31 Juli, 2008

De Archieven van de categorie: WTEM

Voeding uit een Onwaarschijnlijke Bron

Van vandaag Washinton Post De de sectievoorzijde van sporten is een revolutionair feest van overtreft aan de het hockeyventilators van het gebied. Begin met de sumptuous fotojournalistiek van feestAlexander Semin. De post is nauwelijks alleen de laatste jaren in oude media in de verminderende journalistiek van de effectfoto, maar zijn terugkeer is altijd welkom. Wij hebben eveneens Stellair het speldossier van Tarik gewoonlijk. En kroniekschrijver Mike Wise kreeg een verhaal - dwingende, ook - van een bezoek dat hij heeft gemaakt aan Kettler.

Tijdens vorge nacht het gelijk maken van aandrijvingsWTEM Steve geroepen Czabin de post Sectie n van sporten slechtst in het land. Onder andere grieven, haalde hij het ontbreken van nota's aan indient begeleidende teamdekking. Maar er zijn dit eveneens in de Post van vandaag, van Tarik.

Wij hebben gegeven Post steunen voor dit soort het werk voordien. Wij wensen enkel dit het niet zo cicade-als in zijn intervallen was.

Washinton Post - 16 Januari 08 - de Sectie van Sporten

Kolzig op John Thompson Show

De kapitalen netminder Olaf Kolzig waren een gast op yesterday John Thompson Show op SportsTalk980. Besproken de onderwerpen waren:

  • De reacties van het team om Boudreau te trainen.
  • WTEM - SportsTalk980Veranderingen die door Bus Boudreau worden aangebracht.
  • Veranderingen die goaltender benvloeden.
  • Veteranen die aan het team op de recente veranderingen spreken.
  • Zijn de Kappen fysieke genoeg.
  • De Instigator regel
  • Basketbal als shady fysieke sport

U kunt luister hier aan het gesprek.

Boudreau on the John Thompson Show

Interim Caps Coach Bruce Boudreau was a guest on yesterday’s John Thompson Show on SportsTalk980. Topics discussed were:

  • The death of Sean Taylor.
  • WTEM - SportsTalk980Coaching in the NHL.
  • Approaching the game.
  • No “X” in Boudreau.
  • The task at hand vs. Florida
  • Who is the Undertaker?

You can listen to the the interview here.

Washington Capital Frequencies - An Interview with Kurt Kehl

Radio Tower

The Washington Capitals recently signed on with a new radio partner, Bonneville International Corporation, to broadcast all 82 games for the 2007-08 season. As a former DJ I was curious about the deal’s details, and how it benefits the team and Caps fans. So I recently spoke with the Kurt Kehl, the Capitals’ VP of Communications & CCO, about the new Caps radio show, the advertising arrangements, Internet broadcasts, and more.

Mike: Ted Leonsis has mentioned on his blog that the stronger radio signal was a key factor in the team’s decision to switch. What else made this deal so appealing to the team?

Kurt: Here were some of the other big factors:

  • Consistent outlet for games (minimal conflict with the Nationals)
  • Financial considerations and advertising opportunities
  • WTOP promotional opportunities
  • Promo spots & advertising inventory
  • WTOPnews.com banner advertisements all season long
  • Online streaming spots in addition to spots on 3WT and WTOP

Expanding to Baltimore was important to reach out to fans there. We were considering a Baltimore sister station. But [3WT] has an incredibly wide reach with its three stations; now we no longer need a separate station. Also, unlike WTEM, [3WT] has no overnight power reduction.

[Editor's note: WTEM operates with 50,000 watts during the day, but 5,000 watts at night. 1500 AM operates at 50,000 watts continuously.]

One problem with the old deal was surfing the dial to find a game when it was bumped to another frequency. Talk Radio 3WT broadcasts on 1500 AM (DC), 107.7 FM (Warrenton, VA), and 820 AM (Frederick, MD). Will the games be simulcast on all three frequencies?

Yes. And that holds true for the games as well as the Saturday show.

What can you tell our readers about the broadcasting arrangement? Is it a “rent the airtime, keep the ad revenue” deal for the team?

Yes – we buy time and maintain ad inventory – the key point in the agreement is ad inventory for sponsorship and revenue.

Is this a pretty standard agreement in the hockey radio world, and in the sporting world in general?

It’s not an uncommon arrangement – a lot of teams buy their airtime, unless they dominate a market like the New York Yankees or the Washington Redskins.

What varies is how much you pay, and what you get for what you pay. In that regard the Caps’ deal is unique as far as the excellent advertising and promotional opportunities provided.

The key thing for us was getting additional promotional inventory on WTOP. Bonneville offered us a generous package, including “spot banks” that we can use as we like – for example, to promote particular games or events more prominently than others.

We really focused on the promotional elements to reach out to more fans. We’re grateful for the hard-core fans that already listen to the games, but the promotional opportunities are critical to attracting new fans to the team – whether they come to games, listen on the radio, or watch on television.

The press release mentioned a “weekly one-hour Capitals magazine show on Saturday nights at 6 p.m.” Can you tell us more about the style of the show?

The show will be similar to Caps Center Ice Show, but now it’s 6 p.m. every Saturday throughout the season.

Who will host the show, and when is it slated to premiere?

We haven’t selected the host yet. The plan is to debut the show before the first game, but no official date has been announced.

Will the games and/or shows be streaming via the Internet?

Yes! We haven’t finalized exactly where they’ll be available, possibly washingtoncaps.com, but the broadcasts will be available online. We hope that the online broadcasts will provide out-of-town fans a way to follow the Caps from wherever they are.

Will the Saturday Night shows be available for download/podcast?

That’s definitely our intent, though exactly how we’ll distribute them is not yet set.

Has a name for the weekly show been selected? If not, may I suggest “Saturday Night Caps”, or SNC, since everything in DC requires an acronym or abbreviation…

I like your suggestion … maybe you should offer options on OFB and have fans write in …

Thanks Kurt! You heard the man, folks: vote away, and feel free to add your own.

What should the new weekly Capitals radio show be named?
  • Add an Answer
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New Radio Deal

As first seen in Mike Vogel’s blog and later announced by the team, the Washington Capitals have left the hockey-hating SportsTalk980 and signed a deal with Bonneville International Corporation. The Caps will be heard on Talk Radio 3WT at 107.7 FM, 1500 AM, and 820 AM. Bonneville is the parent company of WTOP, which aired the Caps some years back.Old Radio

Bonneville has shuffled many stations and frequencies in the last three years with the latest to come this September. It was announced this week that Bonneville’s partnership with the Washington Post for Washington Post Radio, WTWP, will end on September 20th.

“The new station will feature local and syndicated talk shows to replace programming provided by The Post. WWWT, dubbed “Talk Radio 3WT,” will begin airing Sept. 20. WWWT will be simulcast on the same frequencies on which Washington Post Radio now airs: 1500 AM, 107.7 FM and 820 AM.”

The press release from the Washington Capitals states that the two-year deal will call for all 82 games to be broadcast, including pre- and postgame shows. The station will also air a weekly one-hour Capitals magazine show on Saturday nights at 6 p.m as well as cross promotions on sister station WTOP (103.5 FM and 103.9 FM).

“The addition of another premier professional sports franchise on our radio station makes us the leading provider of play-by-play sports in Washington on one of the most far-reaching signals in the area,� said Bonneville D.C. senior vice president Joel Oxley. “The combination of compelling talk during the day, and play-by-play sports at night and on the weekend delivers a powerful programming lineup for 3WT.�

“We are excited to partner with Bonneville and bring our games to such powerful signals,� Capitals chairman and majority owner Ted Leonsis said. “This agreement will allow Capitals fans throughout the region to hear our games, and the promotional elements will help us reach new fans as well.�

This is excellent news for Caps’ fans, as the 1500 frequency is a whopping 50,000 watts and can be heard at a considerable distance from Verizon Center, especially at night.

Don’t expect any tears to be shed from the so-called Sports Reporters.

Steve Czaban Steps in It

Howard Stern did at least one commendable thing for his culture: every day he reminded us that radio is the lowest form of all media. In D.C., we needn’t have had Stern to point this out; not when we have WTEM’s Steve Czaban.Steve Czaban - Headshot

Late Thursday “Czabe” took umbrage with Washington Capitals’ owner Ted Leonsis, who this week on his blog pointed out the obvious — that D.C. as a sports town is grossly, maliciously underserved by the MSM sports personalities and outlets assigned to covering the region’s teams. In fact, Czaban Thursday admitted as much:

“Washington is a political town first, and a Redskins town second. And if the Wizards ever get really good, it’ll be a basketball town. But that’s about it.”

Nothing there lending credence to the 200 million-strong number of Americans today disdaining the media for its arrogance. (Or is it 300 million?)

If you’re over 40 and a D.C. native you’re actually savvy enough to know that there was a time, not all that long ago, when the Redskins not only weren’t the only game in town, most folks didn’t bother going to games or following them. And thanks to Daniel Snyder, a healthy return to those glory days may not be far around the corner. Anyway, for the likes of Czaban, and by extension his radio station, such laziness of thought and work ethic makes for a comfy, sweatless broadcasting existence.

Czaban didn’t mean to prove the point we made last October 6, with our very first OFB post, but he did; and he underscored, italicized, and placed three exclamation points on Leonsis’ long-standing concern about D.C.’s sports media: they not only don’t aspire to be like the media in great sports cities who do cover the pro teams (all of them) with balance and pride, they’re proud to be gluttonously, unprofessionally imbalanced: “We’re not Philadelphia. We’re not Detroit. We’re not Boston. We’re not Montreal. We’re not New York,” Czaban crowed. Precisely, Steve.

Ovechkin, not OvetchkinCan you imagine if 30 years ago someone like Steve Czaban were tasked with running Toyota or Honda, staring up at the dominance of Detroit’s Big Three? (Not Lindsay, Howe, and Delvecchio.)

“Sports talk radio is not a democracy of equally shared time between all sports,” the Czabe alleged Thursday. “The most popular sports get the most coverage in a variety of ways.” Shuttles to New York and Boston are rather affordable; the Czabe would do well to take one to audit the voices on sports radio there. Think the wretched Celtics of the past 8 or 10 years were blotted out of airwave discourse in Beantown? Or the even worse Knicks in New York?

Isn’t there something noble about a media that with the breadth of its coverage says to the outside world, in effect, “Our guys in shorts (or skates) are having a rough go of it right about now, but we’re behind them”? Or perhaps, “Our guys are terrible, and we’re upset about it, and here’s how we think they should fix it?” A debate, preferably a lively one, is better than silent indifference.

Truth be told, Czaban isn’t exactly on terra firma discussing anything puck (the omitted spellcheck on the last name of Washington’s most dynamic athlete in his blog file Thursday is one tipoff—Alex has no “t” in his surname).

Let’s be clear about Leonsis’ concern: he never asked WTEM to devote an hour to puck talk each autumn Sunday morning. What set him off was listening to WTEM while en route to a DC United game last week, on a night when no less than ESPN was in the house for coverage, and listening to the home town broadcast talent sneeringly deride the occasion. That’s right, it wasn’t even lacking or snide hockey coverage that set off the owner of the Capitals; it was soccer coverage.

Look, it’s patently obvious that our sports MSM here get off on the likes of Michael Vick and Terrell Owens instead of Alexander Ovechkin. We get that. We’re sorry for that—we wish they aspired to something more noble—but, to quote Czaban, “it is what it is.” So how about comporting yourselves, unprofessional as you are, with dignity — at least while the microphones are capturing your thoughts?

A few questions for the Czabe:

(1) First, do you and your colleagues even aspire to make Washington a better sports town than it’s been generally acknowledged to be; if not, why are you in the sports radio business? If not, shouldn’t you get out of the way and let someone else with a greater love of Washington sports try?

(2) If it really is “all about ratings,” and that’s why hockey is one of George Carlin’s seven unutterable words for radio guys in prime ratings slots, why don’t you just Sternify your program and go for the big ones: get some Hooters talent in the studio and have them pick the Sunday pigskin matchups by tossing wet tubetops at the helmets.

(3) In your estimation, is it actually written in the heavens that New York, Boston, Chicago, Philadelphia, and Detroit (Detroit??) have been and always will be great sports towns, and that D.C. never can be? Is it the height of their office buildings that makes it so? Better public transportation (don’t answer that)?

(4) Czaban takes pains to emphasize that his demographic is men aged 25-54, not the less-specific target of the average website; fair enough. But he presents it as a counterpoint to Leonsis’s Internet stats. While most websites’ statistics do not break down to such demographic detail, who do you think does most Internet surfing? Women aged 75+? If anything, Internet usage skews to a younger (and more profitable) age bracket than radio, by far.

Whatever caliber of sports town Washington is, Ted Leonsis this week embarked on a mission to make it better. In any other “sports town,” he wouldn’t have to be this kind of trailblazer.

[Admin Edit: For more views, visit Japers' Rink and the NHL FanHouse]

The Spirit of the CyberRadio

Cup'pa JoeAdd to the names of the Revolutionaries Allen Popels, who a few months ago asked the question, “Is it too much to ask that we the hockey loving and Caps’ fans have a broadcast fan forum for 30 or 60 minutes a week?” The Caps of course asked a similar question a few years back and answered it with the excellent “Caps Report,” hosted by Mike Vogel and Spike Parker. Popels wanted his own show, on the weekend, a fan-driven one. He had technology at his disposal and did something about it. Beginning earlier this summer, every Sunday, he began hosting his one hour on the frontier air of cyberspace, ‘CapitalFanatic: The Fan’s Voice of the Washington Capitals.’ (A podcast is available; and Popels makes his program available via iTunes.)

Yesterday Eric McErlain and Dmitry Chesnokov and I appeared as guests on Popel’s program, where we discussed the recently completed Rookie Camp and a few other tidbits puck. Interestingly, we had no shortage of topics hockey to discuss for the full hour in the middle of summer. If we’re invited back, we’ll return. Telling, though, isn’t it, that the region’s hockey fans have their hockey audio itches scratched by the Caps themselves and their fans . . . and not say local radio?

Here I enter my broken record realm: it wasn’t always thus. Once upon a time Scott Lynn of WTEM hosted a weekly Caps’ radio forum on weekend mornings. One could find comparable programming on WTOP and WMAL in the days prior to TEM. One of the best things about our iconic and highly idiosyncratic radio personality Ken Beatrice was that in a sense every day was Caps’ chat on his program: he never treated the Caps as a third- or fourth-tier tenant in town, and rather led a one-man campaign to make Washington a genuine sports town. He had his broadcast shortcomings to be sure, but his heart was in the right place. More importantly, he had media bosses supportive of his mission.

During yesterday’s ‘Netcast I had at times two trains of thought larger in context than the specific matters the four of us were discussing. One was of the caliber of expertise that was being shared. I’d really urge you to seek out Popel’s podcast, fast forward through my meager prattlings, and listen closely to Eric McErlain’s nuanced take on the Caps and especially the NHL more broadly. The guy knows the league, because he covers the league, and we’re blessed that he possesses a passion for the local team as well. And Dmitry genuinely is a local expert on all things Russian hockey. The remarkable irony now abundantly broadcast and published, and filling the vast void, is that by virtue of their abdication of covering hockey professionally, as their trade has ever required, local media have unwittingly bred a cottage alternative industry of impassioned experts.

I challenge you to identify a single local sports anchor, on radio or TV, who knows one-tenth as much on hockey as McErlain, and can communicate it in as polished a fashion.

Flowers do bloom in deserts, you know.

Let me be clear: there are at times commendable attempts by local broadcast press to cover our game and our team. They tend to be ex-Redskins (not including John Riggins) now seated before studio microphones. That’s interesting in itself; football players are perhaps best conditioned to appreciate the physical demands made of hockey players each night.

The other thought I had yesterday was more speculative about the near-term and more future impact of enterprises like Popel’s, and especially of those that broaden the new media perspective. When, for instance, will we see fan- or team-inspired television/video programming adding to the chatter?

My prediction: within six months.

Axis of Media Evil

Mr. Smith went to Washington to reform politics. Lodged in greater Washington, D.C., a barren outpost of hockey media silence thanks to the malicious disinterest of The Washington Post (henceforth referred to as The Compost), among others, I am venturing into cyberspace to broaden my hometown’s coverage of the planet’s greatest game, and especially of my mistress since my seventh birthday, the Washington Capitals. Thus the birth of On Frozen Blog. Welcome.

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