Talk Radio Top 100 Report 2012 – The Jack Blood Show hits # 42

February 4, 2013 by  
Filed under The Jack Blood Show

The TSL Top 100 Talk Shows for 2012
February 3, 2013 by talkstreamlive

TSL Rankings:
1 Rush Limbaugh
2 Michael Savage
3 Glenn Beck
4 Laura Ingraham
5 Mark Levin
6 Sean Hannity
7 Tammy Bruce
8 Dennis Miller
9 Bill Bennett
10 George Noory
11 Michael Medved
12 John Batchelor
13 Neal Boortz
14 Hugh Hewitt
15 Alex Jones
16 Red Eye Radio
17 Dennis Prager
18 Monica Crowley
19 IMUS
20 Quinn and Rose
21 The Dana Show
22 Larry Kudlow
23 Mike Gallagher
24 Kim Komando
25 Bill Cunningham
26 Dave Ramsey
27 Jerry Doyle
28 John Gibson
29 Rusty Humphries
30 Aaron Klein
31 Howie Carr
32 Tom Donahue
33 MANCOW
34 Phil Hendrie
35 Roger Hedgecock
36 Lars Larson
37 The Power Hour
38 Clark Howard
39 Curtis Sliwa
40 Chris Plante
41 Larry Elder
42 Jack Blood
43 Bill Handel
44 Mike Huckabee
45 Peter Schiff
46 Black Listed News
47 Bob Brinker
48 Art Bell
49 BUBBA the Love Sponge
50 Jesse Lee Peterson
51 Randi Rhodes
52 Robert Scott Bell
53 Bob & Tom
54 Gun Talk
55 Jim Bohannon
56 Dr. Joy Browne
57 Barbara Simpson
58 Clyde Lewis
59 Geraldo
60 Texas Overnight
61 Ed Schultz
62 Dr. Daliah
63 G. Gordon Liddy
64 Jeff Rense
65 Strange Universe
66 John Stokes
67 Free Talk Live
68 Walton & Johnson
69 Mark Simone
70 Leo Laporte
71 Michael Smerconish
72 Don Wade & Roma
73 Bo Gritz
74 Al Sharpton
75 Brian Sussman
76 Armed American
77 Mike Francesa
78 Rick & Bubba
79 Boomer & Carton
80 Bob Tuskin
81 The Right Perspective
82 Joe Pags
83 Bob Grant
84 Thom Hartmann
85 Andy Dean
86 John Gambling
87 Jason Lewis
88 Tony Katz
89 Down the Rabbit Hole
90 National Intel Report
91 Alan Colmes
92 Robbi Student
93 Ric Edelman
94 Jeff Kuhner
95 Heidi Harris
96 Truth Out Radio
97 Chris Stigall
98 Todd Schnitt
99 Phil Valentine
100 Danny Bonaduce

Survey Period: ( 01/01/2012 – 12/31/2012 )
Sample Size: 2.75 Million Listener Sessions
Source: TalkStreamLive.com

The TSL Top 100 Report tracks talk radio show metrics gathered on the internet and collected through our cloud based server via TalkStreamLive.com‘s Website, Gadgets, iPhone app and “click2listen” links on Social Networks. We only rank the talk show hosts that are listed at
TalkStreamLive.com. The TSL Top 100 report includes the big personalities talk show fans would expect as well as some new media rising stars.

Why are the Feds Forcing Media to Use Government Computers

April 14, 2012 by  
Filed under Media

They are no longer reporters… They are merely REPEATERS now…

Ministry of "information" - eliminate the old speak, promote groupthink... Double plus good.

 

Examiner

Unrest is simmering in some quarters of the Washington news universe regarding changes in the way the Department of Labor (DOL) manages its pre-release media “lockups” on sensitive data like weekly jobless benefits and unemployment.

For years, journalists participating in the lockups have shown up at DOL at the appointed time, then entered a limited-access area to receive the new data and prepare news stories for release as soon as official embargoes end.

The system insures that major news organizations get the data as soon as possible and allows journalists covering the release get a jump on providing analyses and opinion about the data.

But Carl Fillichio, Labor Secretary Hilda Solis’ top communications advisor, circulated a memo earlier this week to interested media informing them that everybody is being required to re-submit their credentials requests.

Fillichio reminded participants that there are only 20-30 seats available for the lockups and that priority will be given by DOL in selecting participants to those that “are primarily journalistic enterprises.”

He also offered a one-sentence assurance that “the department will not consider editorial or political viewpoints in making credentialing decisions.”

Whatever grumbling might be occasioned by being forced to go through the credentialing  process again, the element of the Fillichio memo that has journalists worried is this paragraph:

“Second, as a measure toward enhancing security in its main lockup facility (the DOL news room), the department will supply and maintain standardized equipment with a standard configuration for all participants. This change means that privately owned computer and telephone equipment, including hardware, software, cabling, wiring and Internet and telephone lines will be replaced with equipment owned by the department.”

In other words, journalists will no longer be allowed to bring their laptops or other equipment to the lockups, they will have to use government-supplied equipment, described by Fillichio as including “a virtualized desktop running a Windows operation system, a web browser, word-processing software, an Adobe Reader application and secure file transfer capability. Equipment provided will not have wireless networking capability. Provisions will be in place for news organizations to transmit their stories over the Internet.”

The changes evidently are in response at least in part to worries that some of the non-traditional news organizations allowed in recent years to participate in the lockups may not be using their access simply for journalistic purposes.

Since the stock market can rise or fall by hundreds of points as a result of such a data release, making sure nobody gets an advance peek at the data is critical to insuring the integrity of the process.

But some news organizations worry about having to use government equipment that could compromise their editors and reporters in preparing publishable charts, consulting previous stories and charts for comparison purposes, and reviewing prior stories for context and analyses.

They are also concerned that the whole process will slow down delivery of the news at a time when unemployment is high, the economy is in the doldrums and public concerns about future job prospects are unusually high.

Delays will make it more difficult for independent analysts to understand the new data and could give White House and DOL political appointees more time to blunt the impact of the negative news resulting from the data.

In addition, Fillichio’s promise not to consider editorial or political viewpoints is somewhat less than reassuring in view of his boss’s recent appearance in a poster distributed throughout DOL show Solis arm-in-arm with Rev. Al Sharpton, solidarity-style.

There are also rumblings about transferring control of the whole process from political appointees in DOL to career employees within the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).

The BLS has a spotless record of maintaining data integrity and insulation from political pressures to manipulate data content or release timing.  Solis and Fillichio are said to be quietly resisting efforts in Congress to shift control of the lockups to BLS.

Fillichio has scheduled a conference call for Monday with interested media to discuss the memo and implementation of the new system.