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‘Brotha Fred’ to fill ‘DreX’ spot on Kiss FM

Tower Ticker | Christopher “Brotha’ Fred” Frederick, a fast-rising radio and TV star in Charlotte, N.C., is coming to Chicago to take over the morning slot vacated by the abrupt exit this week of Kevin “DreX” Buchar from Clear Channel’s WKSC-FM 103.5.

“Chicago morning radio is a dream,” Frederick said in announcing his move Thursday night on “Fox News Edge,” which he has co-hosted on Charlotte’s WCCB-TV in addition to his “A.M. Mayhem” morning program on Clear Channel’s WIBT-FM.

Kiss FM said Friday that Frederick will start here on Jan. 17.

Punishing parents take away Internet as often as TV

No TV for a week, the time-honored punishment for misbehaving children, has been enhanced. Now, parents are also withholding Internet access to punish their kids, further sign that the Web has become as important to families as television.

As the two mediums converge, parents are quickly coming to see TV and the Internet in similar ways and are seeking to limit their kids’ access to both, according to a report out this week from researchers at the University of Southern California. Get the full story »

Illinois shares in DirecTV settlement

DirecTV Group Inc. has agreed to pay $13.3 million in civil penalties and costs, including $185,000 to the state of Illinois, to settle allegations that the satellite-TV service provider used misleading sales and marketing practices. Get the full story »

Band sues for ‘In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida’ royalties

Bloomberg News | Psychedelic rock band Iron Butterfly has sued Warner Music Group to recover royalties of at least $236,549  from their 1960s anthem “In-A-Gadda-Da-Vida.”

1 Tribune Co. reorganization plan withdrawn

A group of lenders to bankrupt Tribune Co. withdrew its reorganization plan for the media company, leaving creditors with three other options when they begin voting on how to end the 2-year-old Chapter 11 case.

Pursuing the plan “was not the best focus of our resources,” said Evan Flaschen, an attorney representing the group, made up of 14 hedge funds, including GreyWolf Capital Management and billionaire George Soros’ Soros Fund Management. Get the full story »

Facebook CEO named Time’s ‘Person of Year’

Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg. (AP/Paul Sakuma)

Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg has been named TIME magazine’s Person of the Year. Rick Stengel, the magazine’s managing editor, made the announcement Wednesday on NBC’s “Today“ show.

Zuckerberg created the widely popular and influential social networking site, which reflects a major transformation in the way people communicate and do business.

“Facebook has merged with the social fabric of American life, and not just American but human life: nearly half of all Americans have a Facebook account, but 70 percent of Facebook users live outside the U.S. It’s a permanent fact of our global social reality. We have entered the Facebook age, and Mark Zuckerberg is the man who brought us here.“ Get the full story »

Sales of 3-D, Web-enabled TVs fall flat

New features such as 3-D screens and Internet connectivity have not inspired  U.S. television shoppers, dashing a hoped-for recovery in the global consumer electronics industry.

TV manufacturers such as Sony Corp., Samsung Electronics Co. and Sharp Corp. are learning that features such as razor-thin LED TVs are not enough to stage a comeback in the United States. Get the full story »

Elvis Mitchell off new Ebert movie review show

Tower Ticker | When “Roger Ebert Presents At the Movies” debuts the weekend of Jan. 21 in 192 markets, Elvis Mitchell of public radio’s KCRW-FM in Santa Monica, Calif., will not be discussing and debating new films with the Associated Press’ Christy Lemire.

Mitchell and Lemire were paired in the weekly public television show’s pilot, taped this year. But Chaz Ebert, vice president of The Ebert Co. and an executive producer of the the new TV venture with her Pulitzer Prize-winning husband, Roger, said by e-mail Tuesday that Mitchell is no longer associated with the program.

The show’s critics will be announced next week, Chaz and Roger indicated in separate notes.

Oprah Winfrey prepares for launch of OWN network

American talk show host Oprah Winfrey, third from right, is joined by Australian stars, from left, Nicole Kidman, Keith Urban, Hugh Jackman, Olivia Newton John and Russell Crowe in Sydney Tuesday. (AP/ Jeremy Piper)

The long-awaited OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network is gearing up for its premiere on New Year’s Day. And the bold ambition of this venture would spark doubts if there were anybody else’s name attached. Consider: a cable network repurposed from Discovery Health and all-dependent on just one person’s identity, vision and marquee power.

But that person is Winfrey, a cultural force. Now, as she moves through the final months of her daytime syndicated talk show, which will end next September after 25 years, OWN is poised to become Winfrey’s new TV home base.

Instead of a daily hour boasting Winfrey’s on-air presence as host, OWN will be a round-the-clock environment in which — her network vows — she will often be seen but, what is more important, always be felt. She will be the network’s spiritual curator, maintaining a constant presence, even from off-camera, as she offers a slate of programs all guaranteed to meet her “Live Your Best Life” mandate. Get the full story »

Ebert’s new ‘At the Movies’ debuts Jan. 21

“Roger Ebert Presents At the Movies,” the new Chicago-based public-television movie-review show being shepherded by the Chicago Sun-Times’ esteemed film critic, is set to make its debut Jan. 21 in 192 U.S. markets, Ebert announced Monday night via Twitter.

The program also will be available to U.S. servicemen and women around the world through the Armed Forces Network, Ebert said.

NBC plans ‘Idol’ rival early next year

Bloomberg News | NBC will start airing “Voice of America,” a takeoff of a Dutch show, to battle ABC’s “American Idol” early next year.

Tribune Co. signs wire deal with Reuters America

Tower Ticker |  The Chicago Tribune and other Tribune Co. newspapers have signed a multiyear agreement to become charter subscribers to the new Reuters America wire service, a move that will make them less reliant on Associated Press for print and online content.

Though Tribune Co. papers have experimented since May with eschewing AP content in news, business and features — and, in selected trial weeks, sports as well — there is  no plan by the newspapers to drop the 164-year-old wire service whose content is ubiquitous in print and online. Get the full story »

iTunes begins offering 90-second song samples

From Bloomberg News | Starting today, Apple Inc. will let iTunes consumers listen to some songs at no charge for as long as 90 seconds, three times the previously allotted 30 seconds, a spokesman for Cupertino, California-based Apple, said today. Get the full story>>

Groupon teams up with Tribune shopping site

Chicago-based Groupon.com, the fast-growing social networking site that offers its users daily discounts to businesses in their individual markets, has entered into a partnership with Chicago Tribune Media Group’s recently launched e-commerce site.

Stern signs 5-year deal to stay on Sirius XM

Howard Stern announced on his subscription satellite program Thursday that he has signed a new five-year deal with Sirius XM Radio, putting to end months of speculation and discussion that had grown increasingly heated of late. Get the full story>>