Fox News Radio

Not to be confused with the satellite radio rebroadcast of Fox News Channel heard on Sirius XM.
Fox News Radio
Broadcast area United States
Canada
Branding Fox News Radio
Slogan Fair and Balanced
Frequency Various AM/FM stations
First air date 2003
Format News Talk
Class Satellite-delivered radio network
Owner Fox News Group
Website radio.foxnews.com

Fox News Radio is an American radio network programmed by Fox News Channel.

History

In 2003, Fox News began syndicating one-minute radio updates to radio stations via syndication service Westwood One. On June 1, 2005, Fox News Radio employed 60 people and provided five-minute newscasts at the top of the hour and a one-minute newscast at the bottom of the hour. At its launch, 60 stations participated in the network, with more joining under a deal struck between Fox and Clear Channel Communications (now iHeartMedia). This allowed many Clear Channel stations to carry Fox News Radio newscasts and allowed Fox News Radio to use and nationally distribute news content produced by Clear Channel, with several of those stations ending decades-long relationships dating back to the Golden Age of Radio with ABC News Radio (now owned by competitor Cumulus Media) and CBS Radio News to carry FNR.

Fox also produces Fox News Talk for both satellite radio services, with talk radio programs syndicated by and featuring Fox News personalities.

It was announced on Fox News Channel's show The Five on 2/13/2013 by Fox News Brian Kilmeade that Sirius XM has dropped Fox News Talk and the network is asking viewers of Fox News to demand that Sirius XM put the radio network back on air. As of October 17, 2013, thanks to a new agreement, Sirius XM Satellite Radio resumed broadcasts of Fox News Talk Radio, as well as putting in on Internet radio. Their sister property, Fox News Channel was kept with a new online simulcast and Fox Business Network was added for the first time.

Programming

Fox News Radio also syndicates the following radio programs hosted by its TV personalities:

Three other radio programs hosted by Fox News Channel personalities are or were distributed by other companies. The Radio Factor hosted by Bill O'Reilly was produced by Fox News Radio but syndicated separately by Westwood One. This is because when Fox News started producing O'Reilly's radio show in 2002, it did not have the resources to syndicate, and thus outsourced the distribution to Westwood One. Fox and Westwood One have since renewed the agreement, in 2006 and again in 2007; O'Reilly decided to leave the show in February 2009. (Because The Radio Factor was produced by Fox, it was available on Fox News Talk, Fox's satellite radio channel. Westwood One does not sell its programs to satellite services.)

The talk radio programs hosted by FNC's Sean Hannity and former FNC personality Glenn Beck are syndicated by Premiere Networks. Hannity's show debuted before Fox News Radio had launched (and prior to 2009, was distributed by ABC Radio, later Citadel Media and currently Cumulus Media Networks), and Beck did not join the Fox organization until several years after his radio show had been on the air (he has since left Fox).

Hannity's program, The Sean Hannity Show, appears on the America Right and Sirius Patriot satellite channels.

On November 12, 2007, Fox News Radio debuted a 3-6 PM (Eastern) show hosted by Tom Sullivan, a long-time California radio talk show host who has been an anchor on the company's Fox Business Network. Sullivan's show continues to air live on its original home station, Sacramento's KFBK, and is also now being offered to other stations, usually on tape delay.[1]

Newscasts

The network also provides around-the-clock newscasts on the hour and on the half-hour. Depending on a station's affiliation, they either receive a five-minute newscast or a one-minute newscast. Breaking news reports (dubbed Fox News Alerts), correspondent and expert interview availabilities, special broadcasts marking historic or newsworthy events, anchored "as-it-happens" coverage, and clean feeds of news events complete the affiliate service package. Affiliates also have access to a web site with a constantly updating selection of newsmaker audio and correspondent reports.

The five minute audio version of the on-the-hour newscast, consisting of two minutes of news, one minute of ads or Fox promotions, and two more minutes of news, is available as a podcast.[2] As of 2011, typically only one MP3 file, the most recent one, is available at any time. The Eastern Time hour number converted to 24-hour time is incorporated into the filename (for example, 5minpodcast21.mp3 for 9PM). However, if there has been exceptional news (a Fox News Alert), the file for that hour's podcast will be retained for a few hours. The current hour's file is usually available within 10 minutes of its broadcast, i.e., by a quarter past the top of the hour.

Newscasts are regularly anchored by Dave Anthony, Lisa Brady, Kathleen Maloney, Carmen Roberts, Tom Graham, Jane Metzler, Joe Chiaro, Lisa Lacerra, Chris Foster, Pam Puso, Rich Denison, Paul Stevens, Jack Callahan, Kerin McCue, Pat O'Neill and Lilian Woo. Correspondents include Gurnal Scott and Tonya J. Powers in New York; Jon Decker (White House), Jared Halpern (Capitol Hill) and Rachel Sutherland in Washington; in Los Angeles, Jessica Rosenthal and entertainment reporter Michelle Pollino. Jeff Monosso reports from Chicago. Eben Brown reports from Miami. Simon Owen and Kitty Logan in London, Jessica Golloher in Jerusalem, Courtney Walsh in Rome, and Alastair Wanklyn in Tokyo serve as foreign correspondents. Daily short commentaries are delivered by Todd Starnes.

Sounders

Main newscasts start and end with a 5 note Orchestrated sounder. Before that they aired a 6 note guitar sounder. Both were written and arranged by Bruce Upchirch and Dave Meffert from Zone Radio Imaging, based in New York. FNR stations can use both sounders for local newscasts. Fox news reports use the same sounder used on the Fox News Channel.

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/29/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.