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Weekly Log: Green Bay Anchor Continues Recovery, Fargo Anchor Leaving

People

Gray ABC affiliate WBAY-TV/2 (Green Bay) provided an update on anchor Sarah Thomsen, who is recovering from a concussion suffered in a car crash in May. The station reports that Thomsen continues daily therapy sessions and is determined to overcome the injuries.

Sports anchor/reporter Taylor Budge announced her impending departure from Forum ABC affiliate WDAY-TV/6.1 (Fargo). She has not yet announced her next step.


Stations

The Star Tribune reported that the Bois Forte Band of Lake Superior Chippewa has again extended the shutdown date of WELY-FM/94.5 (Ely) and WELY/1450 (Ely) as talks continue with prospective buyers.

Gray TV’s KBJR-TV (Superior-Duluth) has launched a new morning newscast combining the staffs of previous competing newscasts on its NBC and CBS channels, which have shared a newsroom since 2007. The combination allows the station to add live field reporting in the morning, a service not previously offered by Duluth TV stations on a daily basis.

The Changing Newscasts blog notes that Nexstar My Network TV station WJMN-TV/3.1 (Escanaba-Marquette) has dropped its weekend newscasts.

My Central Valley LLC’s new station in Duluth, KMYN-LD, is carrying Buzzr on channel 32.6 with no other channels.

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported that Scripps’ WTMJ-TV (Milwaukee) will add QVC and ShopLC on channels 4.6 and 4.7 next month. Laff will move from 4.6 to 4.4 and Court TV will be seen only on channel 55.3 of Scripps’ WPXE (Kenosha-Milwaukee).


Regulatory issues

Politico and other news outlets reported that Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-Minn.) temporarily withdrew her Journalism Competition and Preservation Act after Republicans inserted provisions that Klobuchar objected to. The bill would allow news outlets to collectively bargain with tech companies to receive payment for the use of their content. Currently, most news outlets receive no compensation for the use of their content on Facebook, Google, and other platforms.

Sen. Tammy Baldwin (D-Wis.) again introduced the Go Pack Go Act, which would change federal regulations to require cable and satellite providers to import Wisconsin stations into 13 counties that are part of the Minneapolis, Duluth, or Marquette markets. The concern is primarily driven by several Green Bay Packers games each season that are not seen on Minneapolis or Duluth stations (see the 2019 article for more background). Various similar proposals have failed to pass.

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