From Teddy Greenstein tonight:
McNeil clears air as suspension ends
Sends e-mail apology to TV executive
Teddy Greenstein
ON SPORTS MEDIA AND COLLEGES
July 25, 2007
A contrite Dan McNeil will return to the air Wednesday, confident he can play by ESPN's rules.
"Like they say, when in doubt, leave it out," McNeil said. "That hasn't always been my style. But it's something I can do."
ESPN-owned WMVP-AM 1000 suspended McNeil on June 27 after he insulted a female TV executive on the air. McNeil, the lead dog of the afternoon "Mac, Jurko & Harry" show, has been off the air ever since.
The penalty was harsh, but McNeil acknowledged crossing the line with his crude reference to Comcast SportsNet's Lissa Druss Christman, a longtime adversary.
Late last week, he apologized to Christman via e-mail.
"I sent her an e-mail, it was unreturned, and that's OK," he said.
Christman confirmed receiving the e-mail but declined further comment.
Asked whether he regrets what he said on the air, McNeil replied: "I have a lot of regrets. I regret I was reckless with my words that seemingly have injured somebody. I regret that I left my audience alone for four weeks. I regret that as a result of this, I had to make co-workers shuffle their schedules."
McNeil said he was "hurt" by a comment from WMVP general manager Jim Pastor. In announcing the suspension, Pastor said it was "not based solely on the inappropriate comment he made on the air, but an inappropriate comment made by a person with a history of disciplinary problems."
Said McNeil: "I understand where he's coming from. He has had to deal with a handful of messes my show has created, but at the same time I think it's inaccurate to paint me as some incorrigible, uncooperative monster.
"I've worked with four program directors here and have willingly and cheerfully given them Chicago baptisms. I've worked in concert with sales, doing whatever they ask. My e-mails and voice mails over the last four weeks indicate that producers and fellow hosts respect me.
"When I hear disciplinary problem, I think: 'Aw, man. The guy is not punctual, he makes life miserable on co-workers, he can't sit through a remote and not drink until 7 o'clock.' "
McNeil said he made good use of his time away. He took family and friends on a fishing trip to Canada, played golf, tried to get in shape and "did lots of Mr. Mom-type stuff."
He's fired up to return to a busy sports landscape. And despite a history of suspensions, McNeil believes he can thrive and keep himself out of trouble.
"I can't do it any other way but by being me, and that means bringing the hammer down on somebody and being edgy if it dictates," he said.
"[But] I understand more specifically what the cans and can-nots of ESPN radio are and I will continue to do the most entertaining show I possibly can under the guidelines."
Score one for WSCR
For Mike North, it was like cranking 50 homers in a free-agent year. His 4.6 spring rating among men 25-54 represents his best since his move to mornings at WSCR-AM 670.
For WMVP's "Mac, Jurko & Harry," it was like batting .240 in an otherwise Hall of Fame career. Their rating fell more than 30 percent, to 3.2, among adult men.
The numbers, released Tuesday, were so one-sided in favor of the Score, one industry analyst called them "shocking."
The Score beat WMVP 3.9-2.8 (percentage of radios tuned into a station) among men 25-54 and 1.9-1.3 among listeners 12 and older.
In the winter book, the stations tied in the 12-plus category and WMVP won 3.7-3.2 among adult men.
North had never beaten ESPN's "Mike and Mike" among men 25-54 before this book, in which he scored a 4.6-4.3 victory.
"I'm going against guys who were just on Letterman," North said. "It's pretty gratifying."
The timing couldn't be better for North, who has one year left on his contract and is set to begin negotiations on a new deal.
The "Mac, Jurko & Harry" dip came as a surprise. The Score's "Boers & Bernstein" beat them handily, 3.9-3.2.
Could McNeil's suspension, which began with a handful of days left in the spring book, have contributed?
One analyst speculated that because listeners fill out their diaries at the end of each month, it could have had an effect.
WMVP officials were not available for comment. They were busy going over their rules and punishment for those that violate their rules.
Going national
Tom Waddle can get by on little sleep. One weekend in June he moonlighted at the NFL Network in Los Angeles before returning to Chicago on a red-eye flight that arrived early Monday morning. Then he did his 9 a.m.-noon radio show at WMVP.
"I got one hour of sleep at the airport and four on the plane," Waddle said. "With four kids in the house, I'm lucky if I get five hours anyway."
Those Sunday-Monday duties will become Waddle's routine this fall.
In a deal that will be announced later this week, Waddle has signed on with the NFL Network to appear each Sunday on "The Scorecard," its afternoon highlights/analysis show. The former Bears receiver also will continue to co-host Fox's "The Final Word" Sunday nights.
"This is a great opportunity," Waddle said. "But I also love what I do at ESPN [Radio] and Fox. This is just on top of that."
Last edited by 35thStreet Slick on Tue Jul 24, 2007 10:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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