Showing posts sorted by date for query ralph renick. Sort by relevance Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by date for query ralph renick. Sort by relevance Show all posts

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

Shallow end of Miami TV News pool: Will it ever swim in the deep-end for one entire newscast and resist the siren song of dopey chick stories? No!

Shallow end of Miami TV News pool: Will it ever swim in the deep-end for one entire newscast and resist the siren song of dopey chick stories?
No!


News stories on TV about important public policy issues, in this case, votes on the future of red-light cameras in Broward County, who needs it?!
So seems the message from the hard-to-figure folks at Miami's Channel 4 News, WFOR-TV.


One week after News4 aired nothing about the vote on red-light cameras at the Broward County Commission last Tuesday morning on that night's 11 o'clock newscast...

Which, itself, came one week to the day after only WSVN-TV/Channel 7 News, in the form of Reed Cowan and his cameraman, bothered to send someone to cover the hugely embarrassing PR fiasco of a whitewash in Hollywood that Jennifer Gottlieb and Ann Murray of the Broward School Board attempted to perpetrate on the public...

...Channel 4 News did TWO separate stories on breast milk in one newscast.

Tuesday night, we once again saw the news judgment of the guy who replaced
blog favorite Adrienne Roark as News4 News Director after she moved up and on to WFAA-TV in Dallas a year ago this month.

Message received!


Yes, we got the "Are you wearing the right size bra?"

Really.
Yes, that chick chestnut that all East Coast TV markets get at least once a year..

Yes, of course, it was a Lisa Petrillo story, how did you ever guess?
Oh right -past experience!

So, do you think a female Ralph Renick could get a job now in Miami TV if she wasn't willing to do the kind of tripe that is so commonplace in Miami TV?

Not any time soon from the looks of things.

Oh well, lest you completely give up hope completely, somebody from the world of Miami TV actually bothered to show-up last Tuesday morning to play grown-up reporter and report the news and that was WPLG-TV/Local10's Roger Lohse.


Here's his thorough story:

Red Light Camera Expansion Hits Roadblock -A plan to expand the number of red light cameras in Broward County has been put on hold
http://www.justnews.com/news/27046307/detail.html
Here's the video: http://www.justnews.com/video/27049351/index.html

I will have a LOT more to say soon about what transpired at that Broward County Commission meeting last Tuesday, perhaps even some video clips highlighting some particularly embarrassing low-lights that some people in the audience felt the need to email and text me about as it was happening.
My favorite excerpt was this one from someone whose identity will have to remain a secret:
You're missing quite the show.
Joy Cooper is in rare form.
Oh yes, Mayor Cooper's curious performance and equally curious choice of words, where her words at times seemed like "perjury" in the words of some HB and Broward residents viewing the show in person and at home told me later.
THAT
will definitely get the overdue scrutiny it deserves that it DIDN'T get in the Miami Herald last Wednesday.

Oh, did you miss that?
One week later, the Herald has STILL NOT managed to put together an original story or column about what happened that day and what the future holds for roughly 45% of its readers.

Here it is, excerpted from the Sun-Sentinel's story by Brittany Wallman, since the Herald didn't bother to send their own reporter.

I've highlighted below in blue what the Herald actually printed.

South Florida Sun-Sentinel

http://www.sun-sentinel.com/news/broward/fl-redlight-decision-20110301,0,1201570.story
Red-light camera expansion on hold
By Brittany Wallman, Sun Sentinel
6:30 PM EST, March 1, 2011

If red-light cameras are going to pop up all over Broward County, the cities would have to put up red-light countdown clocks and enforcement warning signs, and all would have to enforce the same way.
That's what Broward County commissioners said they would want before they'd give the go-ahead to a major expansion in the controversial program.

Drivers in Broward routinely run late yellow lights or fresh reds, camera advocates say. They think red lights mean "STOPtional,'' one officer complained Tuesday.

A vote that would have allowed red-light cameras to proliferate was postponed at least 30 days so Broward's cities, the county and the camera vendor can hash out a standardized, cross-county way to treat drivers.

Commissioners also indicated they would want to collect a fee. They'd want cities to agree not to ticket drivers making right turns on red, as well.
While those details are worked out, the county's staff will explore an alternative: making drivers sit an extra two seconds at the red light to clear the intersection before the signal turns green.

Reader comments at:
http://discussions.sun-sentinel.com/20/soflanews/fl-redlight-decision-20110301/10

Friday, February 4, 2011

1977 interview with Miami R&B legend Betty Wright; Clean up Woman; Miami Groove



1977 WCIX-TV interview with Miami R&B singing legend Betty Wright on her recollections of the Miami music scene, and the artists who performed at the Sir John Hotel in Miami.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=J-thfb6BFwo


The long-since destroyed Sir John Hotel discussed in the clip was located in downtown Miami on N.W. 6th Street & N.W. 3rd Avenue, and was only a few blocks from the old Channel 4 WTVJ-TV studio that was at 316 N. Miami Avenue.

C.T. Taylor
, mentioned in the clip by Betty Wright as a music DJ at WMBM-AM, was hired in 1968 by Channel 4 news director and anchor Ralph Renick to become
the first African-American on-air news reporter in Miami.

That fateful year was the year of the Liberty City riots in Miami during the Republican National Convention over on Miami Beach at the Miami Beach Convention Center.
(In 1972, it hosted both national party conventions.)

Taylor's
extensive knowledge of the area and its personalities, people's trust of him, and his nightly fact-filled, context-heavy reporting from the scene during the riots, gave WTVJ a huge reporting advantage over their local news competitors and the three TV networks of the time.
His insightful reports sometimes appeared on the CBS Evening News with Walter Cronkite.


F
or most of my childhood growing-up in Miami,
Taylor and Renick were each among the best-known and most widely-respected men in all of South Florida.
They
had credibility earned thru merit.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Betty_Wright
http://www.youtube.com/user/wolfsonarchive




Betty Wright Clean up Woman (LIVE)

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r0ssMVL9I1Q





Betty Wright - Miami Groove

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Azb8MtVzCO4

Tuesday, November 30, 2010

Two spot-on columns by Orlando Sentinel's Darryl E. Owens and Miami Herald's Jackie Bueno Sousa demand your attention


August 25, 1982 Ralph Renick editorial on WTVJ-4, Miami,
on the filming of Scarface in South Florida

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyuJGHrjbRY

It's neither here nor there, per se, but per this excellent column by the Orlando Sentinel's Darryl E. Owens that I spied on Saturday -the same day the Miami Hurricanes played like disinterested turkeys two days after Thanksgiving Day- I can distinctly recall as a kid growing-up in North Miami Beach in the 1970's that when a story like this would bubble up to the surface in South Florida, i.e. with lots of context, it would quickly become the main topic of discussion of AM Talk Radio, back before it was almost all nationally-syndicated fare.

Of course, back then, when the Dolphins were consistently good, the area also had an All-News Radio Station, something it now sadly lacks, with South Florida being much worse off for that, as I've often lamented here and at various websites.

Some subject would get under the skin of a columnist at the Miami Herald far enough in advance of some planned public event that a rather pointed column would soon appear, and either cooler heads would prevail, the best option, or, local politicians and govt. officials would be publicly embarrassed and hung out to dry.


If the issue reached a certain threshold of seriousness, local broadcasting powerhouse Ralph Renick at Channel 4, back when it was WTVJ, on N. Miami Avenue in downtown Miami, would make one of his devastating editorials on the six o'clock newscast and simply mop the floor with whomever was responsible for the problem by pointing out the simple facts.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ralph_Renick

Après
toi, le déluge!

That was a measure of the power and influence throughout all aspects of life in South Florida that Ralph Renick had to wield.


Renick was THE most-respected man in South Florida other than perhaps Dolphins head coach Don Shula.

But now, in my opinion, other than the rare Herald column that takes us all completely by surprise, or Jackie Bueno Sousa's common sense columns that demand accountability and integrity from local elected officials or govt. agencies, there's just lots of dopey paint-by-numbers news stories about inconsequential fluff or shopping or diets.

See
http://www.miamiherald.com/columnists/jacqueline-bueno-sousa/ and my post from July 12, 2009
May the good news be yours: Ralph Renick's South Florida TV scene 18 years later; Where's the news in Broward? Or local investigative news anywhere?
http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/may-good-news-be-yours-ralph-renicks.html


-------
Orlando Sentinel

City funded Amway party — but not a Parramore tradition
Darryl E. Owens COMMENTARY

12:46 a.m. EST, November 27, 2010

Good thing Charlie Brown doesn't call Orlando home.


In his world, his only worry is Lucy snatching away the football as he prepares to make the kick.
The City Beautiful might send cops to snatch the pigskin.


This isn't an anti-cop screed.

After all, the would-be footballers — all three of them — who were confronted by police on Thanksgiving Day at the John H. Jackson Community Center lacked a permit.


Instead, consider this a reflection on an embarrassing — and obvious — missed opportunity for Orlando.


Read the rest of the post at: http://www.orlandosentinel.com/news/columnists/os-ed-darryl-owens-parramore-football20101126,0,5199263.column

-----

http://www.miamiherald.com/2010/11/23/1940706/real-leaders-in-short-supply-in.html

Miami Herald
Real leaders in short supply in Miami

By Jackie Bueno Sousa
November 23, 2010

I
t's not that Miami lacks leadership. Rather, it lacks bold, transformational leaders.

You know, the kind of people who use their power and influence to bring about fundamental change in a community, even though doing so will make enemies of other people of power and influence.

And so it is that so many Miamians now are fascinated with Norman Braman. Beyond his battle to recall Miami-Dade Mayor Carlos Alvarez, he's filling a civic leadership vacuum long felt in this community.

Bold, transformational leaders aren't easy to find. That may be a good thing; too many of them could be more problematic than too few of them. But when they become scarce, as they are now, we flock to them and their causes, knowing that they represent a rare opportunity.

Such leadership requires a unique combination of attributes not found in ordinary, run-of-the-mill leaders. Nothing wrong with ordinary leaders; their generosity, in terms of both time and money, has brought many good and worthwhile programs for our community.

It's just that every once in a while we need something more. We need, for example, leaders who are passionately focused on a cause.

MAS CANOSA

The late Jorge Mas Canosa had that passion and focus. The Cuban exile leader was vilified and chastised for his sometimes close-minded stance on Cuba policy. Yet no other person could so effectively spur large numbers of followers to take action, to show up at a rally, to lobby congressional representatives, to write letters to the editor. Who has filled that void in the Cuban exile community?

Such leadership also requires community-wide status and power. It helps to be the chairman of this or the president of that, but such titles aren't always necessary.

Marjory Stoneman Douglas was a simple journalist and writer, and yet she helped preserve the Everglades for future generations. She once wrote a pamphlet on behalf of creating a botanical garden that resulted in countless speaking invitations at local garden clubs and ultimately helped create Fairchild Gardens. Who is today's Marjory Stoneman Douglas?

Such leaders must back up their words and actions with money. The money can be their own -- as in the case of Braman's recall battle. Or it can come from the ability to access money, as was Alvah Chapman's gift. In the 1970s, Chapman led the creation of The Non-Group, an elite body of business and civic leaders who set an agenda for resolving the area's most pressing problems. Who in the business community is filling Alvah Chapman's void today?

We see contemporary glimpses of extraordinary civic leadership every so often. Former TotalBank chairman Adrienne Arsht gave $30 million to save the performing arts center. Banker Adolfo Henriques has the power to rally important business leaders. Miami Dade College President Eduardo Padrón is passionately focused on improving education in our region.

CHARTER REVIEW

And we even see glimpses of bold leadership. Attorney Victor Diaz Jr., as the head of the Miami-Dade County Charter Review Task Force, a couple years ago proposed a series of fundamental changes that could have brought about important improvements in local government.

When the County Commission slapped down most of the suggestions, which civic and business leaders came forward to fight for the proposed changes?

And, so, the void remains.

-----

Personally, I would have chosen different people, but her central premise is sound and echoes a sentiment that nearly everyone I know and respect in South Florida agrees with completely.

Which is why all the unethical behavior by elected officials in South Florida, from small-fry to County Commissioners, grates on people here in a way that is different than other parts of the country.

For those of you who don't live down here, there's a real brazenness and entitlement that's neither funny or amusing but simply venal and creepy.

Monday, July 26, 2010

Weeks later, Miami Herald, Sun-Sentinel & Miami TV newscasts STILL consciously ignoring Bob Norman's spot-on story re School Board's Jennifer Gottlieb

Weeks after Bob Norman perhaps fatally exposed Broward School Board Chair Jennifer Gottlieb's very poor judgment in devastating detail in his must-read Daily Pulp blog at the BrowardPalmBeach NewTimes, the reporters, columnists and editors of the Miami Herald, the South Florida Sun-Sentinel, as well as the various so-called "Business Journals" and TV news operations in Miami are STILL consciously ignoring that unflattering story about a powerful person because... well, they can.

BrowardPalmBeach NewTimes
Daily Pulp blog
Emails Reveal School Board Chairwoman Romanced Schools' Banker
By Bob Norman, Fri., Jul. 2 2010 @ 8:48AM -

She was a second-year elected school board member at a political conference in Tampa, getting quite literally wined and dined by high-rolling bankers at Citigroup, enjoying the "luxury" of a night out in a town that didn't know who she was.

He was one of those bankers, working the deals behind what has become $2 billion in Broward School Board debt. Both were married with young children.

And after meeting and flirting at an all-you-can-eat lobster and steak dinner put on by Citigroup for elected officials at The Palm restaurant in Tampa, romance blossomed between current Broward County School Board Chairwoman Jennifer Gottlieb and Citigroup finance manager Rick Patterson.

Read the rest of the post at: http://blogs.browardpalmbeach.com/pulp/2010/07/school_board_chairwoman_jennifer_gottlieb.php


That post from July 2nd currently has 499 comments as of 4 p.m. today, which shows that despite the local MSM's attempt to bury this story, people who actually pay attention to what's going on in the community, regardless of their opinion, are talking about it, anyway.


This foolish attempt to bury the story only makes the old traditional media in South Florida seem more irrelevant and ridiculous than ever, and it's not like they are that relevant anymore to begin with, since there are clearly many reporters on local Miami TV who ought to be in smaller TV markets, but are here, warts and all.
(That will be a topic of future posts.)


And seriously, when was the last time you read a lengthy and well-written story in the
Herald about the goings-on at local Miami TV news operations the way that once was fairly common in the 1970's and '80's?


Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar and things are exactly what they seem, and in this case, there clearly seems to be a conspiracy of silence among the South Florida news media and chattering class about the personal and professional behavior of
Jennifer Gottlieb.


But then as we are constantly at pains to remind ourselves, this is South Florida, an outlier more often than not in the best of times when journalism is either hard-hitting or popular, and this is hardly the first time since my family moved here in 1968 that a perfectly valid and compelling news story was ignored by the then-extant
MSM on account of... well, whatever the popular excuse offered up at the time at One Herald Plaza or over at the old Channel 4 studio in downtown Miami was.

Usually, when pressed, the answer was always "lack of column inches" in the newspaper or available time on a newscast.


Try to imagine a current local TV anchor publicly going after a local pol like
Demetrio Perez Jr. the way that anchor/news director Ralph Renick does here in 1982?
It's inconceivable in the current era of sycophancy, and our great loss.


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fyuJGHrjbRY


1982 Ralph Renick editorial on WTVJ on political efforts in Miami to prevent Scarface from being filmed in Miami due to concerns of negative portrayal of Miami and its Cuban-American population.




The local TV and print reporters whom we've grown accustomed to seeing report regularly on the latest education funding/scandal/crisis/antics involving School Board Superintendents Alberto Carvalho in Miami-Dade and James Notter in Broward, overwhelmingly female reporters, are quite simply, NOT doing their job by ignoring this story.

They've collectively taken a pass on mentioning something embarrassing about an elected official in Broward County that should be of great concern to every Broward County taxpayer, especially those with children in the public school system.

Why?

And is part of the reason that there is such great reluctance among South Florida's news media to face this issue head-on precisely because the person involved is female? As I've stated previously in writing about other neglected education issues, I personally think the answer is YES.

There is a palpable dis-connect and obvious sense of hypocrisy among South Florida's news media in how they report on the foibles and legal problems of male and female elected officials, so it should hardly be surprising that once again, they just swallow their hypocrisy whole because this case involves a female.

If this had involved a male School Board chair, though, we all know that this same story would've made the front page of the Miami Herald, albeit, with lots of quotes from supportive friends
and work colleagues.


My own experience in corporate life from working with large nationally-known law firms on big cases, as well as from being involved at a high level in presidential political campaigns, plus my own personal relationships with people in South Florida, Chicago and Washington, D.C., is that people who have particularly bad habits tend to have those traits throughout the day, regardless of whether they are at home or not.

There's no OFF switch they hit.

People who are consistently NOT punctual, NOT properly prepared and who are generally untrustworthy, who can't keep a confidential secret about a client from others, tend NOT to be able to do the exact opposite when they are away from the office.


I've personally gotten lots of very smart and talented people re-assigned or fired from firms or political campaigns because of the above issues, and I had no qualms in doing so because I've found that personal recklessness almost always reveals itself at the worst possible time.

Just like a film director,
I need to know that people around me on a project or campaign are on top of things and focused on the matter at hand, not worrying about extraneous matters, esp. involving romance.

If you see people consistently making poor decisions and exhibit carelessness in their job, are
you really supposed to believe that their judgment is any sounder and grounded when you don't see them?


That said, this personal issue Bob Norman writes about so thoroughly doesn't make Jennifer Gottlieb a bad person, just human.

But it does indicate to me that she should be somewhere else, and NOT making important decisions.


http://www.browardpalmbeach.com/search/index?keywords=Jennifer+Gottlieb&x=0&y=0


Because Jennifer Gottlieb is running for re-election as an At-Large Broward School Board candidate, every registered voter in Broward County can and should vote against her and give her the time she clearly needs to get her personal life together, however that shakes out.

Having said that, on Saturday afternoon at the Hallandale Beach Parks Master Plan meeting,
while I was setting up my camera tripod in the back of the A1A Community Center, I saw her husband Ken, the former State Rep. who's running for Circuit Court Judge.

I felt both sorry for him but also very uncomfortable, since he doesn't know whether or not people he runs into have read the story
Norman wrote, which in my opinion was extremely fair.

Two years ago, I voted for Tim Ryan for State Senate to succeed Steve Geller when Ryan, Gottlieb and Eleanor Sobel ran for the seat that Sobel eventually won after a VERY NASTY primary race that left a very bad taste in Southeast Broward voters mouths, due to the influence of secretive groups affiliated with Sobel that ran untruthful TV attack ads and mail that savaged both Gottlieb and Ryan.

(Ryan later took Sobel to court
about the groups' efforts, but after an initial flurry of stories about the trial, the press coverage completely disappeared. Shocker!
That's the current state of South Florida journalism in a nutshell: here one minute, gone another! Just like the summer rain!)


Unlike some people I know in the Broward political/citizen activist community who swear by the guy, I'm lukewarm to Ken Gottlieb, but I will acknowledge that he does seem like a genuinely earnest and hard-working guy who puts everything into his efforts, which makes him somewhat unusual in these parts, where coasting on the job and letting staff do all the work is the norm.


Personally, though, I'm just not crazy about the idea of enthusiastic activist pols becoming judges because I don't think people can fight that part of their nature.

I believe that the personal qualities that people clearly liked and admired about him in one job, State Rep., are not the same ones required to be a fair-minded judge that all parties can have full confidence in.

Frankly, if his wife Jennifer wasn't already on the Broward School Board, though I haven't put too much time into thinking this through to its logical conclusion, I'd much prefer him or Tim Ryan as Broward State's Attorney in two years against incumbent Michael Satz, who seems energy-deficient in the extreme.

Natural enthusiasm in a D.A. is much better than in a judge, especially in such a target-rich environment like corrupt Broward County.

Sunday, March 14, 2010

Adrienne Roark from CBS4 to KTVT-TV in Dallas, Cesar Aldama from KYW-TV to CBS4 as News Director

Received this depressing bit of news on
Wednesday afternoon via email from
CBS4, not long after I'd actually left a
voicemail message for News Director

Adrienne
Roark about the latest example
of the City of Hallandale Beach's longstanding
illegal and unethical (and anti-Sunshine Law)
behavior.

That was city employees at Hallandale Beach
City Hall physically preventing me from attending
a publicly-noticed Evaluation meeting about
the
hiring of a firm to conduct audits, which I
wrote
about later that day
.

On Wednesday and Thursday, South Florida
TV
blog,
http://www.sfltv.com/ had this
http://www.sfltv.com/2010/03/10/the-cbs4-bosslady-heading-to-dallas/
and
http://www.sfltv.com/2010/03/11/former-wsvn-er-cesar-aldama-named-wfor-news-director/


I don't know anything about the new guy
coming in from KYW in Philadelphia as
News Director, but here's some free advice:
the weather does NOT need to be one of
the first three segments of every 6 and
11 o'clock newscast, especially in a place
like South Florida.

If it's true that people are more wired than
ever, and they are, chances are that I already
know the weather forecast for today and
tomorrow.

I know it from the 11 p.m. telecast last night
or from seeing The Weather Channel
before leaving the house in the morning,
since I still check it to see what it'll be like
in the Greater D.C. area, or from seeing the
NOAA website after reading the The
Drudge Report
before going to sleep last
night.
Cool it with trying make the weather guy
my pal, okay?

And what's with Channel 10 NOT running
the results on Tuesday night of the Pembroke
Pines City Commission election?
It's the second-largest city in Broward.
You know, where your viewers are?
WTF?

For more, see my July 12, 2009 post about
local TV news coverage, past and present
May the good news be yours: Ralph Renick's

South Florida TV scene 18 years later;
Where's the news in Broward?
Or local investigative
news anywhere?

http://hallandalebeachblog.blogspot.com/2009/07/may-good-news-be-yours-ralph-renicks.html

--------

CBS4 logo
News from CBS4 & My33

CESAR ALDAMA NAMED NEWS DIRECTOR AT WFOR/CBS4 AND WBFS-TV IN MIAMI


Local news veteran Cesar Aldama, who earlier in his career served as Managing Editor at WFOR-TV/CBS4 in Miami, has been named News Director at WFOR and sister station WBFS-TV/Channel 33, it was announced today by Shaun McDonald, President and General Manager of the CBS-owned duopoly.

Cesar Aldama

Aldama, whose parents, twin brother and younger sister all live in Miami, is returning to South Florida after having served as Assistant News Director at KYW-TV/CBS3 and WPSG-TV/The CW Philly 57, the CBS-owned stations in Philadelphia, since April 2003. In his new role, Aldama will be responsible for overseeing all news operations at CBS4 and WBFS. He succeeds Adrienne Roark, who today was named News Director at KTVT-TV/CBS11 and KTXA-TV/TXA 21, the CBS-owned stations in Dallas-Fort Worth.


Over the course of his 20-year local television news career, Aldama has covered stories around the world in multiple roles - beginning in the field as photo journalist, and in the newsroom as a video editor, on the assignment desk and most recently as a manager.


Aldama first joined CBS4 in Miami as Managing Editor in 1999. Before that, he was Managing Editor at WBAL-TV in Baltimore.

His experience with Florida stations also includes serving as an Assignment Manager at WKMG-TV in Orlando, and early in his career as a video editor, photographer and Assignment Editor at WSVN-TV in Miami.


"We are thrilled to welcome Cesar back to South Florida," said McDonald. "He not only brings a wealth of local news experience, but also the ability to tap into his extensive, first-hand knowledge of this complex and diverse market."


"It has been both my personal and professional dream to come back home to the Miami area," Aldama said. "To do so as part of the CBS family is the best of both worlds. I look forward to joining South Florida's best news team as we continue to do what we do best - serve this vital community."


Born and raised at the U.S. Naval Base at Guantanamo, Cuba, Aldama is an active member of the National Association of Hispanic Journalists and the National Association of Black Journalists. He also serves on the board of the Mid-Atlantic chapter of the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences.


McDonald also expressed appreciation for the role Adrienne Roark has played at CBS4 and WBFS. "Adrienne has done an incredible job as our news director for the past three years," he said. "She will be a fantastic news director for our Dallas stations, and I believe I speak for everyone here when I say we wish her the very best."


WFOR-TV/CBS4 and WBFS/Channel 33 are part of CBS Television Stations, a division of CBS Corporation.

CBS4 is "always on." For local news, sports scores, weather updates, traffic reports, entertainment news and the best video experience available on the web 24 hours a day, go to CBS4.com.


Press contact: Lee Zimmerman, Director of Communications, WFOR-TV and WBFS

Phone: (305) 639-4426 e-mail: zimmerl@wfor.cbs.com


CBS4 & MY33 | 8900 NW 18 Terrace | Miami | FL | 33172

Sunday, July 12, 2009

May the good news be yours: Ralph Renick's South Florida TV scene 18 years later; Where's the news in Broward? Or local investigative news anywhere?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=06U7uhK1YS4



July 12th, 2009

I'm writing today on what is the 18-year anniversary of the
death of South Florida TV pioneer and journalism icon
Ralph Renick.


I was already living up in Arlington County when I got
a phone call 18 years ago today from my mother saying
that Ralph Renick had died, and that everyone she knew
seemed out-of-sorts after getting the news.
He was the FDR of Miami, always there in the background.
And then he was gone.


To me, one of the most unpleasant changes I've observed
in South Florida over the years, while living here and on
visits, has been the dramatic loosening of journalism
standards from the era when I was growing up down here
in the '70's & early '80's, with anchors like Ralph Renick
and Ann Bishop -or sharp folks like Gene Miller at
The Miami Herald- who while perhaps considered cool
and imperious to some viewers, to me, always seemed
to convey a real sense they DID have the viewer's best
interests at heart.

For me, that meant reporting the news straight-up and
letting the facts guide the story, rather than cover stories
with hidden agendas, in order to appease the myriad
business/ethnic/cultural interest groups, in the area
who are STILL sensitive to even the slightest sign of
public criticism, constructive or otherwise.

(I know one thing, if Ralph Renick was around today
making his editorials, he would definitely have zeroed-in
on Frank Nero's salary at The Beacon Council with
a specificity and delight that would have caused that
particular story to be much better known than it currently
is, and used it as a jumping-off point to discuss other
examples of so-called South Florida leaders, who
talk-the-talk but who seem hard-pressed to point to
any tangible results of there being in charge, instead
of someone else.)

Renick and Bishop's success in achieving that goal was
reflected by both their enduring popularity, and, I suppose,
by the simple fact that people like me who grew-up here,
STILL bring their names up at the drop of a hat to suggest
a sense of contrast and proportionality with the present
sad state of affairs.

Back then, savvy reporters with a nose for news and an
eye for uncovering corruption and hypocrisy, especially
at City Halls and County Halls, like Ike Seamans,
Brian Ross, Fred Francis, Bernard Goldberg,
Susan Candiotti, Richard Schlesinger, Steve Kroft,
Wyatt Andrews among other consistently enterprising
types -so many of whom went national- would see
the amazing menu of stories they were presented with
on a daily basis because of South Florida's special
circumstances and geography, cultural diversity and
inherent tension among its population, unique weather
problems and omnipresent criminal element, and take
full advantage of it, instead of merely being a drone
doing a LIVE stand-up for the 11 p.m. newscast for
something that was over and done with at 4 p.m.

One of the few advantages offered by the current bad
economy is that Miami-area TV stations seem to be
cutting down on those awful extraneous LIVE shots,
long the bane of my existence and many of my friends,
who wonder why the reporters involved hadn't already
gone on to the next story.

As a person who regularly attends events and functions
around South Florida that are often the subject of print
and electronic news coverage, certainly more than the
average newspaper reader or TV viewer, it's really quite
shocking to me how many local reporters -excepting
the exceptional few- who now can't seem to even be
bothered to pretend to do even the most basic of
research that the pre-Internet era required.
They show up woefully prepared!

It's almost as if the reporters I'm complaining about here
fail to understand or appreciate that those noted reporters
mentioned earlier, got to that respected status locally by
developing a solid reputation for returning phone calls
promptly, which is part of why they always received so
many tips in the first place.

I can't begin to tell you how many times over the past few
years I've personally tipped-off individual reporters to a
developing story that they ignored at their peril, with the
logical result being that their tardiness and indifference
led to someone else beating them to it.

For whatever reason, there seems to be a much steeper
learning-curve for many current TV reporters here than
there used to be, reporters who, in my opinion, really
ought to be in much-smaller TV markets than ours if
they are going to continue to be so smug and
self-important.

These are the very reporters whose email addresses
I've deleted the past two years, even as other reporters
I deal with somewhat regularly are smart enough to
know to either email or call back promptly to see what
I've got to share with them.

I'm also regularly shocked by the number of TV stations
who routinely only send a cameraman to an event or
hearing of some importance, rather than send along
a reporter as well.

That was the case last year when I attended the final
public meeting of the Broward County Charter Review
Commission at the County HQ on Andrews Avenue.
That afternoon, the most publicized issue -though by
no means only important issue- was whether or not
Broward County voters should be able to vote in the
upcoming November election for a County mayor,
rather than continue with the absurd and meaningless
charade now where the County Commission votes
amongst themselves and appoints a member mayor.

That's 'mayor' lower-case as far as I'm concerned,
since if a citizen didn't vote for that title, it's a
completely meaningless appelation.

As I recall it, Channel 10 sent Michael Putney and
a cameraman, Channel 4 sent a reporter and cameraman,
Channel 6 sent a lone cameraman.
Channel 7 sent nobody, as did the various Spanish
language TV stations, which seems to be par for the
course for the latter in Broward County, since they are
rarely if ever on the scene of an important govt. hearing
in my personal experience, which explains a lot,
if you care to think about the logical results of such
civic short-sightedness.

The stories that appeared in the newspaper the next day
and on local TV that night about that critical CRC meeting,
the most important one in their two years of meeting,
and the votes that took place there, which could've gone
a long way in giving Broward voters a means of making
Broward County government more accountable, in the form
of a single person directly voted into power by the entire
county, not just one slice of it, all had one thing in common.
As it happens, bad things as far as I was concerned.

The news stories
a.) didn't identify how the individual members of the Broward
CRC voted on the proposal -which failed- and
b.) neglected to mention that ALL the elected city mayors
appointed to the CRC voted to NOT ALLOW voters to vote
on the issue and decide it themselves.

As it happens, all those mayors saying "nyet" to Broward
voters were women.
I mention that here just in case you think that women are
inherently more democratically-inclined by nature.
Maybe in other parts of the country, but certainly not here
in Broward County.

In fact, it's the exact opposite, as Hallandale Beach mayor
Joy Cooper proves rather convincingly, year-after-year, by
continually having the City Commission vote on items that
AREN'T on the public printed agenda, and held in a small
room at City Hall different than the Commission Chambers,
which just happens to have no TV cameras to record their
votes.
Because that's that's the way she wants things to be.

(I've written about that CRC meeting here many times
over the past 15 months and explored the rationales
for why things may've happened the way they did.)

Maybe after five years of being back here, I ought to stop
being so easily shocked, huh?

I was scared-straight back in 2007 when I penned an email
to then-Daily Business Review reporter Julie Kay,
of which this is but an excerpt:

Subject: re your 6-29 DBR story; illegal disclosure/sale of arrest data by FDLE;
Thursday January 18th, 2007

Dear Ms. Kay:

My letter to you today is actually long overdue, as I had planned on congratulating you earlier, before the end of the year, on the consistently great job you did last year of covering what passes for the South Florida legal system in the
Daily Business Review, and imbuing your stories with the proper amount of anger, enthusiasm and curiosity -and incredulity- for the peculiar way things have of sorting themselves out here, regardless of any actual law, statute or precedent.
Or, of course, common sense.
While much attention was paid to your recent stories on the 'missing' court records of judges/elected officials -and what passes around here for celebrities and VIPs- who surely must've preferred those records of theirs existing in some parallel universe, where the curious public couldn't discern their content, the story you wrote that most impressed me was actually your June 29th DBR story titled, "Legal Boomerang," on Broward County and the state of Florida continuing to sell expunged legal case data to private firms for their own databases, though they're not supposed to do so.
Perhaps you've already heard about it by this late date, but on the chance that you haven't, the day your story ran,
CBS-4 led it's 6 p.m. Local News with that same exact story, down to the point of interviewing the very same person you interviewed for the majority of your insightful anecdotes, without reporter Mike Kirsch ever giving you or the Daily Business Review proper credit/attribution for the story.
I wrote a draft of a note to you about that slight that night on my computer, but I regret to say that I never finished it, much less mailed it, and for that I'm sorry, since I really hate seeing a reporter, esp. a TV reporter, get credit for hard journalistic leg-work they didn't actually perform.
That feeling became particularly ingrained in me during the 15 years I lived in D.C. from 1988-2003, because so many media friends of mine, esp. at the Washington bureau of the New York Times, who'd regale me at ballgames, movies or over hot dogs across the street from their office at a favorite hot dog stand of ours during breaks, with instances of having discovered, after-the-fact, clear-cut examples of out-of-town reporters using their stories as a paint-by-numbers primer for stories that small town reporters couldn't previously get a handle on.Clearly, that's not the smartest move to make in the era of the Internet and searchable databases.

For what it's worth,
Kirsch added absolutely zero to your original story, not even bothering to supplement his version of your story with additional interviews with other parties, just to cover his bases.
Nope, it was strictly paint-by-numbers;
your numbers.
Since that initial report back in June, I haven't taken anything
Kirsch says seriously, since I now have a clear sense of what he's capable of.
Maybe he should stick to doing stories on 'hot' new celeb-filled boutiques or trendy restaurants on South Beach, that way, there's no real public harm or misrepresentation.
In the three years since I returned to South Florida from DC, I've had to reconcile myself to lots of changes to this area, many of them for the good, of course, but just as many for the bad I'm afraid.
Not that things before in local/state govt. or local legal circles were so rosy and on the level, of course, since I know that clearly wasn't the case.
Starting roughly around 1979, when I'd return to South
Florida from school or work in Bloomington, Evanston,
and DC, for visits during Christmas and spring break,
or even Baltimore Oriole spring training trips or weekend
weddings, I could still see that Miami had the kind of
scrappy and innately curious reporters who make a real
difference in a community.
Frankly, the sorts of reporters that so many of my friends
at Ernie Pyle at IU and Medill at Northwestern aspired
to emulate by making a positive contribution.

Reporters who had the talent & ability to convey to the
waves and waves of newcomers to the area, who were
without a sense of South Florida's very mixed past,
the proper amount of perspective and sense of disbelief,
before dropping the hammer on whichever corrupt/
incompetent/miscreant elected pol or agency hack was
the target zone, for attempting to perpetrate something
of a dubious nature.

Even while watching the local TV news out of Indianapolis
or Washington, D.C., while clearly recognizing that there
were a handful of TV reporters of the sort who'd be good
no matter what city they were based in, I always had the
sense that, in general, the reporter culture in those cities
lacked the kind of focused energy and zeal I'd seen down
here, which was their town's loss.
(I even mentioned this particular line of thought, such as it is, to CNN's Larry King once at an American Cancer Society Ball in DC, around '89, that I was involved with in a small fashion, with Larry being honored as the guest of honor. While I know that many people often laugh at Larry's own unique brand of infotainment and news, and I'm quick to admit that I've heard the reels of crank calls at his expense, that night at the Hilton Towers, while his then-wife was being photographed with friends and various DC celebs like Al Haig and former FBI Director William Webster, Larry and I stood in a corner for about ten minutes, just the two of us, reminiscing about life in Miami, mostly about local radio and TV personalities we'd known and liked and wondered about every so often.

I'd grown-up as a kid watching Larry's interviews on Channel 4, and was a daily listener to his late night nationally-syndicated radio show out of D.C. on Mutual, starting while I was in school at Indiana, making tapes of individual shows with interesting guests.
After moving to Chicago my collection of tapes accumulated as I got to know his routine and came to recognize his little idiosyncracies, as well as the names of the people who did the news breaks, as well as got to know his substitute, Jim Bohannon.
I was driving from Chicago to Florida and first got word of the passing of the great Jackie Gleason while Larry read the news bulletin, and I stayed at a FL Turnpike rest stop early in the morning for a bit to compose myself, while he poured out one great Jackie Gleason story after another.
I knew most of them by heart, but that didn't make them less precious or make me laugh any less.
It only made me much sadder.
Which I told Larry in person when I had the chance.

Larry and I also talked back and forth about the great sense of competition that once existed among the Miami TV stations, and between the Herald and the late, great Miami News, where as some of you may know, I spent a lot of time while in high school, and got to know and make a number of friends over the years in their sports and entertainment departments.
We lamented that the kind of rough but honest competition we both knew of down here, which really pushed reporters, often seemed lacking now, despite how counter-intuitive that seemed with all the new technology that was making reporting easier. And that was 20 years ago.)

But now?
Well, it seems that the low TV standards that I saw
elsewhere and have read about and followed for years
in myriad media journals, blogs and newspapers,
have found a home-sweet-home right here.

And as for my my own clearly antiquated and sentimental
notions of what journalism is, based on years of Renick
and his successors, and being part of Walter Mondale's
advance team in '76, and accompanying him to the old
Channel 4 studio downtown, for an interview with Joe
Abrell, host of Montage, a place where I recognized
nearly every single reporter's face I saw in the hallway
-and actually knew their assigned beats?

Well, I guess I thought the news management at local
stations would have done a better job of insisting on
keeping higher standards for what's considered news,
and what passes for journalistic ethics than what appears
to be the case.
More than ever, this area seems to be on the losing
side of a journalism slippery slope.
C'est la vie.

Personally, among many other things, I think this area
would be much better served if there were tons more
criticism in the local newspapers at what local TV news
churns out, and a corresponding series of frequent jabs
at the Herald and the Sun-Sentinel for what they are
-or are not- doing with their resources, which in too
many cases, is appeasing elements of the local population,
at the risk of only further corroding their connection to
the local populace.

I mean as you all know by now by my repetition,
the Herald hasn't covered a meeting in Hallandale
Beach in over 13 months.

There are still so many local people and organizations
down here who've heretofore escaped both accountability
and brickbats for their years of unsatisfactory results,
despite receiving city, county or state taxpayer funds,
that in other parts of the country, with the current
technology available, would've put them front-and-center,
and certainly under the microscope.
But here, because of cronyism and back-scratching,
or something, they aren't.
I'd call them sacred cows, of course, but we don't live
in India quite yet.

In the past, an enterprising local TV reporter might've
addressed these matters of concern to me, which
while affecting public policy or the lives of thousands
of people on a daily basis, currently go unexamined.
Nowadays, that same reporter is assigned to go to
a Mall and report on either holiday shopping tips or
trends/fads among the seemingly endless armies of
affluent teens of our area.

Maybe it's me, but I keep thinking of
Jane Fonda's
character in The China Syndrome, Kimberly Wells,
forever banished to covering cute human interest stories
before stumbling upon a great story by accident.

At least Channel 7's Deco Drive, one of my few guilty
pleasures, is totally upfront about what it's reporting on,
and doesn't put on airs.
That is the only place where I can accept seeing 'soft'
stories on trends, diets, fashion and social causes of
celebs, even ones I like or adore.

I DON'T want to see any of that on a regular local TV
newscast, nor do I want to see network video footage
of national stories on the local eleven o'clock News
that are done from a "Satellite Center," where the VO
storyline is verbatim from what I saw on the national
news show a few hours before, as if you were WIOD
repeating their news stories over and over, verbatim,
all afternoon and early evening, except for traffic
conditions.

(WIOD: Telling me the same exact thing 14 times
in a row on your news breaks, with the very same
actualities, doesn't make me 14 times better informed,
just really, really annoyed.)

I want more in-depth local news coverage on TV and less
time wasted on the weather if it's a carbon copy of the past
week.
Stop dragging the weather segments out un-necessarily!

Just to mention one story that cries out for greater examination,
given the amount of tax money involved, how come the
patently false financial numbers offered up by the likes of
Nikki Grossman of the Greater Ft. Lauderdale CVB as proof
of the financial impact on the area of hosting the Super Bowl
or BCS Title Game, or even more egregiously, my Orioles
staying in Ft. Lauderdale for spring training, or the number
of jobs created by a new Marlins stadium, are never held-up
to anything even remotely resembling basic fact-checking
scrutiny, much less, oh, forensic accounting?

They still do that sort of thing in other parts of the country,
and at Channel Four in Great Britain as I've recently posted,
but other than CBS4's I-Team here, under WFOR news
director Adrienne Roark, that whole public scrutiny thing
seems to be ancient history in local South Florida TV, even
though it's needed now more than ever before, with tough
decisions on the horizon for years to come at Dinner Key
Auditorium and up on Andrews Avenue.

-----------------------
Miami Herald

WHERE'S THE NEWS IN BROWARD?

By SANDRA EARLEY Herald Television Critic
May 27, 1982
In the eyes of South Florida television news, Broward is an adolescent stepchild, growing quickly but not mature enough to be taken seriously.

Sometimes local stations ignore it all together. When thunderstorms flooded the region earlier this month, one TV reporter noted the hazzards "throughout Dade," never mentioning its northern neighbor.

Other times, it's just the basics -- stories about county commission and school-board meetings, I-95 traffic tie-ups and robberies. Sophisticated, investigative analysis and feature reporting are for Dade only.

Yet Broward's TV audience increased 86 per cent during the last ten years. By comparison, TV homes grew only 36 per cent nationwide and 43 per cent in Dade. If Broward were a TV market all its own, it would rank alongside Syracuse, N.Y., and Richmond, Va.

But it isn't. Broward is wrapped into a viewing area dominated by three network-affiliated stations based in Dade. It doesn't have its own VHF broadcast station. And while 40 per cent of South Florida's viewers live in Broward, stories about it occupy only 10 to 15 per cent of the available time in 6 p.m. newscasts.

"I don't think they cover us to the extent that their market would indicate," says Marcia Beach, Broward County Commission chairman.

To a large degree, Dade's dominance is justified. The southern county, with its much-publicized crime rate and refugee camp, is more newsworthy than Broward's bedroom communities. Still, the future of Dade's stations is tied to Broward, with its large concentration of affluent residents. "It's a very Anglo-oriented market, with Dade being more Hispanic and black," says Dave Choate, WCKT-Ch. 7 news director.

In response, each station has added staff in the last two years. In January, WTVJ-Ch. 4 moved into a larger Broward news office with anchor Ralph Renick broadcasting from the facility on opening night. Ch. 7 will occupy a new building come September, and WPLG-Ch. 10 is searching for larger quarters.
WCIX-Chs. 6/33, the Dade independent station, has a small news operation in Broward.

Other changes, albeit small ones, have been incorporated to emphasize the region as a whole. Ch. 7 calls itself "South Florida's 7." Anchors and reporters at Ch. 10 must say "in Broward," not "up in Broward," lest the "up" isolate the county.

But Broward remains a quandary: How do you cover Broward without boring Kendall?

Chs. 4 and 7 acknowledge the differences. Each has given Broward its own anchor, and most Broward news is presented in a short, self-contained segment. The stations say the format increases credibility. A separate Broward anchor is "more authoritative than me speaking from Third and Miami Avenue in Miami," says Renick.

Ch. 10 uses its format to emphasize the unity of the Dade- Broward region. There is no separate anchor, and Broward stories are placed throughout the broadcast according to their newsworthiness. "We do not ghetto-ize our coverage," says Steve Wasserman, news director. "It trivializes the stories and sends signals. It's like telling Broward that it's different, that anchors Ann Bishop and Glenn Rinker are too good to read Broward news."

The stations have other differences, too. Here are some evaluations based on monitoring newscasts and visiting each bureau:

Ch. 4: In Broward since 1961, this granddaddy of news operations has the least air time but the largest staff and the best facility of the three stations.

Ch. 4 produces 30 minutes of news at 6 p.m., while Ch. 10 has 90 minutes, beginning at 5:30, and Ch. 7 an hour at 6.

Fourteen people--including three reporters, a reporter/ anchor and bureau chief Frank Lynn-- work out of a large, relaxed office and mini-studio above a Fort Lauderdale movie theater. It is the only bureau to have a remote truck assigned to it full time. When other stations want to broadcast live from the scene, a truck comes in from Miami.

The combination of a big staff and little airtime should translate into more thoughtful stories, since reporters have time to work on them. Sometimes it does. But day by day, there's significantly less Broward news -- usually two or three stories in two minutes, compared to three to five stories occupying four or five minutes in the other early-evening newscasts.

Still, the ratings show Ch. 4 is the station preferred at 6 by most Broward viewers. As in Dade, Ch. 10 runs second, Ch. 7 third.

Ch. 7: It's the best overall effort in Broward news, balancing quantity of stories with quality and position in the 6 p.m. broadcast. A Broward story usually runs in the show's top segment. Later segments feature one or two groups of stories, with Steve Dawson anchoring.

Ch. 7 opened a Broward bureau in 1962 but did not begin building staff until 1 1/2 years ago. These days, two reporters, a reporter/anchor, bureau chief Jere Pierce and seven others work out of a jammed storefront office.

These days, WCKT's Broward studio has a static, old- fashioned look on the air, but Pierce says that will change when the bureau moves to its new facility.

Ch. 10--Traditionally, it has been an afterthought in the Broward market. "I guess Ch. 10 also does some coverage, too," is the way Marcia Beach puts it.

The station didn't open its bureau until 1974 and continues to play catch-up. It has the smallest staff: a total of eight, including two reporters and bureau chief Elaine Hume in an office on the 19th floor of a Fort Lauderdale building. June 1, a third reporter and two-man crew will join the bureau full time.

For all the late start, the Ch. 10 bureau bustles more than its sisters down the dial. Every workday hour, a staffer calls local police and fire departments to check for breaking news; the other stations check twice a day.

And when a big story breaks, Ch. 10 quickly calls in Miami reinforcements. On the day bodies of Haitian refugees washed up on a Hallandale beach, "they swarmed all over the story," a competing newsman says.

Ch. 10 promises more coverage in the future. "Broward is where it is all happening if you want to build up the ratings," Hume says, "if you want to beat the pants off the other stations."
-----
(Steve Bousquet is now a political reporter with the St. Pete Times
and a must-read for me.)

Miami Herald
STATE'S FIRST TV STATION IS NOW BROWARD'S FIRST

By STEVE BOUSQUET Herald Staff Writer
July 31, 1998
Steve Bousquet was a Broward-based news reporter for WPLG-Channel 10 from 1981-84, before joining The Herald.
For 50 years, history and geography conspired to deprive Broward of an electronic identity: a hometown TV station. But that became old news Thursday as WTVJ-Channel 6, Florida's first TV station, announced plans to relocate to Miramar.

The same station that gave South Florida its first news anchorman, Ralph Renick -- on a different channel and different network -- will be broadcasting from Broward in two years.

To appreciate the historic significance of Channel 6's decision to move to Miramar, it helps to remember when Broward TV news consisted of film cans being shuttled down Interstate 95 at rush hour or snippets of news delivered from ``the Broward bureau'' -- a small studio in the Yankee Clipper Hotel on Fort Lauderdale beach.

Stations pay more attention to Broward than ever before. But there are still some nights when Broward TV coverage is little more than a crime newsreel sandwiched between longer Dade stories, and Miami-based meteorologists still warn us about those thunderstorms ``up'' in Broward.

By moving its studios, satellite TV trucks and anchors to Miramar, NBC-owned Channel 6 is moving closer to the region's population center. But the TV station is making a public-relations commitment to Broward that no amount of promotion can buy.

Station executives described the decision as a move to the center of the region's booming population. Don Browne, WTVJ's vice president and general manager, said the ``artificial'' county line is meaningless in today's society.

``We're making a natural response to the population growth and shift,'' Browne said. ``We look at this as one community. . . . This is a decision based on an understanding of the dynamics and growth of our entire community.''
Effects on coverage

The questions are whether a Broward location will mean better Broward coverage on Channel 6 -- and whether Channel 6's rivals will feel pressured to beef up coverage because a competitor is headquartered there.

``There will be more coverage of Broward. We're talking about two broadcast facilities,'' said Ramon Escobar, WTVJ's news director. ``Covering South Florida is more about preparation and strategy than it is about position. Having a Miramar location does help us have more Broward [coverage].''

Station executives spoke of a ``dual studio'' in Miami and South Broward, with an indoor-outdoor studio on Biscayne Boulevard in Miami. It is important that in moving north, WTVJ not appear to be abandoning Miami-Dade.

The move is the second half of a positive civic 1-2 punch, coming after the Florida Panthers agreed to move to a new arena in western Sunrise.

A television station, like a newspaper or a sports team, gives an area a sense of place, an identity -- and not having a hometown station has been one reason why Broward lacks a stronger identity.
Stepchild perception

Even in an age of cable and satellite receivers, South Florida TV news reinforces a perception that Broward is Miami's suburban stepchild.

``You turn the TV stations on here, and it's mostly Miami news, so you do not have that daily confirmation of where you are,'' said Jack Latona, a Fort Lauderdale lawyer who grew up watching three hometown TV stations in Buffalo.

In a modern age of media saturation, Latona said, the boundaries of communities are not municipal lines, but the circulation of a newspaper or the reach of a TV signal.

As a city commissioner in Fort Lauderdale, Broward's largest city, Latona can count on one hand the number of times a TV crew has been inside City Hall -- but that may change when WTVJ moves to its new six-acre site near Interstate 75 and Miramar Parkway.

``It stands to reason the news is going to be skewed more toward Broward, and I'm not so sure that's a bad thing,'' said Joe Angotti, a Miami TV consultant and former NBC News senior vice president and former dean of the University of Miami communications school. ``I know a lot of people who think Dade is losing an important media outlet, but I'm not so sure that Broward doesn't deserve a little more on newscasts than it's been receiving up to now. It's not going to happen overnight, but there will be a gradual tendency to have more Broward news on the newscast.''
Beyond local cable

That would be good news for people in Broward, who have to drive out of the county to get on network-affiliated television. Top politicians must settle for what exposure they can get on cable TV, or go to Miami's WPLG to appear on This Week in South Florida with Michael Putney.

BECON TV, the Broward school system's television network, airs a weekly Broward public affairs show called Countyline, but not all cable systems pick it up.

Two dueling state Senate candidates, Mandy Dawson-White and Matt Meadows, squared off Thursday in their only TV debate so far -- in the West Palm Beach studios of WPTV-Channel 5.

``Broward doesn't have its own TV station, and yet there are little towns in Montana with TV stations,'' Latona said.
It was not by accident.

When the first VHF television licenses were issued in the late 1940s, Miami already was a big city. Broward was still largely swampland. A half million people lived in Dade in 1950, compared to 84,000 in all of Broward -- fewer people than live in Pembroke Pines today.

Smaller West Palm Beach, just out of range of the Miami TV stations' signals, also qualified for licenses. Broward got a couple of UHF station licenses instead.

Broward's current population is estimated at 1.4 million. It consistently ranks among the top 10 fastest-growing counties in the United States. It is the 16th most-populous county in America, larger than Riverside County, Calif.; Montgomery County (Philadelphia), Pa.; Cuyahoga County (Cleveland), Ohio; and Alameda County (Oakland), Calif.

Herald staff writers Jane Bussey and Neil Reisner and researcher Harriett Tupler contributed to this report.
--------
Miami Herald

RAZING OF WTVJ'S OLD HOME STIRS UP STATION'S `GHOSTS'

By ANABELLE de GALE
August 18, 2002
Frank Capra's You Can't Take It With You and 2 Yanks in Trinidad, starring Pat O'Brien, were rolling on the big screen. Pocket change got you into the double feature playing at the Capitol Theater in downtown Miami.

But that night - March 21, 1949 - what was debuting on the small screen in the theater's backroom would make history. Television.

More than half a century later, it's curtains for the site of Florida's first television broadcast and home to the only station south of Atlanta in those early days. In the coming weeks, the historic but crumbling Capitol Theater and former WTVJ-NBC 6 studios will be reduced to rubble. In its place: a new $120 million U.S. courthouse, one of the largest in the Southeast, which federal officials hope will be majestic enough to bring back life to the once animated area.

Designed by Arquitectonica, the local architecture firm that designed AmericanAirlines Arena, the massive court building will house about 16 courtrooms, 16 judges' chambers, detention cells, U.S. Marshals Service offices and other facilities.

The 316 N. Miami Ave. site once lured throngs of South Floridians to the theater, then dubbed Wometco's ``first-run'' premier movie house. It was built in 1926 as the Capitol Theater and converted into WTVJ in 1949 by Miami pioneer Mitchell Wolfson as an outgrowth of his Wometco theater chain.
RUNNING LIGHTS

``I remember going to the Capitol Theater even before it was WTVJ. It had the most dramatic theater front in Miami with running lights,'' said Miami historian Arva Moore Parks. ``Everybody went downtown to see the movies.''

Among them: a young and mischievous Howard Kleinberg.

Kleinberg, a newspaperman and long-time Miami resident, was a teenager in high school when he went to see a rerun of The Four Feathers, a 1939 colonial-India epic.

As the film's thirsty hero made his way across sun-scorched land, Kleinberg jumped from his seat in the balcony, screaming ``Water! Water!''

His friends got a kick out of it. Kleinberg got a kick, too - out of the place.

In 1952, WTVJ remodeled the building. It added to the three-story structure 200 spectator seats for its 68-by-100-foot studio on the second floor. The ground floor housed the executive offices, programming and sales departments. The control and projection rooms were on the third floor.
END OF THE ROAD

The building's demolition marks the end of an era, said Parks, who remembers that Monday evening in March 1949 when she walked to a store on Northeast 97th Street and Second Avenue to watch the first broadcast on a set in the shop's front window.

``I stood in front of an appliance store with most of the rest of Miami Shores to catch it. It was only an eight- or 10-inch screen, but most of us had never seen television before and it was very exciting,'' Parks said. ``They were having a lot of technical difficulties that first night. The test pattern and signs that said `Please Stand By' were probably on more than the programming.''

Only about 1,000 homes in the Miami area had sets that night to tune into WTVJ, which was then Channel 4.

The station had but 21 employees and two cameras. The 16th television station in the country, WTVJ would be South Florida's sole station for the next seven years.

From behind an office-like wooden desk, 21-year-old Ralph Renick - ``a skinny, little kid,'' Parks said - delivered the station's first news broadcast in July 1950.

That amateurish 15-minute segment would pave the way for electronic media in South Florida. ``We were pioneering,'' Renick said in a 1991 interview. ``Pioneering is fun because nobody can tell you you're doing it wrong - because it hasn't been done before.''

Renick would go on to be one of the nation's longest-running news anchors before his retirement in 1985. He died six years later from cancer.
IN THE ARCHIVES

Some of the footage from Renick's early newscasts has survived. The Florida Moving Image Archive has four million feet of WTVJ film, with the earliest newscast dating to circa 1951, said Steven Davidson, the archive's director.

Maps and pointers were used, cardboard backdrops were common and advertisements were displayed on the set during Renick's newscast. Commercials were not taped. Instead the camera would pan over to a spot next to Renick where pitchmen would give their spiels live.

From its small studio carved out of the Capitol Theater, WTVJ would broadcast four hours a night except Tuesdays, when the station went dark.

Before the technology to link the station to national networks was developed, the station was dependent on live, locally produced programs.
STUNT WOMAN

There were sports trivia and Pictionary-style game shows, gardening segments and children's programming. And then there was Lee Dickens. The stunt woman who walked on the wings of planes for the show ``was my idol,'' Parks recalled.

The station, which moved to Miramar in 2000, produced many heavyweight journalists like CNN's Larry King, NBC's Katie Couric and ESPN's Hank Goldberg and former ESPN Up Close host Roy Firestone. It introduced editorials, black journalists and female sportscasters to South Florida television.

``Many great things happened there. The place is overrun with history,'' said senior correspondent Ike Seamans, who joined WTVJ in 1969.

Still, Seamans said, ``I can't think of a more dumb place to put it than an old movie theater, but as [Wolfson] said at the time he never realized the full impact of what he was starting.''

The Miami building was like ``an old pair of shoes,'' Seamans said.

``It was old and decrepit. You had people jumping on chairs to avoid the mice but it felt comfortable. There was a sense of camaraderie there that has not been duplicated. The [Miramar headquarters], as grandiose as it is, will never be the same.''

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Miami Herald
MIAMI DADE COLLEGE

Moving Image Archives show Miami's past

By LUISA YANEZ
March 30, 2009
South Florida's most prized film and video collection -- millions of feet of footage documenting nine decades of events that shaped Miami-Dade -- has just been been donated to Miami Dade College.

The Lynn and Louis Wolfson II Florida Moving Image Archives are made up largely of newscasts aired by the area's first station, WTVJ -- the flagship station of Wometco Enterprises. WTVJ first went on the air in 1949, fronted by pioneer newscaster Ralph Renick. It is now NBC6.

Louis Wolfson II had presided over the television and cable division of Wometco prior to its sale in 1983 and had preserved the station's video collection.

This month, his widow, Lynn Wolfson and MDC President Eduardo Padrón signed an agreement transferring the archive to the college and establishing the new Lynn and Louis Wolfson II Florida Moving Image Archives Media Center to be housed in a new building to be constructed in MDC's Wolfson campus complex in downtown Miami.

Through the years, the collection has expanded to include local footage shot as early as 1910. There are also many reels dedicated to the Cuban Revolution, Miami's civil rights era, the McDuffie riots, the Mariel boatlift, Haitian refugees and the Cocaine Cowboys.

Recently, WPLG-Channel 10 donated 5,000 hours of tapes to the archives when it moved out of its longtime Biscayne Boulevard headquarters.

The historic archives are the latest cultural acquisition by the college. MDC already owns the Miami International Film Festival, Miami Book Fair International, the Freedom Tower and the Tower Theater in Little Havana.

Along with the donation of the video library comes $7 million from the Mitchell Wolfson Sr. Foundation to maintain and grow the new media center. And, Lynn Wolfson donated an additional $2 million toward its construction.

"These funds will allow the center to expand its capacity to preserve historically important film and video from around Florida and to preserve our heritage for future generations to better understand their past," Lynn Wolfson said.

Padrón thanked the Wolfson family in a prepared statement:

"On behalf of our nearly 170,000 students, who will benefit immensely from this gift, I thank Lynn Wolfson and family for this extraordinary contribution that will keep giving for years to come."

Lynn Wolfson helped found the Moving Image Archives in 1984, along with newscaster Renick and historian Arva Moore Parks, under the joint sponsorship of the Miami-Dade Public Library System, MDC and the University of Miami.

The archives are presently housed at the main public library.

To learn more about the archives go to:
http://www.wolfsonarchive.org

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Back in April, there were a flurry of really terrific articles
and columns that highlighted many of the same points
I've made before about the future roles of newspapers
as well as the common complaint -including from this
blogger- about inadequate local news coverage, so I've
linked them below for you to peruse when you can.

Since she wrote it while out in California, the Maureen
Dowd column I link to here, for a Sunday, has a title
that's a nodding reference to Joan Didion's famous book
of essays on California in the Sixties, and the myriad
cross-currents of history and social change taking place
there at the same time,
Slouching Towards Bethlehem,

If you haven't already heard it or don't already know my
great story about Maureen at the New York Times
employee party at Todd Purdum and Dee Dee Myers's
house in Santa Monica in 1996, during the Democratic
National Convention, back when Todd was still with
the paper -now at Vanity Fair- ask me to tell you about
it if we ever meet.

It's actually quite amusing and illustrative of lots of things
about media and the power of celebrities, and Maureen
in particular, whom I used to find myself defending in public
an awful lot when I was living up there, since lots of
otherwise well-infomed people, especially conservatives
I generally respected, would say outlandish things about
her that simply weren't true.
And I was in a position to know.

The last few years that I was living up in the D.C. area,
she and I were the only two people in the Army/Navy
Building, where the Times Washington bureau is located,
who had subscriptions to Daily Variety, which were
couriered in every weekday and left for us at the concierge's
desk.

Because she lived closer to the building then I did,
Capitol Hill compared to Arlington, if she came into work
before I swung by, she'd often grab my copy if she didn't
look carefully at the name on the label.
Which is why about 5-6 times a month I was walking
around town with her name on my copy.

And why, at least once a month, typically when I was
having some coffee at one of the two Starbucks up at
Dupont Circle, or at the Whatsa Bagels nearby,
just above M Street -home of the best bagels in D.C.,
esp. their banana nut, my fave- and just a few blocks
from the CBS Washington news bureau, I'd be asked the
question by someone sitting next to me, who'd spot her
name on the front page,
"Do you REALLY know Maureen Dowd?"
-----

Slouching Towards Oblivion

Maureen Dowd
April 26, 2009

Her previous four columns have all also been from California,
which is much longer than most of her trips out there over the
past ten years.
To Tweet or Not to Tweet
In an interview with the inventors of Twitter, a simple quest to find out if they are as annoying as their invention.
April 22, 2009
The Aura of Arugulance
On a visit to the Bay Area, there is clarity from two visionaries who inspire cultlike devotion, one for her green cooking and the other for his mythical empire on blue screens.
April 19, 2009
Dinosaur at the Gate
Does Google have the right to profit so profligately from newspaper content at a time when journalism is in such jeopardy?
April 15, 2009
Demi in Des Moines?
The West Coast once glowed with prosperity and was the harbinger of hip new things. Now in the grip of recession, California’s cool has been stolen by, of all places, Iowa.
April 12, 2009
-----
(Sharon Waxman is the former New York Times Hollywood
reporter who covered the world of entertainment from LA.
She now writes for The Wrap, http://www.thewrap.com/
which I'd advise you to make a Favorite if you're smart.)

The Future of Media: The Profit Principle
By Sharon Waxman
April 26th, 2009
It was a packed auditorium and a lively debate at Broad Hall at UCLA today, where we addressed the future of media on our panel -- myself, Arianna Huffington, Marc Cooper (pictured left, with festival's founder longtime chief architect Steve Wasserman) and Andrew Donohue. I'm starting to see a pattern emerge from these conversations, which are going on daily, constantly, all over the country. The pattern is, essentially, legacy media (read 'old media') getting defensive and weepy over their decline, new media feeling fresh-faced and righteous, and none of us having a solution to any of it.
Read the rest of this story at:
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Meanwhile, following the sound of his own drum...
Former CBS4 Reporter Very Happy To Be Out of Miami
By Kyle Munzenrieder
March 31, 2009
http://blogs.miaminewtimes.com/riptide/2009/03/former_cbs4_reporter_very_happ.php