storm chaser’s first day on air was August 8.

Ossmann wouldn’t comment about Crooke and vice versa.

A Philadelphia native, Ossmann nabbed his first TV job in Abilene, Tx and after brief jaunts in Montgomery and Birmingham, Ala., found a job in Atlanta in 1988 at WAGA-TV. He started the same day as current 11 Alive evening anchor Brenda Wood. He became the original host of “Good Day Atlanta,” then moved to WXIA in 1998.

With all his travails, Ossman took solace in his hobby, the shot put. He did it in high school and college and picked it up again in 2004 after covering track and field at the Titan Games. Since then, he’s become a four-time national champion in the masters category and came in second last month in the World Masters Track and Field Championships. 11 Alive staffers nicknamed him “Big Swol” for his impressive physique.

“Even though I didn’t excel and win, people who knew my situation supported me,” he said. (He lost 25 pounds the past three months due to the stress.)

“The biggest muscle he has,” said anchor Karyn Greer in an on-air tribute on Ossmann’s final day, “is his heart.” (See the tribute here.)

Ossmann is now by himself in a rental home for $900 a month in Acworth and living within his means, something he didn’t do for years. He admits now that he was a blind optimist who let his wife handle the finances. (His bankruptcy filing in February indicated $83,525 in credit card debt and negative monthly cashflow despite his annual income of about $225,000.)

Despite his hardships, Ossmann said he feels a burden has been lifted. “I’m happier than I’ve been in a long time,” he said. “I have my health and my two sons are healthy.”

“The separation” from his wife, he acknowledged, “blindsided me.” (Faith Ossmann didn’t respond to an inquiry for comment.)

Ossmann plans to start taking classes next week to become a real estate agent, hardly a path many people would take in this day and age. But as a newscaster, he loved hobnobbing with fans. “Real estate gives me an opportunity to help some people who have been watching me for years,” he said.

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By Rodney Ho, rho@ajc.com, AJCRadioTV blog

11 Alive Can-a-Thon collects record 229,000 cans

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11 Alive’s 32nd annual Can-a-Thon for the Salvation Army collected more than 229,000 cans this year, the most in its history.

I stopped by Turner Field Friday morning in misty overcast weather and took some snapshots of the 11 Alive crew, the volunteers and V-103, which helps out every year as well to get the word out.

Karyn Greer with her Christmas sweater during the Can-a-Thon for the Salvation Army. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Karyn Greer with her Christmas sweater during the Can-a-Thon for the Salvation Army. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Moving cans at Turner Field. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Moving cans at Turner Field. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

The morning team of Ryan Cameron, Wanda Smith and Jim Basile. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

The morning team of Ryan Cameron, Wanda Smith and Jim Basile. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Ryan Cameron poses with a group of student volunteers. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Ryan Cameron poses with a group of student volunteers. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Vinnie Politan with one of the Salvation Army staff. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Vinnie Politan with one of the Salvation Army staff. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Vinnie Politan of "Atlanta Live" helping out boxing canned goods. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Vinnie Politan of “Atlanta Live” helping out boxing canned goods. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Wanda Smith, always smiling. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Wanda Smith, always smiling. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Wanda Smith goofing with Karyn Greer on air.

Wanda Smith goofing with Karyn Greer on air.

Nobody beats the Wiz-o-meter! CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Nobody beats the Wiz-o-meter! CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Ray Holmes, volunteering for the first time, moves cans into categories. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Ray Holmes, volunteering for the first time, moves cans into categories. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Crash Clark with the "original Bird Lady" Keisha Burns. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Crash Clark with the “original Bird Lady” Keisha Burns. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Crash Clark with recently married Ramona DeBreaux. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Crash Clark with recently married Ramona DeBreaux. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Crash Clark crashes his buddy Ryan Cameron's morning show. Clark lost his gig at V-103 on Dec. 16, 2014 but has since become an 11 Alive traffic reporter. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

Crash Clark crashes his buddy Ryan Cameron’s morning show. Clark lost his gig at V-103 on Dec. 16, 2014 but has since become an 11 Alive traffic reporter. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

 

Jeff Hullinger gets late evening anchor spots on WATL-TV/WXIA-TV for February

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By RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com, filed Feb. 1, 2011

Emmy-winning reporter Jeff Hullinger (right), who joined NBC affiliate WXIA-TV eight months ago as a reporter, will be working the anchor desk in late evenings for the month of February.

First, he’ll anchor the 10 p.m. news on sister station WATL-TV, followed by 11 Alive with Brenda Wood at 11 p.m. Ted Hall, who joined the station five years ago from Knoxville, will continue to anchor the 6 p.m. with Wood. This shift will enable Hall to work on stories during the day. Hullinger will continue to do reporting as well.

Ellen Crooke, news director, said this experiment is a bit unorthodox but believes having Hall and Hullinger each report and anchor will enable the station to get the best out of both of them. She said she’lll test it out this month and see how it plays out.

Ted Hall CREDIT: WXIA-TV

Ted Hall CREDIT: WXIA-TV

“Jeff has been with us only a short time,” Crooke said, “but his passion and energy and following in this market have proven him to be a great addition.”

Hullinger had been unemployed for several months when I wrote a piece about him in February, 2010, wondering why Atlanta TV stations had not hired him since he left WAGA-TV in 2002 after 18 years.  He  has been a well-known sportscaster in Atlanta who also worked radio and CNN’s “TalkBack Live.”  After WAGA-TV let him go, he free-lanced for ESPN, worked briefly on TV in Tampa, then came back to Atlanta to work at AM750 and now 95.5FM News/Talk WSB for three years. He and WSB parted ways in September, 2009.

“I’ve been mystified,” Bill Hartman, retired WSB-TV sportscaster, said to me last year. “If I were one of the other TV stations besides Fox 5 and WSB, I’d hire him in a minute to be my newscaster – not my sportscaster, my newscaster.”

My piece helped get his name back on the radar screen and Crooke took notice. (In a purely unscientific poll on this blog, he received an 81% positive rating.) She hired him four months later.

Hullinger specialized in politics  leading up to the last election and did some anchoring with Wood during the winter storm a month ago.

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By Rodney Ho, rho@ajc.com, AJCRadioTV blog

Elle Duncan joins 11 Alive as traffic reporter

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By RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com, filed May 31, 2012

Elle Duncan, who was let go from V-103 last December after seven years, has found new full-time employment as a traffic reporter at 11 Alive.

She starts this Thursday morning from 4:30 a.m. to 7 a.m., according to 11 Alive General Manager John Deushane, though she won’t be full time until Monday morning.

She Tweeted this afternoon:

So I hope y’all will wake up and turn us on!! So excited to work with the whole 11alive team and get my feet wet in live television!!

She is technically employed with Radiate Media, which provides traffic for radio and TV stations, including WXIA-TV.

Duncan, who has also been a sideline reporter for the Atlanta Hawks, started her media career at 790/The Zone in 2003 with the 2 Live Stews. She moved to V-103 in 2005 to work with Ryan Cameron. In 2009, she moved to mid-days. Eighteen months later, she worked mornings with Frank & Wanda as a sports reporter, then moved back to Cameron’s show in March, 2011. Nine months later, she was out at V-103 completely.

At 11 Alive, Duncan replaces Nick Vavas, who is returning to New York.

And small world: before Vavas, 11 Alive tried to train Nina Brown to do the traffic but that didn’t pan out. At V-103, Brown was a producer with Frank Ski and Cameron and did not get along with Duncan. You’d have to read the story to believe it but an incident involving an open mic, sweet potato pie and cursing in late 2010 led to Brown’s departure from the station.

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By Rodney Ho, Radio & TV Talk

11 Alive meteorologist Paul Ossmann: what’s his future?

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By RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com, filed originally on Feb. 2, 2011

The forecast for meteorologist<strong> Paul Ossmann’s </strong>future at 11 Alive WXIA-TV is a bit cloudy<strong>. </strong>A source of mine yesterday told me his contract has not been renewed though he will remain at the NBC affiliate through late spring.

Ossmann has been with the station since 1998 and currently does weather for the evening news on 11 Alive and sister station WATL-TV.

Prior to his time at 11 Alive, he spent more than  10 years at WAGA-TV (now Fox 5), where he was the original host of “Good Day Atlanta.”

WXIA-TV general manager <strong>John Deushane</strong> declined to comment, citing policy about not discussing personnel  contracts.  That isn’t an outright denial so who knows?

Ossmann, who is married with two teenage kids, also declined to comment.

The most interesting item on his bio beyond his bonafides as a meteorologist:

<blockquote>In his spare time, Paul competes in shot put in Masters Track and Field events across the country. .He is an accomplished shot-putter, having finished in the top three nationally for the past three years. During the 2008 Indoor track and field season, Paul had the second best throw in the world! In 2009 Paul won gold in the USA Masters Indoor and Outdoor National Championships! One of only a few select masters athletes to earn two golds in the same year.</blockquote>

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11 Alive adding a 5 p.m. newscast, dropping noon and 7 p.m. news programs

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11 Alive anchor Brenda Wood accepts the best newscast Emmy with her boss (right) Ellen Crooke. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

11 Alive anchor Brenda Wood (left) will be anchoring the new 5 p.m. newscast. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

By RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com, originally filed January 28, 2015

11 Alive is dropping “Dr. Phil” at 5 p.m. starting March 2 and bringing back a local newscast at that hour.

But “Dr. Phil” fans shouldn’t despair. The station was already showing repeats of the show at 3 p.m. Now, the first-run editions of his show that had been on at 5 will air at 3.

Brenda Wood will co-anchor the 5 p.m. news with DeMarco Morgan. As a result, her “Daily 11 at 7″ will end and be replaced with “Wheel of Fortune,” which will again be paired with “Jeopardy” at 7:30 p.m.

The station is also ending its noon news program and readjusting the schedule of its “pay for play” program “Atlanta and Company,” which currently runs an hour at 11 a.m. and then an additional 30 minutes at 12:30 p.m. Now, the show hosted by Christine Pullara will run continuously from 11 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., followed by a repeat of “Jeopardy.”

11 Alive’s general manager John Deushane said fewer people are watching local news in the middle of the day so they are transferring their efforts during that time frame online.

Over at sister station WATL, Gannett had previously aired “Wheel of Fortune” at 7 p.m. In its place, the station will run an additional episode of “The Andy Griffith Show.” And at 6 p.m., a re-run of “Dr. Phil” will air instead of “Extra” and a “Jeopardy” repeat. Deushane feels “Dr. Phil” is a better fit for WATL, which also runs “Jerry Springer,” “Maury” and “Steve Wilkos.”

Plus, more Andy Griffith never hurts. “This show never seems to get old, especially in the South,” he noted in an email.

Over the years, Atlanta broadcast stations have been adding more and more local news. 11 Alive was the only station left among the big four without a 5 p.m. news show. It was also the only station that had a 7 p.m. local news broadcast.

Paul Crawley, who worked at 11 Alive for 36 years until last year, recalls 11 Alive having a 5 p.m. newscast going back to the late 1970s. Deushane said the station moved “Dr. Phil” to the 5 p.m. slot in March, 2003 not long after its fall debut in 2002.

The NBC affiliate currently airs six hours of local news a day on weekdays including an hour of repeats at 3 a.m. The changes will keep the number of hours the same – just different times. Channel 2 Action News airs 7 hours, plus a 30 minute repeat overnight. CBS46 airs six and a half hours with no repeats.

Fox 5 airs 11 hours a day including two hours of repeats overnight. It’s the only station of the four that airs a local morning show from 7 to 9 a.m. and has a 10 p.m. newscast as well.

11 Alive recently added a new news director Jennifer Rigby, replacing Ellen Crooke, who moved up in Gannett to become a regional news director.

 

Jill Becker, leaving 11Alive after 23 years, expresses gratitude, hopes she can keep it together on her final day Sept. 2

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By RODNEY HO/rho@ajc.com, originally filed September 1, 2011

On television news, leaving on your own terms seldom happens. The thirst for the spotlight is too intoxicating.

But 11Alive’s Jill Becker is choosing to retire and is not being shoved out the door. (She announced the move in January.) Her final day is Friday, Sept. 2. She has been a pillar at the station, a morning host at the NBC affiliate for 23 years. She has shared the desk with at least seven different co-hosts.

Ted Hall, who had been working evenings, takes over for her starting next week, working alongside Karyn Greer.

I spoke with Becker Wednesday.

Why she’s leaving: “I think I’m just exhausted. I’ve been on mornings here for 23 years. And I was on mornings before that on Channel 2 for a couple of years. It’s a long time.”

The emotional impact: “It didn’t really hit me until this week when the goodbyes started. It really brought it home. They’ve been running soundbites with some of my coworkers and former coworkers… I hope on Friday morning I can keep it together. I really do. I don’t want to go out sobbing. I want to keep it together, then fall apart after that.”

Why she chose mornings in the first place: “I had just had my first son. And I just felt it would work better with our schedule. So I wouldn’t have wanted to be anywhere else in the world. Mornings were what I wanted to do all these years. I just think I hit some kind of wall.” [On nights before work, she went to bed at 7 p.m. and wakes up at 2:30 a.m.]

Her philosophy in mornings: “If you think about turning on your TV in the morning, it better be with someone that’s pleasant enough. I read and edit all the copy. I have to be familiar with the stories so they make sense. That’s important to me. I think I’ve honestly tried to be very real. Sometimes people like it. Sometimes they don’t. Sometimes you have to take a risk. You want to be more real than you want. People have stuck with me on television for 30 years and they seem to think of me as a friend. And I’m very grateful for that.”

Her game plan post-WXIA: “I don’t have a game plan. I will take a couple of weeks and just sleep. Then I want to volunteer. I want to work with Cure Childhood Cancer. [Her son had T-Cell Lymphoma as a child but is now cancer free]. I want to do stuff with my church. I want to declutter.”

Working at a station that was never top dog: “I’ve always looked at it that there’s enough viewers for all of us to go around. I’ve always gotten the impression quite a few people watch. I’ve never been wildly competitive in that respect.”

On the daily talks with “The Today Show”: “It began in the early 1990s with Bryant Gumbel. At first, it was a little stilted. All they’d ever do is give a rundown and toss it back. Then I asked Bryant one day what he was making for Thanksgiving. That opened the doors. When Katie [Couric] came on, it got downright chatty. We got to know Matt [Lauer.] We got to know Meredith [Vieira]. We’d see them at shoots when they came to Atlanta. It really became more than an on-air relationship. We knew them off air. ”

On her replacement Ted Hall: “It’s going to be a seamless transition. He’s perfect for mornings. He’s got a wonderful personality. He’s very upbeat. I think he can adjust to the sleep schedule.”

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By Rodney Ho, rho@ajc.com, AJCRadioTV blog

CBS46 hires 11 Alive’s Fred Kalil as new sports anchor

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Fred Kalil has worked at 11 Alive since 1993 but moves to CBS46. CREDIT: 11 Alive

Fred Kalil has worked at 11 Alive since 1993 but moves to CBS46 March 23. CREDIT: 11 Alive

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Tuesday, March 10, 2015

The dismantling of 11 Alive’s long-time sports anchoring team is complete.

Randy Waters retired in 2013 after 29 years. Sam Crenshaw was let go last year after 16 years. Now Fred Kalil is moving to CBS46 as their new sports anchor starting March 23.  He had been there 22 years.

Collectively, those three had been at 11 Alive for a combined 67 years.

Kalil stepped down as sports anchor in August, 2013 and has only done taped pieces since then. He has admitted that he has not fully  recovered from a brain tumor 15 years ago. He said in 2013 that he was having trouble reading the teleprompter. A source said his ability to ad lib coherently was also limited.

Waters, who left about 15 months ago, said Kalil may have had issues at the time with his medications he was taking, but he hasn’t kept up to date on his medical status.

“I’m really happy for him,” Waters said. “He’s a smart guy. I’m sure he’ll do fine.”

Curiously, 11 Alive chose to let Kalil go and waive his non-compete clause. Typically in this market, when an on-air talent leaves, they aren’t allowed to go on air on another station in the same market for six months based on the non-compete clause. (That was the case with David Chandley between Channel 2 Action news and Fox 5.)

Kalil didn’t respond to a text and call for comment. “I look forward to joining CBS46 and using my local contacts and experiences to help build the best sports department in town,” said Kalil in the press release.

“We are very excited to have Fred join the CBS46 Sports team. He brings with him over 20 years of outstanding sports reporting in Atlanta. He knows the city and the community and we look forward to him bringing our viewers the best local sports coverage in all of Atlanta,” said CBS46 News Director Larry Perret.

Kalil will be the network’s first sports anchor in more than five years. In October, 2009, CBS46 dropped Gil Tyree and Mark Harmon as its sports anchors and outsourced sports to 790/The Zone.

That deal ended in the summer of 2013 and the station hired a sports director Larry Smith. Smith hosts a weekly show “One on One” and sports specials.

 

 

 

Confirmed: Karyn Greer has left 11 Alive after 15 years

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Karyn Greer

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Sunday, March 15, 2015

It was kind of expected given Karyn Greer‘s mysterious disappearance from 11 Alive the past seven weeks, but she officially announced her departure Sunday afternoon on her public Facebook page.

It’s been a very difficult decision, but after 15 great years and prayers and discussions with my family I have decided to leave 11alive. The new contract options offered to me did not provide the opportunity to grow as the journalist I am constantly striving to become. I will miss working day to day with my great colleagues and friends and I will miss the love from all you loyal viewers. I am stepping out on faith but I know in the end God has my back. Keep me and my family in your prayers. Love you..mean it!

In just a couple of hours, she received hundreds of “thumbs up” likes on her Facebook postings on both her personal and public pages and plenty of “best wishes” comments from fans and friends.

11 Alive, someone had noticed this morning, had already taken her off their “Meet the Team” page. I have not heard from anyone of authority at 11 Alive about her situation.

I talked to her on the phone Sunday afternoon. As she noted in her Facebook post, she said she pondered long and hard and talked to her family and ultimately decided this was the best move for her at the moment. “You just have to move forward,” she said.

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She is also recovering from an unspecified surgery she had a few weeks ago, but she said she’ll be okay. Greer had been a long-time morning host on 11 Alive but last year was bumped to day-side when 11 Alive hired Vinnie Politan. She was also supposed to be given expanded digital duties, which never came to pass.

I heard from a source inside 11 Alive that the station had offered her a hefty pay cut in her new contract to stay and she chose not to take it.

Ratings in general, I’m told, have not been strong lately for 11 Alive. The station tends to be in third place in the market, behind Fox 5 and Channel 2 Action News.

Greer wouldn’t say how long her non-compete clause is but the standard in this market is six months. She has been a long-time presence in this market and is active in the community. Another station might very well pick her up. She would like to stay in the business.

“I’m a good communicator,” Greer said. “I will see what options are out there, who’ll be knocking at the door.”

Before 11 Alive, she worked at WGNX-TV (which is now WGCL-TV, the CBS affiliate) as a weeknight anchor from 1989 to 1999.

This is the second big-name departure from 11 Alive this week. Sports broadcaster Fred Kalil last week said he was moving to CBS Atlanta starting March 23.

The Facebook responses on my blog about Greer’s departure were highly supportive of her. A sampling:

Rick Segers Another in a long line of screw ups by management,

Cindy Owens Pittman I miss her. Their morning news is BORING. Bad move on the part of their management.
Michelle Mollica What is going on over there? They keep letting great talent go. I wouldn’t be surprised to see Brenda Wood go next.
Cynthia Ross Kendrick I so miss Karyn in the morning. The new crew hasnt grown on me yet.
Betsey Shaw Ellingsen 11 Live is losing me with all their stupid changes.

11 Alive, GPB, WSB big Southeastern Emmy winners

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Jaye Watson of 11 Alive won three Emmys last Saturday night. CREDIT: 11Alive

Jaye Watson of 11 Alive won three Emmys last Saturday night. CREDIT: 11Alive

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Friday, June 12, 2015

I am sorry I skipped the Southeastern Emmys this past weekend at the Grand Hyatt in Buckhead, but alas, I decided to take Saturday night off from work. Crazy, right?

In this blog, I’ve name-dropped the Emmys twice already this week: CBS46’s Scott Light lost his job and won an Emmy for best anchor. That’s pure irony. And CBS46’s Adam Murphy kept his job and won two. That’s because CBS46 is all about the news, as in all their changes have been newsworthy to me.

Anyway, as usual, 11 Alive (WXIA-TV) ran away with the wins: 28 to be exact, including best news editor (Brendan Keefe), best news producer (Molly Baker), best general assignment reporter and video journalist (Jeremy Campbell), best sports reporter (Matt Pearl), best news photographer (Nick Moron), best news writer (Jaye Watson), journalistic enterprise (“DFCS” Rebecca Lindstrom) and news excellence.

That’s up from 20 the past two years.

Georgia Public Broadcasting brought home 18 including historical documentary (“Dean Rusk: At the Heartbeat of History”), interview (“First Family From Plains”), lifestyle feature (“The BBQ Show”) and overall excellence, beating WXIA and WSB.

Channel 2 Action News’ 9 wins included best daily newscast (5 p.m.), breaking news (Forsyth Courthouse Shooting), spot news (Police Chase & Arrest with Richard Elliot), continuing coverage (DeKalb Corruption), team coverage (Second Snowstorm) and investigative reporter (Jodie Fleischer).

Univision and Fox Sports South took home five each while Telemundo Atlanta garnered four.

CBS46 won three, as noted above.

Public Broadcasting Atlanta pocketed two.

Fox 5 clearly does not make Emmys a priority. It had exactly one nomination for an investigative report and zero wins.

Read the entire winner’s list here.

 

TV briefs: 11Alive’s Tracey Humphrey, CBS46’s CB Hackworth, local on ‘Kelly & Michael’

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Tracy Humphrey is moving back to weekend work at 11 Alive. CREDIT: 11 Alive

Tracy Humphrey is moving back to weekend work at 11 Alive. CREDIT: 11 Alive

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Friday, June 19, 2015

Meteorologist Tracy Humphrey, who arrived at 11 Alive a year ago as the weekend meteorologist and weekend feature reporter, was moved soon after to the weekday Atlanta Alive team with Vinnie Politan.

She’s now going to do a hybrid, working with Atlanta Alive three days a week and joining Blayne Alexander on weekend mornings reporting weather and feature news.

Humphrey has previously worked in Philadelphia, Buffalo, Syracuse and Savannah.

11 Alive’s weather team, dubbed “Storm Trackers,” include chief meteorologist Chris Holcomb, Chesley McNeil, Samantha Mohr and Humphrey. Julie Martin will continue in a freelance role along with Allison Chinchar, who also works with CNN.

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CBS46 General Manager Mark Pimentel has brought in a gaggle of new faces to CBS46 but also a few older ones from his past including Fred Kalil from 11Alive. His latest pickup: CB Hackworth as new producer for special projects, the same job he had at 11 Alive in the early 1990s when Pimentel was the news director there.

Hackworth is not a household name among average viewers, being a behind-the-scenes guy. But he’s been in Atlanta media for several decades.

He began working in TV at Channel 2 Action News from 1987 to 1990 as an associate producer, became a producer of special projects from 1991 to 1997 at 11 Alive.  He became a senior producer for local programming at WSB from 1997 to 2005.

For the past deacde, Hackworth partnered with Andrew Young, the former United Nations Ambassador, two- term Atlanta Mayor and civil right leader. They created and launched a series of syndicated Emmy-winning television specials. Their program “Andrew Young Presents,” is now in its seventh season and is seen in 100 markets in the U.S. and worldwide on American Forces Network.

Clearly, this hire is an effort by CBS46 to create more original programming.

***

Courtney Rushing of Powder Springs with Nene Leakes and Michael Strahan  during the production of "Live! with Kelly and Michael" in New York on Tuesday June 16, 2015. Photo: Rob Tannenbaum/Disney ABC Home Entertainment and TV DistributionCourtney Rushing, Nene Leakes and Michael Strahan are pictured during the production of "Live! with Kelly and Michael" in New York on Tuesday June 16, 2015. Photo: Rob Tannenbaum/Disney ABC Home Entertainment and TV Distribution

Courtney Rushing of Powder Springs with Nene Leakes and Michael Strahan during the production of “Live! with Kelly and Michael” in New York on Tuesday June 16, 2015. Photo: Rob Tannenbaum/Disney ABC Home Entertainment and TV DistributionCourtney Rushing, Nene Leakes and Michael Strahan are pictured during the production of “Live! with Kelly and Michael” in New York on Tuesday June 16, 2015. Photo: Rob Tannenbaum/Disney ABC Home Entertainment and TV Distribution

Courtney Rushing of Kennesaw appeared this morning on “Live with Kelly and Michael” on WSB at 9 a.m.

Atlanta’s NeNe Leakes was filling in for Kelly Ripa.

She is the fourth semi-finalist in “LIVE’s Search for America’s New Grill Star.” Courtney got in the kitchen with Michael Strahan and Leakes to make her pineapple, avocado and shrimp salsa.

11 Alive’s morning show adds WATL hour at 7 a.m.

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The Atlanta Alive team taking part in the ice bucket challenge last year. CREDIT: 11 Alive

The Atlanta Alive team taking part in the ice bucket challenge last year. CREDIT: 11 Alive

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Wednesday, July 22, 2015

WXIA-TV’s Atlanta Alive morning show, which airs from 5 a.m to 7 a.m. weekdays, has added an extra hour on sister station WATL-TV from 7 a.m. to 8 a.m.

The team is Vinnie Politan, Jaye Watson and meteorologists Chesley McNeil and Tracey Humphrey, plus traffic guys Crash Clark and Fred McFarlin. Politan joined the station last year from HLN.

This gives Fox 5’s “Good Day Atlanta” direct competition during that hour for local news. WGCL, WSB and WXIA are each obligated from 7 to 9 a.m. to air their national morning programming with occasional inserts for local weather and traffic. WXIA is required to carry “The Today Show.”

“The 7 to 8 a.m. time period is a critical ‘get out the door’ hour typically with the heaviest traffic, so we’re staying on the extra hour to provide our audience with the latest information on traffic, weather and breaking news,” said 11Alive News Director Jennifer Rigby in a press release. “We’re fortunate to have the networks of 11Alive to give us another channel to deliver local news, weather and traffic in an important time period.”

The new morning show had a soft launch this week but it officially starts Monday when Politan returns from vacation.

WATL already airs 10 p.m. news using the resources of the 11 Alive news team.


Dish Network resolves fee dispute; WXIA-TV (11 Alive) returns

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11 alive logo

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Saturday October 10, 2015, updated Sunday, October 11, 2015

Dish Network lost access to WXIA-TV, the NBC affiliate also known as 11 Alive, and sister station WATL-TV late Friday night over a fee dispute.

UPDATE: The two sides reached an agreement early afternoon Sunday. So the blackout ended up lasting less than 48 hours.

Tegna, formerly known as Gannett, has cut off 42 television stations in 38 markets. 11 Alive airs everything from the “Today” show to “Dr. Phil” to “The Blacklist” and “The Voice.” And Dish subscribers in the Atlanta metro area wanting to see tonight’s new episode of “Saturday Night Live” hosted by Amy Schumer will be out of luck unless the two sides come to an agreement before 11:29 p.m.

Subscribers of Dish who wanted to see the “Dateline” special last night featuring 27 Bill Cosby accusers were locked out.

Dish has about 14 million subscribers nationwide but doesn’t break them down by market.

This is the just latest battle between content carriers and content providers are battling over fees that play into the prices you pay each month. And as subscriber numbers have been shrinking in the face of cord cutting and Millenials who never subscribed at all, the disputes have become more common in recent years, though the two sides dispute on what constitutes a “blackout.”

This year, the American Television Alliance, an advocacy group that represents cable and satellite companies, said there have been 183 blackouts, which appears to represent every individual market impacted. TVFreedom, which represents broadcasters, say it’s more like 15 specific disputes in 2015.

The last time Atlanta has had a new fee dispute that caused a month-long blackout was late last year between Dish and some Turner channels such as Cartoon Network and CNN.

Dish TV has also chosen not to air weekend Atlanta Braves game for three seasons, a dispute that is one of the longest I’ve ever seen.

Both sides tried to explain their case in separate statements. Dish argued that Tegna could have kept negotiating without pulling its channels. Tegna simply said Dish is the side causing the problems and noted that they are “serial dropper of channels.”

“With Dish willing to grant an extension and a retroactive true-up on rates, Tegna had nothing to lose and consumers had everything to gain by leaving the channels up,” Warren Schlichting, Dish senior VP of programming, said in a statement. “Instead, Tegna chose to turn its back on its public interest obligations and use innocent consumers as bargaining chips.”

Here’s Tegna’s statement:

“TEGNA has worked hard over the course of months to reach a deal with DISH. Our position has been simple: the same fundamental terms that allowed us to reach deals with distributors nationwide should serve as the basis for our deal with DISH. Rather than accepting that fair, market-based approach, DISH has refused to reach an agreement and once again is preventing its customers from accessing valued channels, even as customers continue to pay for that content. Despite DISH’s repeated efforts to blame programmers, the record is crystal clear – DISH is a serial dropper of channels. It has been responsible for the largest broadcast blackout in history and routinely drops valued cable and broadcast channels. TEGNA, on the other hand, has never been in this position before because we have always been able to reach fair agreements with distributors without disrupting our viewers.”

Dish Network customers in Atlanta and 37 market will not be able to watch "Saturday NIght Live" tonight hosted by Amy Schumer. (right) unless the blackout ends later today. CREDIT: NBC

Dish Network customers in Atlanta and 37 market will not be able to watch “Saturday NIght Live” tonight hosted by Amy Schumer. (right) unless the blackout ends later today. CREDIT: NBC

This dispute might last a day or a month. It’s impossible to say.

Notably, Dish tends to be the best provider on price alone, according to third-party studies. But DirecTV is superior with HD and sports. And cable is more reliable.

According to the Chicago Tribune: “In August, about 5 million satellite-TV customers were left without local channels when Sinclair Broadcast Group Inc. temporarily withheld its content from Dish Network Corp. subscribers during contract talks. The signal was restored [within a day] after the FCC intervened. Time Warner Cable Inc. went a month in 2013 without CBS programming during a fee dispute, and lost customers in the process.”

 

11 Alive’s Canathon collects 220,000 cans (photo gallery)

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Here's a trio of personalities: Ryan Cameron of V-103, Vinnie Politan and Crash Clark of 11 Alive. Clark and Cameron used to work together at V-103 so this is a mini-reunion of sorts at the 11 Alive Canathon, held December 4, 2015 by Turner Field. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

Here’s a trio of personalities: Ryan Cameron of V-103, Vinnie Politan and Crash Clark of 11 Alive. Clark and Cameron used to work together at V-103 so this is a mini-reunion of sorts at the 11 Alive Canathon, held December 4, 2015 by Turner Field. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Thursday, December 10, 2015

For the third year, I visited Turner Field’s parking lot last Friday to check out one of the sites for 11 Alive’s annual Canathon for the Salvation Army. This year, at multiple sites, the station collected 220,000 cans.

The NBC affiliate fell just shy of last year’s record 229,000 cans.

The breakdown shows how supportive the folks in the Northwest corridor of Georgia can be:

Rome: 68,840
Turner Field: 31,008
Infinite Energy Center: 55,041
Cumberland Mall: 40,392
In-studio & text: 25,582

Vinnie Politan, morning host at 11 Alive, was packed with energy, obsessing over Periscope at Turner Field. (I did some Periscope too just for fun and someone from Moscow even stopped by.)

I also caught up with Jaye Watson, Chesley McNeil and Crash Clark for 11 Alive as well as Ryan Cameron and Wanda Smith over at V-103, which simulcast from the parking lot. Here are some more shots I took that morning:

Some students took the Canathon literally. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

Some students took the Canathon literally. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

Vinnie Politan

Vinnie Politan does a Periscope video of Ryan Cameron and Wanda Smith. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

DSC06697

Several schools came by with students to drop off donations, separated by category. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

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Jaye Watson interviewed some dude who is running for president. Didn’t catch who he was but I’m pretty sure it wasn’t Donald Trump. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/rho@ajc.com

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Vinnie Politan pals with Christopher “Crash” Clark, who has been doing traffic for 11 Alive the past couple of years. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

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Wanda Smith kept warm by keeping a heater between her legs. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

DSC06672

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Every year, I see the massive Wiz-ometer balloon and chuckle. That name has survived five years. And the timing was good. This happened a day after “The Wiz Live!” aired and featured promos of Crash (right) dressed as the Cowardly Lion. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

DSC06687

Chesley McNeil, morning meteorologist, said now that Vinnie Politan and Crash Clark are around, he no longer feels pressure to be wacky in the mornings. He said he can play the straight man now. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

DSC06700 DSC06701

11 Alive introduces upgraded weather, traffic system

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Chesley McNeil, an 11 Alive meteorologist since 2009, and Christopher "Crash" Clark, who has been with 11 Alive covering traffic since early 2014. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

Chesley McNeil, an 11 Alive meteorologist since 2009, and Christopher “Crash” Clark, who has been with 11 Alive covering traffic since early 2014. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Thursday, February 4, 2016

Traffic keeps getting worse in metro Atlanta. Rush hours stretch out from pre-dawn to well after dark on some roads with nary a break. And for morning TV stations, traffic is a key component of its newscast.

Last month, 11 Alive brought in an upgraded 3D traffic and weather information system that better integrates the two. Live weather radar can now be seamlessly placed over traffic maps.

The new system features thousands of GPS speed sensors to provide real-time speed and travel information. It can also offer more accurate time estimates on alternate surface street routes when the highways get clogged.

Christopher “Crash” Clark has been with 11 Alive the past two years. He began providing traffic to radio stations all the way back in 1989. (Over the years, he’s been heard on Hot 97.5, 99X, Q100 and V-103, to name a few.)

“I started writing a map on a piece of paper,” he said. “I had a clipboard with looseleaf paper. I’d draw a circle and that was the Perimeter. Then I’d draw a straight line for I-20 and the split for 75/85. It was my template for the wrecks and stalls.”

Now he – along with fellow traffic guy Fred McFarlin – can zoom in on accidents anywhere in metro Atlanta, check highway speeds and work with meteorologist Chesley McNeilwhen weather is a factor.

This is an effort by 11 Alive, which is typically in third place in the market, to compete in an arena top-rated station Channel 2 Action News has dominated for decades. (WSB just renovated its set. Read my story about that here.)

TV/radio briefs: 11 Alive buyouts, Cassiday Proctor & Selena Gomez, Belinda Skelton

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(clockwise) Donna Lowry, Keith Whitney, Kevin Rowson, Bill Liss. CREDIT: 11 Alive

(clockwise from top left) Donna Lowry, Keith Whitney, Kevin Rowson, Bill Liss. CREDIT: 11 Alive

By RODNEY HO, originally filed Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Several 11 Alive staffers have been offered early retirement buyouts by parent company Tegna, according to multiple sources. Among the on-air veterans who might leave soon include Keith Whitney, Bill Liss, Donna Lowry and Kevin Rowson.

The buyouts are being offered to workers ages 55 and up with at least 15 years of service nationwide. Station management didn’t respond for comment.

This doesn’t mean employees necessarily have to take the buyout but if not enough people do so,  people may get laid off.yy

Whitney anchors weekend newscasts and has been with the station for about 23 years. Rowson has been part of WXIA-TV since 1994. Liss came on board in 1989. Lowry, who specializes in education arrived at 11Alive in 1986.

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Cassiday Proctor

Cassiday Proctor of Star 94 last Friday hosted the Curing Kids Cancer fundraiser at the College Radio Hall of Fame where a 12-year-old cancer survivor and Dacula resident Reece McPhail wanted a date with pop star Selena Gomez. He even requested her time on this video:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A3jAiKAiVxk&w=640&h=390]

Gomez couldn’t make it but was nice enough to send along this video:

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Vn-Wwqj6DNQ&w=640&h=390]

And here is the Drex, Cassiday and Tingle morning show (soon to be the afternoon show next month) talking about it:

[soundcloud url="https://api.soundcloud.com/tracks/247842453" params="visual=true&auto_play=false&hide_related=false&show_comments=true&show_user=true&show_reposts=false" width="100%" height="450" iframe="true" /]

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Belinda Skelton with her former boss Neal Boortz in 2012. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

Belinda Skelton with her former boss Neal Boortz in 2012. CREDIT: Rodney Ho/ rho@ajc.com

News 95.5 and AM 750 WSB weekend host Belinda Skelton has shingles. She reported the news on her FB feed with a joke:

Stress is no joke folks. I was just diagnosed with Shingles. You know what would make me feel better? If Terry Bradshaw came and sat on the sofa with me.

[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KSI2AZQmEsU&w=640&h=390]

Skelton’s Saturday lifestyle radio show is heard Saturdays from 1 to 3 p.m. on WSB.

WSB and the Atlanta Journal-Constitution are both part of Cox Media Group.

TV briefs/radio briefs: Elle Duncan on ESPN, Suchita Vadlamani, Jeopardy snafu on 11 Alive, 1340 sports shift

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Atlanta native Elle Duncan will be joining ESPN SportsCenter May 9. CREDIT: ESPN

Atlanta native Elle Duncan has joined ESPN SportsCenter May 9. CREDIT: ESPN

By RODNEY HO/ rho@ajc.com, originally filed Friday, June 10, 2016

Elle Duncan began her career at ESPN on Monday at 11 a.m. co-hosting “SportsCenter” and her first show went off without a hitch.

The former Atlantan was best known for her time on V-103 before moving to Boston in late 2013 to cover sports full time.

She announced her move in April. 

Here’s how she played it on Instagram:

Instagram Photo

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Andrew Moore of Dacula competed Tuesday night in Tournament of Champions with the infamous rival Arthur Chu. CREDIT: Jeopardy

Fans watching “Jeopardy” on 11 Alive last Thursday didn’t get to see the results because the network accidentally re-aired the second half of Wednesday’s episode instead. CREDIT: Jeopardy

In a bizarre snafu last Thursday evening, 11 Alive aired the first half of a new episode of “Jeopardy.’ But after a commercial break, the station replayed the second half of Wednesday’s episode.

John Deushane, the general manager, said there was some sort of technical snafu involving a back-up server that has never happened before. He said unfortunately, the network is not allowed to re-air the episode properly. So if you want to know who won and what questions/answers were posed, you’ll have to go here.

Deushane, by the way, was named “Broadcaster of the Year” by the Georgia Association of Broadcasters (GAB) this past Friday. Since he joined WXIA-TV six years ago, the station has won GAB’s Station of the Year four times and multiple Emmys for “Station Excellence.” The station pulled in 25 Emmys this past Saturday.

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1340/WIFN-AM, known as the Fan 3, is now carrying CBS Sports instead of Fox Sports. It covers the core part of Atlanta for the handful of folks who still listen to that part of the AM dial.

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Suchita Vadlamani hasn’t lived in Atlanta for many years since she left Fox 5’s “Good Day Atlanta” in 2010. But it appears she has not sold her Atlanta residence – until now. She posted an update on Facebook:

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