In 2010 Phil Arno told the Buffalo News that he was bringing back great
local television to the Buffalo market and he purchased Springville
television station WNGS. Phil Arno used the money he was awarded after a
helicopter crash in California to buy WNGS from a religious broadcast
corporation and told everyone and anyone who would listen that he could
do it better than the media giants who owned the Buffalo network
affiliates. Today some six years later Phil Arno's WBBZ has failed to make even a dent in the viewing habits of the local market and insiders say he is close to shutting off the lights.
Media
Critic recently had a few cold beverages with an individual who was
there when Phil Arno began his ill-fated journey and has nothing good to
say about his association with the former Ch 4 news photographer. "Phil
Arno's handshake means absolutely nothing," said this insider. "I helped
this man realize his dream to buy a television station by applying the
skill set I acquired over 40 years in the business. At the end of the
process Phil Arno proved to be an ingrate, a man who's word meant little
and has zero honor." Now those quotes are certainly harsh and I wish I
could put a name to them, but believe me, I know this person and take
every word as gospel.
Phil Arno got off to a rocky start in his
second year on the air with his Buffalo Night in America event held in
the parking lot of the Eastern Hills Mall. The event was Arno's idea and he insisted on following through with the night despite
warnings from his Sales Manager according to my source. In fact, I'm told the WBBZ promotion lost well over $100,000 and was very poorly attended.
To
his credit Phil Arno has shown a remarkable ability to hire veteran,
experienced broadcasters from the local market. However, Arno has failed
to keep any around for an extended period of time. Currently Phil Arno
has former WIVB GM
Chris Musial on board and it's anyone's guess how long Chris will stay
on. Musial has been seen in the back ground of several of programs
carrying cables and acting as floor director, not what he was used to
at Ch 4. Only former WKBW-TV
promotional manager John DiSciullo has hung around beyond three years
and I'm told he has tried more than once to get back to his former
station but has been unsuccessful.
Phil Arno is quickly losing
his small fortune according to another former partner who is in a
position to know. I'm told Phil Arno has lost over 5 million dollars
thus far with his local TV experiment and there is no end in sight to
his losses. One former sales manager tells Media Critic
that Phil Arno's decision to use Me-TV as his network back drop was the
first major mistake. Me-TV with it's aging sitcom programming from the
1960's and 70's draws minuscule ratings and those who do watch are in
the their 60's. Old demographics and small viewing numbers are a one-two
punch that means eventual bankruptcy.
Phil Arno bragged to Pergy
that if he got into local news he would quickly become the second rated
news station. To understand just how ridiculous that statement is just
look at the local programming Phil Arno is creating in 2016. The list
includes a game show called Bragging Rights with
flexible rules, no real winners and production values that rival a
junior high play. Another show is a remake of the old antiquated bowling
format show called Beat the Champ. The original Beat the Champ
was recorded in black and white and one would think Phil Arno is trying
to re-create that look with the inexpensive cameras he uses out in the
field. They also, believe it or not, use a dry board with a marker to
keep score. Not even an old chyron deck available to animate the score
on the screen for Phil Arno's version of Beat the Champ.
Phil Arno has even brought back his version of Pick a Polka which has
dancers easily over the age of 70 filling the dance floor. Then finally
the one that really tells you why former camera guy Phil Arno bought a
TV station, a studio show called Talk of the Town in
which Phil Arno is the co-host with talented local actress Kim Piazza. Not sure
what Phil Arno is worse at, owning a television station or acting as a on-air host on
that very station?
Phil Arno has been compared
by some veteran observers to Dick Greene, owner of WECK and WLVL radio.
The consensus is Greene overpaid for WECK radio in 2007 when he spent
$1.3 million on the AM station with a weak signal. Some see Greene's
battle to be competitive among the corporate radio giants identical to
Phil Arno's struggle in TV. However, Greene seems to have turned the
corner with WECK radio and also has WLVL radio in Lockport to help pay
the bills. If Phil Arno's former associates are being honest with Media Critic and I believe they are, then Arno has already lost eight to ten times more than any losses Greene may have suffered.
The tough financial situation has also forced Phil Arno to now pay his sales staff on an hourly wage with a possible bonus at the end of the month if a targeted sales number is reached. Asking around town, no one has heard of paying a television sales staff on an hourly rate instead of the tried and true commission method.
To add insult to injury, apparently the Eastern Hills Mall has other plans for the store front Arno rents there for offices and studio. This latest development has forced Arno to seek an empty facility elsewhere. Such a move would cripple the already cash strapped operation.
Media Critic has learned that Phil Arno is hot to sell WBBZ before he
loses what is left of his legal settlement. According to sources in the
know, Phil Arno has reached out to numerous millionaire businessman in
Buffalo including Terry Pegula, Carl Paladino, Russ Salvatore, Bob Rich
and even Tom Golisano, but to no avail. The ledger sheet is a nightmare
according to a former numbers guy who has knowledge of the gallons of red ink at the bottom of the page.
So what
looked like a possible "feel good" story in 2010 when word of Phil Arno
resurrecting the dark WNGS leaked out, has now turned into yet another
"local owner went broke" tale. Phil Arno will be the latest local entrepreneur to
fail in a business dominated by corporate conglomerates.
Phil Arno's end
will be much like that of the mythical Don Quixote, who initially
seemed to be a charming and romantic character, but in the end simply
suffered from mental illness. The song "Impossible Dream" could well be Phil Arno's theme song.
@mediacriticwny
No comments:
Post a Comment