Weekly Roundup – Week of May 6th, 2024

Weekly Roundup – Week of May 6th, 2024

Sports Media & Sports Betting News

Detroit's All-Black Sports Rap Radio Unveils Debut Lineup

"Veteran Detroit sports journalist Rob Parker has announced the lineup for Sports Rap Radio (WXYT-AM). The station showcases an all-Black lineup as Parker envisions a platform that mirrors the community’s voice with a unique format mixing hip-hop and sports/talk.
The daily Sports Rap Radio lineup features prominent sports figures, including former Detroit Pistons player and NBA coach Lindsey Hunter. He was previously a host on Detroit Sports 105.1 until 2016 when the station dumped the sports/talk format. Hunter will co-host The Pitbulls during afternoon drive with Detroit native Montezz Allen.
Three-time NBA champion B.J. Armstrong will take middays, offering experience from both his playing days and his tenure as an NBA executive. Martin Weiss and JR Gamble will host The Bad Boys from noon to 3p.
Parker’s nationally syndicated show, The Odd Couple with Chris Broussard, will hold the evening slot."

Legal Sports Betting Is Here, And It's Sustainable

"From MLB superstar Shohei Ohtani to now former NBA player Jontay Porter, recent stories surrounding sports integrity have predictably led to scrutiny of America’s still-new legal sports betting market.
These headlines wrongly depict the workings of the legal and regulated market and fail to recognize the persistent issues and predatory nature of the illegal market. It’s time to refocus on the facts and recognize that legal sports betting remains a solution, not a problem, when it comes to preserving the integrity of the games.
Remember, sports betting isn’t a new phenomenon. Prior to 2018, there were plenty of opportunities to bet — whether with shady bookies or navigating the murky waters of offshore websites. But the landscape has changed drastically in six short years."

ESPN's Jason Kelce Signing Showcases Disney's New Strategy, Per Dan Le Batard

"ESPN is going hard on names that are already established.
Jason Kelce is joining ESPN, and a former ESPN voice sees the move as another sign of the changing times of the Worldwide Leader in Sports.
Dan Le Batard, the former ESPN host of several shows including "Highly Questionable," praised the ESPN's signing of Kelce to join its "Monday Night Football" studio show, in a report by The Athletic on Monday, August 29.
Speaking on "The Dan Le Batard Show," Le Batard added that the rise of Kelce, which is in part due to this association with Taylor Swift through his brother, is unprecedented considering his role on the football field."

News & Political Media News

Apple Reports Decline In Sales And Profit Amid iPhone Struggles In China

"Difficulties have been piling up for Apple. In recent months, it has been sued by the Justice Department, fined by European regulators and challenged by the resurgence of a Chinese smartphone competitor.
On Thursday, the company added to its list of problems, reporting that its business was in a slump.
Apple said sales fell 4 percent to $90.8 billion for the three months that ended in March. Revenue from iPhones, iPads and wearables like the Apple Watch declined from the same quarter last year, while sales of software and services rose. Profit fell 2 percent to $23.64 billion, Apple’s first quarterly decline in a year."

Paramount Sale Reopens, As Sony-Apollo Swoops In

"Paramount Global's sale process is wide open after an exclusive window with Skydance Media lapsed, opening the door for Sony's joint bid with Apollo Global Management.
Why it matters: Time is of the essence. Deal talks have dragged on since December, and Paramount has a long list of reasons for wanting to wrap up an agreement soon, including its debt pile and struggling business.
Driving the news: Sony and Apollo Global Management have already submitted a $26 billion joint cash bid to buy the whole company, Axios reported."

Fewer Black Americans Plan To Vote In 2024, Post-Ipsos Poll Finds

"Black Americans’ desire to vote in this year’s election is down sharply compared with four years ago, according to a Washington Post-Ipsos poll conducted last month — a potentially troublesome sign for President Biden, whose ascent was powered by Black voters in 2020 and who has intensified efforts to court them before November’s election.
The poll of more than 1,300 Black adults finds that 62 percent of Black Americans say they’re “absolutely certain to vote,” down from 74 percent in June 2020. The 12-percentage-point drop outpaces the four-point drop among Americans overall, from 72 percent to 68 percent."

Recent Blogs from Crowd React Media & Harker Bos Group

Harker's Corner: Nielsen's Fractured Fairytales

In this week's Harker's Corner, Richard delves into the little-known PPM metric called Time Spent per Occasion (TSPO), initially shared by Arbitron in 2011. The study revealed that the average radio listener spends only 10 minutes per occasion before switching stations or turning off the radio, a finding that surprised many in the industry. Harker expresses skepticism about the implications of this data, suggesting that it may be influenced by limitations in PPM metering rather than reflecting true listening habits.

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Sean Bos

Sean Bos is a founder of Crowd React Media and VP of Branding & Research at Harker Bos Group.