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Elvis Mitchell off new Ebert movie review show

Tower Ticker | When “Roger Ebert Presents At the Movies” debuts the weekend of Jan. 21 in 192 markets, Elvis Mitchell of public radio’s KCRW-FM in Santa Monica, Calif., will not be discussing and debating new films with the Associated Press’ Christy Lemire.

Mitchell and Lemire were paired in the weekly public television show’s pilot, taped this year. But Chaz Ebert, vice president of The Ebert Co. and an executive producer of the the new TV venture with her Pulitzer Prize-winning husband, Roger, said by e-mail Tuesday that Mitchell is no longer associated with the program.

The show’s critics will be announced next week, Chaz and Roger indicated in separate notes.

Oprah Winfrey prepares for launch of OWN network

American talk show host Oprah Winfrey, third from right, is joined by Australian stars, from left, Nicole Kidman, Keith Urban, Hugh Jackman, Olivia Newton John and Russell Crowe in Sydney Tuesday. (AP/ Jeremy Piper)

The long-awaited OWN: Oprah Winfrey Network is gearing up for its premiere on New Year’s Day. And the bold ambition of this venture would spark doubts if there were anybody else’s name attached. Consider: a cable network repurposed from Discovery Health and all-dependent on just one person’s identity, vision and marquee power.

But that person is Winfrey, a cultural force. Now, as she moves through the final months of her daytime syndicated talk show, which will end next September after 25 years, OWN is poised to become Winfrey’s new TV home base.

Instead of a daily hour boasting Winfrey’s on-air presence as host, OWN will be a round-the-clock environment in which — her network vows — she will often be seen but, what is more important, always be felt. She will be the network’s spiritual curator, maintaining a constant presence, even from off-camera, as she offers a slate of programs all guaranteed to meet her “Live Your Best Life” mandate. Get the full story »

Ebert’s new ‘At the Movies’ debuts Jan. 21

“Roger Ebert Presents At the Movies,” the new Chicago-based public-television movie-review show being shepherded by the Chicago Sun-Times’ esteemed film critic, is set to make its debut Jan. 21 in 192 U.S. markets, Ebert announced Monday night via Twitter.

The program also will be available to U.S. servicemen and women around the world through the Armed Forces Network, Ebert said.

NBC plans ‘Idol’ rival early next year

Bloomberg News | NBC will start airing “Voice of America,” a takeoff of a Dutch show, to battle ABC’s “American Idol” early next year.

Tribune Co. signs wire deal with Reuters America

Tower Ticker |  The Chicago Tribune and other Tribune Co. newspapers have signed a multiyear agreement to become charter subscribers to the new Reuters America wire service, a move that will make them less reliant on Associated Press for print and online content.

Though Tribune Co. papers have experimented since May with eschewing AP content in news, business and features — and, in selected trial weeks, sports as well — there is  no plan by the newspapers to drop the 164-year-old wire service whose content is ubiquitous in print and online. Get the full story »

Analysts: LCD TV sales to fall for first time

Shipments of LCD flat-panel TVs will fall this year from the year before, the first such decline since the popularity of such TVs took off in 2006, according to a research firm. Get the full story »

FCC exploring role in TV programming disputes

Federal regulators will explore whether they can do more to protect consumers from losing their television signals because of disputes over the fees that subscription-video providers pay broadcasters for their programming. Get the full story »

‘Operation Oprah’ storms Sydney

Oprah Winfrey’s visit to Sydney — or “Operation Oprah,” as they’re calling it — sounds a bit like a bio-hazard, rather than a visiting TV show from Chicago. But maybe that’s because of the way Australia’s Ten News correspondent reports it.

There is to be a maritime exclusion zone, a no-fly zone, road closures and re-routed public transport in the “operational footprint.”

Oprah’s new network searches for subscriber fees

The Oprah Winfrey cable network, set to launch in a few weeks, is still trying to line-up subscriber fees from cable and satellite operators, David Zaslav, chief executive of the network’s part-owner Discovery Communications Inc., said Monday.

The new network — which is a 50-50 joint venture between Discovery and Winfrey, is set to replace Discovery Health network in about 80 million homes on Jan 1. Discovery Health, which is not widely watched, receives no per-household subscription fee in the “majority of cases,” said Zaslav during remarks at the UBS Global Media and Communications conference in Manhattan. Get the full story »

Oprah picks Dickens novels for Book Club

Talk queen Oprah Winfrey will announce her latest book selection on her show today, and her choice, according to the Orlando Sentinel, is actually two books: “A Tale of Two Cities” and “Great Expectations” by Charles Dickens.

In September, Winfrey chose Jonathan Franzen’s book “Freedom” as the first selection for the 25th and final season of her talk show. She announced that month that despite rumors, her famed book club would continue. “I will have book selections coming all season long and when I move over to OWN, my new network, the book club is coming with me,” she told her audience.

Get the full story »

No new shows slated for Oprah’s Chicago studios

From Crain’s Chicago Business | After “The Oprah Winfrey Show” finishes taping its last season in May, the two studios at Winfrey’s Chicago-based Harpo Inc. may simply go dark while programs for her new OWN cable network are being filmed in Los Angeles and New York.

Currently, executives say behind-the-scenes production work will keep Harpo’s 400 Chicago-based workers busy and have hinted that a new program may eventually take place in Chicago. But early contenders, shows featuring Dr. Oz and designer Nate Berkus, are being filmed in New York. Get the full story>>

Fed’s Bernanke did not rule out more bond buys

Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke did not rule out further purchases of Treasury bonds beyond the $600 billion program announced last month, CBS television reported Bernanke as saying in an interview on the show “60 Minutes”. Get the full story »

Viacom appeals ruling in YouTube copyright case

Viacom is appealing a court decision that YouTube obeyed copyright laws even though the Internet video site used to show thousands of pirated clips.

The challenge filed Friday in a federal appeals court in New York had been expected since a June ruling rebuffed Viacom’s copyright infringement lawsuit against YouTube and its owner, Google Inc. Get the full story »

Congress acts to shush loud TV ads

Here’s a message TV viewers may not want to mute: The days of getting blasted out of the easy chair by blaring TV commercials may soon be over.

The House on Thursday gave final congressional approval to a bill that would prevent advertisers from abruptly raising the volume to catch the attention of viewers wandering off when regular programming is interrupted. Get the full story »

CBS: Bernanke to appear on ‘60 Minutes’ Sunday

U.S. Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke will appear on the news program “60 minutes” on Sunday, part of an effort by the central bank to step up its public communications.

The move comes as the Fed’s decision last month to purchase an additional $600 billion caused a flurry of criticism from politicians in Washington, who argue the central bank is playing with fire and courting future inflation. Get the full story »