Phil Rosenthal

Media

Sunday-night outsourcing on CW

October 5, 2008

For the CW network's first two seasons, its Sunday-night lineup was a rumor, one in which the young women it targeted weeknights had no interest.

    Recent columns

  • Chicago playoff fever not exactly in the (TV) air

    October 1, 2008

    Some baseball fans will have an unpleasant realization this week.

  • Obama weighs in on Arbitron

    October 1, 2008

    As all-consuming as the nation's financial crisis would seem to be, to say nothing of the demands of his run for the White House, Sen. Barack Obama nonetheless found time this week to worry about the accuracy of radio ratings.

  • Playoff fever not exactly in the air

    September 28, 2008

    Some baseball fans will have an unpleasant realization this week.

  • Spin room coverage out of control

    September 26, 2008

    Regardless of how this week's McCain-Obama debate over whether to debate is resolved, there can be no dispute on one point.

  • Channel 2 news set gets a big upgrade

    September 24, 2008

    WBBM-Ch. 2 used to look like it was doing its newscasts from a well-lit closet. Puppet shows have had bigger, more impressive sets. The Channel 2 news team crammed in around a desk that appeared to be the size of a coffee table.

  • 'Loser' brand a winner

    September 14, 2008

    For the people behind "The Biggest Loser," turning NBC's 4-year-old weight-loss reality show into Fat City was a matter of improving the exchange rate between pounds and dollars.

  • Words on printed page still connect—publishers bank on it

    September 12, 2008

    The words are the same, but those of you holding a newspaper as you read this column are having a different experience than those of you reading it on a computer screen.

  • Payne seeks way to deal with strokes

    September 10, 2008

    Longtime WGN-Ch. 9 anchor Allison Payne was packing Tuesday for a visit to Minnesota's famed Mayo Clinic for a battery of tests to determine the best way to battle the residual effects of a series of mini-strokes that kept her off the air for three months this year.

  • 'Wait' may soon get answer on TV vision

    September 9, 2008

    What popular radio quiz show has cut a deal to produce a television pilot that could lead to fame, fortune and quite possibly a regular makeup artist assigned to Peter Sagal and Carl Kasell?

  • Esquire chief hardly bound by past

    September 7, 2008

    When David Granger took over as editor in chief of Esquire magazine 11 years ago, beautifully bound copies of past issues sat on a shelf behind his desk. The volumes dating to the mid-1930s, filled with contributions from virtually every major writer since its launch, were more intimidating than inspiring.

  • Everyone loves to hate the media

    September 5, 2008

    So I tuned in to the Republican National Convention the other night to size up Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin and enjoy the political theater, and you can imagine my surprise to find out she and Sen. John McCain are campaigning against Barack Obama, Joe Biden and … me.

  • North eating up return on Internet

    September 3, 2008

    Perhaps the only person outrageous enough to suggest that former WSCR-AM 670 mainstay Mike North has anything in common with Barry Manilow would be North himself, and guess who's tryin' to get the feeling again.

  • Cubs 1, relaunched '90210' 0

    August 31, 2008

    The Cubs, who have put a hurt on just about everyone coming up against them at home this season, are scheduled to play the Houston Astros Tuesday night at Wrigley Field.

  • Sun-Times still in a trap without 'rat'

    August 29, 2008

    Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic Roger Ebert—long the Chicago Sun-Times' heart, soul and conscience—hated hated hated the way sports columnist Jay Mariotti bemoaned the state of the newspaper industry in general and the Sun-Times in particular after quitting the paper this week.

  • Mariotti: Love-hate even in exit

    August 28, 2008

    My memory of Jay Mariotti at his most Mariotti-est goes back 10 years, when we were sharing an apartment in Nagano, Japan, while covering the Winter Games for the Sun-Times.

  • Expansion thins CNN's Chicago staff

    August 20, 2008

    What CNN is calling expansion will mean reducing the number of staffers assigned to its bureau in Chicago by 25 percent, to nine from a dozen.

  • Conventions need Olympic-style splash

    August 17, 2008

    Confident that Michael Phelps was not a digital special effect produced by the Chinese equivalent of Industrial Light & Magic, U.S. TV viewers have been way into NBC's coverage of the Beijing Summer Olympics so far.

  • Bears line up with 'One City, One Team,' a spirited multimedia effort that is the team's first ad campaign in years

    August 14, 2008

    It may be a bear economic market, but the Chicago Bears are bullish.

  • Chicago gets its very own HuffPo site

    August 13, 2008

    As Arianna Huffington talked on the phone about hopes and dreams for one child, she was interrupted in midsentence by another.

  • Fox Business ad: Give us a twirl

    August 10, 2008

    CNBC will have the Olympic Games.

  • Sun-Times weighs own private turn

    August 8, 2008

    Chicago Sun-Times parent Sun-Times Media Group thinks it might be able to shave $10 million in 2009 expenses just by going private or deregistering its stock under federal securities laws.

  • WFLD closing in on news co-anchor

    August 6, 2008

    Jeff Goldblatt, a Chicago-based correspondent for Fox News Channel, has emerged as the odds-on choice to become Robin Robinson's new co-anchor on Fox-owned WFLD-Ch. 32's 9 p.m. news.

  • WLS should keep Wades, add Cassidy

    August 1, 2008

    Not that anything is likely to happen while WLS-AM 890-bound Pat Cassidy sits out the required three-week non-compete period following his now-lapsed WBBM-AM 780 contract—and, foolishly, no one has called for advice—but there's a smart strategy for Citadel Broadcasting staring it in the face.

  • WCIU-Ch. 26 losing station manager

    July 31, 2008

    WCIU-Ch. 26 station manager Fred Weintraub said he will leave the Weigel Broadcasting outlet in February.

  • NBC makes news with WGN coup

    July 30, 2008

    The epicenter Tuesday was Larry Wert's NBC Tower office. Shock waves were felt not only at Tribune Tower and WGN-Ch. 9's headquarters, but as far away as Dallas.

  • Cubs sale a dribbler instead of line drive

    July 27, 2008

    In a less complicated world, perhaps, Tribune Co. could just put the Chicago Cubs and Wrigley Field on eBay or StubHub and wait for the cash to show up in a PayPal account.

  • Theater goes dark for Ebert, Roeper

    July 22, 2008

    The curtain has come down on "At the Movies With Ebert & Roeper."

  • No shortage of nominees for local media hall of fame

    July 20, 2008

    With Howard Stern and Steve Dahl snubbed again in voting this year, and other major impact players such as Studs Terkel not even nominated, the so-called National Radio Hall of Fame remains as incomplete as Chicago's half-built Museum of Broadcast Communications, which may house it someday yet.

  • In neutral on Leno, NBC risks plenty

    July 18, 2008

    With less than a year until NBC is scheduled to retire Jay Leno as host of "The Tonight Show," the network had better make nice with late-night TV's top-rated star in a hurry to keep him from joining a rival network and competing with successor Conan O'Brien.

  • Kern sets out to realize new media reality

    July 16, 2008

    Gerould Kern remembers Christmas Eve of 1990, the day he was offered a job at the Chicago Tribune, as one of the happiest of his life.

  • TV, papers crossing paths in future of news

    July 13, 2008

    Two industrywide media business trends crisscrossed last week within Tribune Co.

  • David Carradine's 'legendary' faux pas

    July 12, 2008

    The free-wheeling "WGN Morning News" on Friday was more free than usual, as guest David Carradine, live on the air, casually dropped one of the words you're not supposed to say on TV.

  • Jacobson's suit seems TV-friendly

    July 11, 2008

    Regardless of whether a jury finds merit in the $1 million-plus lawsuit former WMAQ-Ch. 5 reporter Amy Jacobson and her family filed this week against WBBM-Ch. 2 parent CBS and others for airing videotape of her in swimming attire at the home of a potential source last summer, there may be some ancillary benefit.

  • Same old story, brand new cuts

    July 9, 2008

    It's not as though the Chicago Tribune would rerun old stories to reduce costs, but you can be excused for feeling as though you've read this one before:

  • Mark Cuban puts Cubs-Brewers game on his schedule

    April 30, 2008

    Sure, Tribune Co. chief Sam Zell has said the Chicago Cubs' financial books would go out around now, but it's a ballgame not a book signing Wednesday that will bring potential buyer Mark Cuban to see the Chicago Cubs and Milwaukee Brewers at Wrigley Field.

  • Blackhawks skating over to WGN-AM

    April 30, 2008

    Here come the Hawks … to WGN-AM 720.

  • CEO Sam Zell to Tribune workers: 'This is a crisis'

    February 20, 2008

    Tribune Co. Chairman and Chief Executive Sam Zell's tour of company properties brought him back to Tribune Tower on Tuesday. His meeting with Chicago Tribune personnel reached a dramatic pitch when Public Editor Timothy J. McNulty told Zell his profanity-laced remarks elsewhere raised concerns among staff, particularly women.

  • Murdoch given an audience in Dow Jones bid

    June 1, 2007

    If money didn't talk, there wouldn't be a Dow Jones & Co. empire.

  • NBC needs to keep its two hosts happy

    May 25, 2007

    An executive at NBC Universal recently was dismissing the latest iteration of long-standing rumors that parent General Electric Co. might look to unload the division.

  • NBC News' cost-cutting gets stone-cold

    May 23, 2007

    In its effort to rein in costs, NBC News is leaving no Stone unturned.

  • Nerds have their revenge in prime time

    May 20, 2007

    Outcasts are in. Clumsy is cool. Awkward is awesome. Minds are beautiful.

  • TV's prime time to sell

    May 13, 2007

    For a few days this week, as they do each May, the broadcast television networks will produce the kind of lavish all-star spectaculars that fell out of favor about the time the novelty of TV in color wore off.

  • Couric feeling more at ease

    April 22, 2007

    There were times, toward the end, when Katie Couric said she felt she had "outgrown" NBC's "Today" show, its lighter segments on occasion making her feel "more like a game-show host than a journalist."

  • The Times they are a-changin'?

    April 6, 2007

    David Geffen has made no secret he covets the Los Angeles Times and thinks he can help it.That was true last year when the entertainment mogul dangled $2 billion but failed to budge Tribune Co. from its stance the paper wasn't for sale.

  • Black's trial no big deal for city

    March 14, 2007

    With the trial about to begin and 300-some TV and print reporters put through a special credentialing process to cover it, Canadians keep asking me just how big a story this Conrad Black case is down here.

  • Tribune Co. wants Fox `Red Eye' title closed

    February 18, 2007

    Ask anyone who's ever had too good a time: Red eyes tend to come in pairs.

  • Bickering blocs at Tribune Co. may work it out

    August 4, 2006

    Are the Chandlers and Tribune Co. ready to reconcile?

  • Tribune Co. chief recovering from cancer surgery

    August 1, 2006

    Dennis FitzSimons, Tribune Co.'s chairman, president and chief executive, is recovering from surgery Monday for prostate cancer but expects to be back to work full time before the end of August, the Chicago-based media concern said.

  • Tribune considering ads on section fronts

    July 20, 2006

    With the traditional media business under increasing pressure to boost revenue, newspapers are finding it harder to ignore the value of their most coveted real estate.

  • When the news breaks in your back yard, dig

    June 16, 2006

    As a reporter, when you have a personal stake in a story, you're supposed to beg off the assignment. When the story is about the company you work for, you're supposed to dig in and not let go.

  • No terms of endearment, no reading between lines

    June 15, 2006

    It is just as well Hallmark doesn't make a greeting card for all occasions. "Roses are red/We're feeling blue/You're costing us money/Here's what to do" doesn't really cut it when a company's second-largest shareholder bloc wants to register its dissatisfaction.

  • Given options, Tribune could rewrite script

    June 9, 2006

    Even those of us who haven't seen the new Vince Vaughn-Jennifer Aniston movie "The Break Up" have found it impossible to avoid hearing about it.

  • Not all behind Tribune buyback

    June 8, 2006

    The opening of a major rift on Tribune Co.'s board, with a bloc of three directors standing in opposition to eight others, may portend more turbulence for the embattled Chicago media concern.

  • Bold strategy to shape Tribune chief's legacy

    June 4, 2006

    With his silver-flecked hair and neatly trimmed mustache, Tribune Co. Chairman, President and CEO Dennis FitzSimons has the look of media maverick Ted Turner.

  • Tribune sets buyback

    May 31, 2006

    Tribune Co., in a move that aims to boost its stock price but saddle the company with a punishing debt load, on Tuesday disclosed a plan to buy back a quarter of its outstanding shares at a cost of more than $2 billion.

Phil Rosenthal

Phil Rosenthal

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