Media: Kilmartin’s House, GoLocal’s Lawsuit, TV Ratings and Cumulus Stock

GoLocalProv News Team

Media: Kilmartin’s House, GoLocal’s Lawsuit, TV Ratings and Cumulus Stock

Attorney General Peter Kilmartin and former State Police Col. Steve O'Donnell
Media and politics. Politics and media. The two seem ever more intertwined, both at the national and local levels. And this week in media hit some high -- and low -- points in Rhode Island.

Kilmartin’s "House"

Attorney General Peter Kilmartin is under fire. At his press conference against marijuana legalization on Thursday, Kilmartin told WJAR veteran reporter Bill Rappleye, when Rappleye asked about 38 Studios:

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“Bill, you’re in my house now and we have a lot of professionals who took time out of their day to be here and we’re going to start now,” Kilmartin said.

Kilmartin’s aides then threatened to remove Rappleye.

“If you cannot respect this press conference we will ask you to leave,” Kilmartin’s spokeswoman Amy Kempe told Rappleye, placing her hand on his arm.

Kilmartin’s outburst was sparked by Rappleye asking, “You’re a public official and we’d like to know if you were interviewed on the 38 Studios question.” 

Former Assistant Attorney General Tom Dickinson
GoLocal Lawsuit Against Raimondo, Public Safety and State Police

GoLocal’s lawsuit over the release of all 38 Studios non-Grand Jury document continued this week in Superior Court before Judge Maureen Keough.

GoLocal’s attorney, former Rhode Island Assistant Attorney General Tom Dickinson, continues to press for release of all interviews and notes relating to the criminal investigation.

On Wednesday, Colonel Ann Assumpico told reporters at a hastily organized press conference at the State House, “There are questions to why we released some of the General Assembly interviews. I learned we initially we taped and transcribed interviews — but at some point interviewers were told taping interviews was not necessary. Instead, they summarized interviews in a statement that was released.  We have no further records of those interviews."

Assumpico was widely critical of her predecessor Steven O’Donnell for the highly questionable practices implemented in the investigation.

Presently, O’Donnell head the Greater Providence YMCA and he is facing complaints from two former employees of the agency with the Rhode Island Commission for Human Rights.

“He would send the females aggressive, threatening and demeaning emails and text messages at all hours of the night and on weekends,” was one of the charges made, according to the complaints. 

WJAR 10 and WPRI 12 battling over rankings
WJAR and WPRI Battle Over TV Ratings

Both WJAR and WPRI are making claims about why their TV rankings are best in market.

In a press release issued on Thursday, WJAR claimed, “WJAR NBC 10 continued to be the #1 station in the Providence/New Bedford market. NBC 10 News beat all other competitors in every newscast, from 5am-11pm, in the coveted persons 25-54 demographic. NBC 10 also scored household wins at 4:30am, noon, 5pm, 5:30pm, 6pm, and 11pm. NBC 10 continues to be the #1 choice in the mornings from 4:30am-8am in Households and P25-54.”

The CBS affiliate, WPRI-12 fired right back, asserting its leadership in the all important morning newscasts. “During the February 2017 ratings period, Eyewitness News This Morning on WPRI 12 and Fox Providence was the #1 morning news at 4:30am, 5am, and 6am in household ratings in the Providence RI/New Bedford MA DMA, according to Nielsen. In the Late News, Eyewitness News at 10PM on Fox Providence along with Eyewitness News at 11PM on WPRI combined garnered the most household ratings in that daypart,” said WPRI.

“We are incredibly proud of our consistent growth on all media screens and the gains we have made in the market in local news,” says Patrick Wholey, President and General Manager at WPRI.

Provided by WJAR 10

WPRO's parent company Cumulus
Cumulus Radio Stock Continues to Tumble

In an effort to hold off a delisting by NASDAQ in October of 2016, Cumulus issued an "8 shares for 1 share" stock conversion, and as a result the per share value was repriced to $2.40 per share (although investors had one-eighth the number of shares), but since then the slide has continued. 

On Friday, the stock had dropped to $.51 a share — a 79 percent loss in value in just five months. 

For a company that has more than $1.1 billion in revenue, but has a depressed market cap of just over $15 million.


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