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ABC Radio to Syndicate Matt Drudge

Media: Despite objection from network's news president, Internet gossip will be heard in L.A. and other markets.

July 09, 1999|HOWARD KURTZ, THE WASHINGTON POST

WASHINGTON — Matt Drudge is coming to Washington--and plenty of other cities--over the heated objections of ABC News President David Westin.

ABC Radio said Wednesday that it has signed the Internet gossip columnist to a syndication deal that will put him on the network-owned stations in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles (beginning Sunday at 10 p.m.), San Francisco, Detroit, Atlanta and Washington. Drudge, whose Sunday night show is already carried on New York's WABC, is getting a bigger major-market roll-out than Rush Limbaugh.


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According to network sources, Westin vociferously argued that Drudge should not be part of ABC's corporate family. In meetings with Pat Fili-Krushel, the president of ABC Television, and Lyn Andrews, the head of ABC Radio Networks, Westin contended that Drudge was reckless and that the radio division would be sorry if it hired him. Fili-Krushel, in turn, raised the matter with Steven Bornstein, president of ABC Inc.

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The sources said Westin also noted that Drudge had been sued, a reference to the $30-million defamation lawsuit filed by White House aide Sidney Blumenthal after Drudge falsely accused him of spousal abuse.

Drudge's signing was delayed more than a week by Westin's lobbying campaign. But the radio unit, which operates separately from the news division, prevailed.

Drudge brushed off the criticism by Westin, who declined to be interviewed. "It doesn't bother me at all," he said from Los Angeles, where he will often do the show. "Hopefully one day I can become an apple of his eye like George Stephanopoulos and anchor the news." The former White House aide recently filled in as co-host of ABC's "World News Now" overnight news show.

Geoff Rich, executive vice president of ABC Radio Today Entertainment, said Drudge is "a dynamite radio personality" and that the show "wouldn't be on the air if it didn't have a great breadth of support within ABC. I can't speak for the news executives."

As for Drudge's controversial record, Rich noted that ABC long carried famed gossip-meister Walter Winchell on Sunday nights. "I expect him to be a responsible broadcaster," Rich said. "Are there things talk-show hosts have said that later turned out not to be true? That's happened with every talk show out there--and it's happened with every news organization out there."

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