Posts Tagged ‘Omar Lewis’

19th November
2012
written by Bill Church

Most Central Texans don’t know Lewis Hamilton from Alexander Hamilton or Sebastian Vettel from J. Sebastian Bach. Still, the first Formula One race at the Circuit of the Americas (COTA) in Elroy on Sunday was a major news story.

Whether you were a strong proponent of the building of the track or unalterably opposed, there is no denying that this was a big deal for this area on many levels—economic, political, sports, worldwide image, to name a few.

From a TV news perspective, the race called for extensive coverage. A major event like this, especially one that is scheduled and allows for prior planning, can stamp a news operation as a serious player and one aiming for the number one position in the market. Conversely, it can tell you if a news team is not in the game.

And the winner is—(drum roll)—KXAN in a landslide!

Clearly, based on its performance on Sunday, KXAN is in it to win it. Only KXAN gave the event the all-out coverage it deserved, outdistancing YNNKVUE, and FOX 7. At the other end of the spectrum, KEYE was missing in action.

Here’s how I saw the local coverage as I bounced around the stations and tried not to miss anything, which I’m sure I did:

 

KXAN Blankets the Race From Every Angle

KXAN began with a solid three-hour newscast from 7 a.m.-10 a.m., using its usual Sunday morning two hour bloc plus an extra hour gained by not joining the Today Show.

The morning effort featured weekday morning anchor Sally Hernandez and traffic reporter Amanda Dugan joining regular weekend morning meteorologist David Yeomans on set.

In a very wise move, weekend morning regular Brian Sanders anchored from the track, introducing a number of tape packages related to the race itself. From his many years as a sportscaster, Sanders brought both knowledge and his usual strong ability to handle live, on-scene reporting.  Reporter Angie Beavin was live at 15th and Trinity where race fans boarded shuttle buses for the track, while meteorologist Mark Monstrola was pressed into duty as a feature reporter, live from the scene of downtown’s Fan Fest.

The best KXAN piece was probably Sanders’ feature on the earsplitting decibel level produced by the F1 cars, making earplugs required for race fans. He also passed on the information that security guards stand behind every car in the pits to block prying eyes from seeing proprietary equipment.

After breaking for an hour for NBC’s Meet the Press at 10 a.m., KXAN took a substantial lead over its competing stations by producing an excellent two-hour pre-race show from 11 a.m.-1 p.m. This left KXAN as the only station on the air from the track.

Prime time anchors Robert Hadlock and Leslie Rhode led the coverage expertly from the track along with chief meteorologist Jim Spencer and Formula One expert John Bisignano, all perched on high chairs on a hill overlooking the scene. Sanders continued as the main anchor on race stories.

The program was first rate from beginning to end. It covered every aspect of the race, including a detailed look at the track along with driver profiles and numerous interviews. Chief Investigative Reporter Chris Willis lightened up to take over the Fan Fest live shots while traffic reporter Dugan continued with updates on the road congestion.

The same crew continued with a 30-minute newscast at 5 p.m., adding Sports Director Roger Wallace at the track, regular weekend sports anchor Brent Carney back at the station, reporter Omar Lewis at Fan Fest, reporter Josh Hinkle at the 15th & Trinity shuttle stop and reporter Chris Sadeghi at police headquarters for the viewpoint of the peace officers.

KXAN wrapped up the day with it’s usual news program following the NBC Sunday Night football game at 10:49 p.m. Regular weekenders David Scott and Natalie Stoll resumed their normal spots at the news and weather desks with Sports Director Roger Wallace back from the track. The producer led with a late breaking murder, unfortunately, but then got quickly into an extensive race wrap-up with Wallace, Sanders and the assorted reporters around town from their 5 p.m. newscast positions. Wallace did an excellent wrap up of both the race itself and a fast moving series of key interviews.

Bottom line—KXAN called out its troops, preempted significant chunks of network and other programming and delivered outstanding coverage of this very important news story. The station clearly had been preparing for months, producing massive amounts of special F1 material, a fact confirmed by News Director Chad Cross. He credits Assistant News Director Alicia Dean for “making miracles happen,” and Executive Producer Haley Cihock, who produced the 11 a.m. two-hour special. Roger Wallace and Chief Photographer Todd Bynum actually had been at the site non-stop since Friday morning, camping out in an RV the station put on site. All in all, an ambitious and highly successful effort.

Final Grade—A+

 

YNN Does Well by Featuring the Racing

Time Warner’s all-news cable channel produced some excellent work on Sunday. YNN may have delivered the best pure coverage of the racing by leaning on its ace-in-the-hole, reporter Jeff Stensland.

Several months ago, YNN News Director Michael Pearson sent Stensland along with Austin Mayor Lee Leffingwell, Chief of Police Art Acevado and a delegation of other city officials as they visited the Formula One race in Silverstone, England to pick up tips for staging the Austin race.

Stensland, himself an F1 race fan, reported live from Circuit of the Americas throughout Sunday in both the regular news cycles and on the channel’s 10 p.m. special, “Your Sports Now: Grand Prix,” anchored ably by weekend sports anchor Mike Berman. Stensland was able to compare the experience at both the England and Austin races, opining that the traffic was actually worse at Silverstone.

It’s harder to compare YNN’s total coverage since individual pieces appeared at various points in the news cycle as well as in the 10 p.m. sports special. YNN reporters, however, delivered numerous solid features, including  Chris Savolski with interviews of happy fans, John Salazar on the chopper traffic, Russell Wilde on slow sales for Elroy business owners and Jess Mitchell with those who biked to the track.  In a piece unique to YNN, photojournalist Drew Moses convinced the management at The Tavern sports bar to suddenly turn all the televisions away from football and onto the race, causing pandemonium among the customers. Very funny bit.

Berman also did a pre-race special at 10 a.m. while ace traffic reporter Joe Taylor came in for both the pre-race and post-race view of the backed up cars and the best routes to take.

Bottom line—While not throwing the large cast of staffers at the story that KXAN did, YNN performed very well. Stensland was outstanding and I hope he gets his wish for the boss to send him to more out-of-town F1 races.

Grade—A-

 

KVUE Starts Strong, Ends Strong, but  Disappears in the Middle

KVUE began Sunday morning neck and neck with KXAN by producing an equally strong newscast from 7 a.m.-9 a.m.  KVUE also featured its regular weekday morning crew, co-anchors Bryan Mays and Yvonne Nava, meteorologist Albert Ramon and traffic reporter Rob Henderson.

Using a chopper supplied by it sister station, WFAA,Dallas, KVUE added a bird’s-eye view of traffic, sending reporter Andy Pierrotti up to report. At the track, KVUE elected to take a lighter approach with its regular weekend morning team of anchor Ashley Gaudeau and meteorologist Ilona McCauley.

The strongest piece in the show was probably meteorologist Andrew Chung’s excellent feature on the science behind the cars, with explanations from engineers at the University of Texas and National Instruments.

Then, while KXAN stayed on and kept producing excellent coverage, KVUE disappeared. At 9 a.m., they joined ABC’s This Week. Then, inexplicably, the station aired a one-hour real estate show, a vacuum cleaner infomercial and then went to a movie at Noon.

KVUE’s news team did not appear again until its late afternoon newscast at 5:30 p.m. With prime time anchor Terri Gruca anchoring from the Circuit of the Americas and regular weekend anchor Jade Mingus reporting from the set, KVUE quickly hit its stride again with very well-produced and reported pieces.

Weekend sports anchor Matt Mitchell covered the race itself from the set, reporter Morgan Chesky reported live on how the traffic situation had gone all day while traffic reporter Rob Henderson offered the very latest, morning anchor Bryan Mays filed a feature from the Travis County Expo Center shuttle stop and anchor/report Jim Bergamo checked in live from the Fan Fest downtown.

At 10 p.m., KVUE repeated its 5:30 p.m. line-up with the addition of reporter Shelton Green’s celebrity interviews, Gaudeau’s feature on those who biked to the track and reporter Heather Kovar’s piece on the helicopter traffic. To its credit, KVUE did not lead with the murder, saving that for Mingus’s anchor segment from the set where she covered other news.

Bottom line—When the KVUE news team was on the air, it delivered its usual high quality product. It deserves high marks for its early morning program featuring its skilled regular morning team. As usual, Terri Gruca combined professionalism and a winning personality as she hosted from the track at 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. Unfortunately, KVUE made a strategic error in ceding the field to its rival station at 11 a.m. and as a result earns one demerit.

Grade—B

 

FOX 7 Fails to Show-up All Day but Produces Good Shows at 5 p.m. and 9 p.m.

FOX 7’s race day effort was a bit of an enigma. For a station that prides itself on its weekday morning news program which does very well in the ratings, Fox did nothing on Sunday morning, opting for infomercials and the national Fox news. At 11 a.m., it had to join Fox’s NFL coverage, but management certainly could have called in at least some of the morning crew to handle weather, traffic and race-related features before football. Unfortunately, they left that to their competitors at KXAN and KVUE. Since national Fox owns the Speed Channel, which carried the race, it is especially puzzling that the local Fox owned and operated station was not all over the event.

When FOX 7 did take to the air at 5 p.m., it produced a credible product. Regular weekend anchor Jenni Lee held down her usual spot while Sports Director Dave Cody, who first told me how to pronounce Vettel in a conversation we had several weeks ago, was outstanding as he reported live from the track. Reporter Rudy Koski did related features out at COTA, Nancy Zabrano reported on the reaction of neighbors near the track and Noelle Newton drove from the downtown studios to Circuit of the Americas for a report on traffic flow.

The 10 p.m. newscast was similar to the 5 p.m. Unfortunately, in my opinion, FOX 7 led with the late-breaking murder, including a live shot from reporter Daniel Armbruster. It could have waited until later in the show. Once Lee moved to the race after two minutes, the reporting was good. Koski’s interviews with celebrities at the track were interesting, Armbruster reported on the helicopter ferries, while reporter Alex Villereal did two live shots from downtown, one concerning disappointing  sales for South Congress businesses and another on Fan Fest. The producer repeated Zambrano’s and Newton’s 5 p.m. packages.

Bottom line—FOX 7 was nonexistent until 5 p.m. It failed to produce a morning newscast and it failed to call in at least one or two of its front line anchors and meteorologist. Those anchors and reporters who did work produced solid and interesting features and Cody was excellent reporting live from the track.

Grade–C

 

KEYE Invisible on One of Austin’s Biggest News Days

And then there is KEYE, which made itself irrelevant by ignoring the biggest news story in town on Sunday. The station’s management can’t be blamed for having to carry CBS’s NFL coverage beginning with the pregame show at 11 a.m. and followed by two games, which then cancels the late afternoon newscast and pushes back prime time programming so that the late news will be on very late. But this happens to KEYE on every Sunday in the Fall, so it was no surprise.

You would think, if KEYE wanted to be in the local news game, they would at least have scheduled an early morning newscast focusing on the race. They could have brought in the regular morning crew, with special emphasis on meteorologist Allison Miller and traffic reporter Erica Harpold, plus some reporters for the various angles and Sports Director Bob Ballou at the track.

Didn’t happen. KEYE stuck with its usual lineup of preachers and infomercials around the CBS Sunday morning news and Face the Nation. While every other station in town was covering the race, KEYE news did not appear on air until 10:52 p.m. as eyes were glazing over and viewers were heading off to bed.

Prime time co-anchor Judy Maggio came in to anchor, but I don’t know why. The producer led with the murder, then did three recorded pieces related to the race. Regular weekend anchor Katherine Stolp interviewed angry Rainey Street merchants who did not get much business. The piece itself was fine, but in the midst of an overwhelmingly positive event, KEYE’s first Formula One story of the day was negative. Reporter Adam Bennett wrapped up the events at the track with more emphasis on the celebrities than on the race itself, and newcomer Adam Racusin reported from the the police chopper. Then, it was back to other news, like a very old fatal crash, the “fiscal cliff” and the demise of Twinkies.

Surely, KEYE would cover the race on Ballou’s Sunday sports show, which aired at 11:20 p.m? Not a chance. The show was all football, even featuring sports reporter Adam Winkler from the Houston Texans’ game.

Bottom line—If KEYE doesn’t want to fall off the face of the local news map, maybe it’s about time its management stopped “wasting” so much time worrying about government spending and instead began covering Central Texas news, especially major stories like the first ever U.S. Grand Prix race in Austin.

Grade–F

24th July
2012
written by Bill Church

Wouldn’t you know it? I take a week away with my beautiful bride to celebrate our anniversary and all hell breaks loose on the Austin TV news front.

First, to no one’s surprise, Suzanne Black is out as news director at KEYE-TV. This means that KEYE’s new owners, Sinclair Broadcasting, have now dismissed or pushed out all the station’s key department heads, including the sales director, the production director and the head of promotions. Only General Manager Amy Villereal remains.

Sinclair’s corporate representative on site at KEYE reportedly told a staff meeting that a new news director would be in place within two weeks, indicating this change has been in the works for some time. A good bet would be that the incoming news boss will be from within the Sinclair family of stations, already trained in the Sinclair way of doing things.

“As much as I love it here, it’s time to devote some attention to my boys,” Black told Austin blogger Jim McNabb. “They’re only young once and I want to enjoy it. This has been a busy and successful year. We launched a new two-hour morning program, a 5 p.m. newscast, and ended the May book with our 10 p.m. newscast moving into first place for the first time in KEYE history. It has been fun and very rewarding.”

Black’s last day is Thursday, July 26.

Meanwhile, over at KXAN, President and General Manager Eric Lassberg has signed up a new news director to replace Michael Fabac, who was suddenly let go during the May ratings period.

Chad Cross, KXAN-TV news director

Chad Cross

Chad Cross, a Colorado native who earned a bachelor of journalism degree from The University of Texas, will be joining KXAN on August 13 from long-time Wichita, Kansas ratings leader, KWCH-TV. According to sources, Cross is “laid back and quiet but incredibly talented.”

That Lassberg would look for that type of personality would make sense following the tumultuous time KXAN news has had over the past year, including law suits for racial discrimination and libel and a revolving door for reporters.

Just as with baseball managers and football coaches, the pendulum usually swings between a tough, intense news director, as Fabac reportedly was, to a more easy going leader.

According to his bio on that station’s web site, Cross has been at KWCH since 2002, “producing coverage of major events like the tornado that destroyed the town of Greensburg, the capture of Wichita’s ‘BTK’ serial killer and the Kansas Jayhawks’ 2008 national championship basketball team.”

Under his leadership, the station has won several national and regional Edward R. Murrow awards, the 2011 Kansas Association of Broadcasters’ “Station of the Year” and a 2012 Emmy nomination for news excellence.

The web site indicates that Cross launched Eyewitness News at Nine and Wichita’s first weekend morning newscast; expanded Eyewitness News to sister station, KSCW, with newscasts at 7-9 a.m., 4 p.m. and 9 p.m. and, a Spanish newscast weeknights at 10 p.m. on Univision affiliate, KDCU.  He also created FactFinder 12 Investigators, a team of award-winning reporters, and expanded the popular “Does it Work?” consumer series to a weekly feature.

A KXAN new release adds that Cross also led “many digital initiatives, including innovative news and weather apps and a high school sports website.”

“We are extremely excited to have Chad as part of the team,” Lassberg said in the KXAN statement. “He has a proven track record of journalistic excellence, integrity and leadership.”

Before becoming news director, Cross worked as a producer, anchor, reporter and assignment editor.

Lost in the news director news of the past week, KXAN also added a new weekend morning weather guy and a new reporter.

David Youmans, KXAN Meteorologist

David Youmans

University of Miami graduate David Youmans suddenly appeared (as is KXAN’s style) during the weekend of July 14. Although a New Mexico native, Youman’s bio on the KXAN web site indicates he lived in Austin from the age of 14 and was looking for a chance to return. Although he expresses a passion for weather, there is no indication of his having worked anywhere else, so we’ll presume this is his first job until someone at KXAN tells us differently.

 

 

Angie Beavin, KXAN-TV reporter

Angie Beavin

And in a case of true love winning out, Angie Beaven has followed her boyfriend of two years, weekend sports guy Brent Carney, to KXAN. Like Carney, Beaven joins from Lexington, Kentucky, where she worked at WKYT-TV. Among her stories was coverage of March’s devastating tornadoes in eastern Kentucky. She’s a University of Kentucky graduate.

KXAN seems to be going for a youthful appearance (not counting Jim Swift who helps raise the median age). Despite several years of college and/or experience, Youmans, Carney, Beaven, reporter Omar Lewis, morning traffic reporter Amanda Dugan and sports reporter Chris Tavarez all look like they just graduated high school.
 
 
Another good reason to hire a young news director like Chad Cross.
 
 

 

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