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Editorial
See other Editorial Articles

Title: BLOOD IN THE WATER; Right-wing talk shows next...
Source: Neal Boortz
URL Source: http://boortz.com/nuze/index.html
Published: Apr 12, 2007
Author: Neal Boortz
Post Date: 2007-04-12 13:59:49 by Brian S
Keywords: None
Views: 3071
Comments: 338

Liberals see this whole Imus situation as a way to rid themselves of the problem of talk radio. Now that they've succeeded in getting MSNBC to pull Imus' program, they'll concentrate on CBS .. trying to get the radio show cancelled. At this point I wouldn't be surprised if they succeed.

Then they will turn their attention to the rest of us. The tape recorders will be running. There is not one single significant right-of-center radio talk show out there that is not going to come under fire. Liberals know -- they've proven it to themselves -- that they simply cannot succeed in talk radio. So, it's all very simple.

If they can't succeed, destroy the genre. Their original plan was to wait until Democrats control the congress and the White House and then murder talk radio with the so-called "Fairness Doctrine." Now that they're on the verge of having a talk radio scalp on their belts as retribution for a bad and mean-spirited joke, they see that they may not have to wait for the electorate to give them the power.

In the meantime... while the race industry is calling for the head of Don Imus, we have Crystal Gail Mangum of North Carolina. Who is she? She is the woman who falsely accused three members of the Duke lacrosse team of rape. Her unsubstantiated charges resulted in a media firestorm against Duke University and these lacrosse players.

Would you like to spend a few moments comparing the effect of Mangum's charges on the Duke lacrosse team and Imus' words on the Rutgers woman's basketball team? Sure! Why not! Now, let's see ...... The remainder of the Duke lacrosse season was cancelled. They were nationally ranked, and had to forfeit the rest of their games. The coach, Mike Pressler, resigned. "Mug shots" of the lacrosse players were posted on campus. Mark Anthony Neal, an African Studies professor on the campus said that this was "a case of racialized sexual violence." A Durham, N.C. resident called it "racial terrorism." In the middle of all of this we had a district attorney, Michael Nifong, who was running for reelection in a majority-black jurisdiction. There were suggestions that he wanted to be the mayor one day.

Jesse Jackson had plenty to say about this case also. In his column on http://Blacknews.com Jackson said "Predictably, the right-wing media machine has kicked in, prompting mean-spirited attacks upon the accuser's character." Later he offered to pay Mangum's tuition for a college education if her story proved true. Later he amended his promise. In January he said that the Rainbow/Push Coalition would pay her college tuition even if it turns out she completely fabricated her story! Now isn't that special? Hey sisters! How would you like to get a college scholarship from Jesse Jackson? Apparently all you have to do is lodge a false rape accusation against an all-white college sports team!

Get out your checkbook, Jesse. Now we have learned that it was a hoax. No truth. The North Carolina Attorney General's office has declared the accused players to be innocent. A State Bar investigation of Nifong continues. And thus far Jesse Jackson has not come forward to offer any comfort to the lacrosse players falsely accused by Ms. Mangum.

Now ... why even bring all of this up? Well, we have two college teams in the mix. A Rutgers women's basketball team that is largely black, and a Duke men's lacrosse team that is almost (save for one player) exclusively white. A white man insulted the Rutgers team with a mean-spirited quip. No season cancelled. No coach fired. No arrests. Nobody on the basketball team had to spend tens of thousands of dollars on defense attorneys. They were insulted. The were the targets of a stupid racially charged remark ... but that's pretty much it. But how about Duke? The Duke team members were accused of a crime. Attorneys were hired. Coaches fired. Seasons cancelled. Reputations damaged. DNA swabs were taken. Charges were filed. The district attorney was out there saying that a rape most definitely had occurred. Now we find that they were completely innocent. In the meantime the white man who made the stupid remark about the Rutgers basketball team is being attacked and vilified as if he was a mass murderer. The black woman who made the false charges of rape against the lacrosse team is going to walk. In fact, you can fully expect the civil rights establishment --- the same civil rights establishment that is united in their efforts to destroy Don Imus -- circle the wagons around Crystal Gail Mangum and protect her at all costs.

Oprah is going to have the Rutgers woman's basketball team on her show. How many of you would like to make book on when Oprah invites the Duke lacrosse team to be on her show? When pigs fly.

Back to talk radio.

The mainstream media in this country doesn't merely dislike talk radio, they hate it. Hate it with a blinding passion. How dare these "disc jockeys" get on those radio stations and spout opinions on matters of governance and public policy? Don't they know that this is a job to be left to the professionals at the New York Times and the Washington Post plus the major broadcast TV networks? What's worse, how dare the great unwashed of the general population get on these radio shows, especially the syndicated ones, and spout their ill-advised and uneducated opinions?

Think about this. You have a liberal columnist like Maureen Dowd or the insipid Tom Teepen write a column spouting some leftist dogma. That column gets published in newspapers across the country. Then you have some mechanic from Memphis get on the air with Limbaugh or Hannity to offer a differing point of view. The column may be read by a million people -- at the most. The Memphis mechanic is heard by perhaps five times that many. It just ain't right!

For years now the left has employed various tactics to marginalize talk radio. The favorite tactic is the tired "hate radio" accusation. The general idea here is that anything said on a talk radio show that is at variance with liberal dogma is "hate speech." This tactic hasn't worked ... and talk radio continues to grow.

Well .. now there's a new game plan. Use the Jesse Jacksons and Al Sharptons of this world to attack these hosts on the basis of race. That's right .. this whole Imus affair isn't really about race! The TV networks and the liberal mainstream media haven't been hammering this Imus thing day after day after day because they really care about the racial aspects of the story. If they were that concerned about the racial angle they would be playing up the Duke case to a similar extent. Race is the means, not the reason. Right now the mainstream press sees race as the key to destroying talk radio. Focus on the hosts ... wait until they say something that can be racially exploited, and then launch the relentless attack. Go after networks, stations and advertisers. Concentrate on them -- one at a time -- like hyenas looking for a meal. Select prey that looks vulnerable. Isolate that prey and go in for the kill. I don't know how many hosts there are out there who have not made comments about black politicians, celebrities or culture that could be used as the basis for a full force attack. I know I have. Have I gone overboard? You bet! Hell .. 37 years in the business, how can you not have screwed up from time to time? I've apologized in the past -- and probably will one day say something else that merits an apology. Apologies aren't enough, however. The Christian concept of forgiveness and tolerance means nothing to the "reverends" Jackson and Sharpton. They're sharks .. and there's blood in the water.

By the way ... my guess? Now that MSNBC has dumped Imus, CBS is sure to follow. Look at it this way .... NBC has canned him. How in the hell can CBS stand up to the this racially charged onslaught? "Hey, CBS! NBC did the right thing? How about you?"

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#72. To: Burkeman1, ..., Mekons4, bluedogtxn, Destro, rowdee (#68) (Edited)

I agree with you, Burke. The Fairness Docterine is useless - it doesn't address the problem in our media - which is limited and cross ownership of media by a handful of fatcat family/corporations - and yes, Fairness Docterine would stifle free speech because it would add yet another bureaucracy of well paid pencil pushing obnoxious gov't silly servant news-balance-checker-nazis.

It's not the application of the "Fairness Docterine" that this country needs. It's the application of the anti-trust laws to break up the monopoly that exists today with a small cabal of owners controlling all aspects of our print, television, and radio media.

http://www.info rmationclearinghouse.info/article13713.htm

"It's time to break up the Media"

scrapper2  posted on  2007-04-12   18:32:12 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#73. To: scrapper2, Burkeman1, ..., Mekons4, bluedogtxn, rowdee (#72)

I agree with you, Burke. The Fairness Docterine is useless -

The REAL CENSORSHIP has been the fucking right wing backing the deregulatio n/media consolidation of media ownership that monopolized the air waves.

See my above about breaking up the media crossownership.

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-12   18:35:25 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#74. To: Destro (#71)

Any government subsidy to media at all- in any form- is an assualt on free speech. Government shouldn't even be running public radio= as witness what NPR has become- a faux "balanced" warmonger channel that purports to be the model of the "Fairness doctrine" and yet it is just gubmint propaganda and lies with "Dems" and "GOPERS" debating over minutia and trivia.

80 percent of American media is in the hands of 8 large media conglomerates. What should be done about that? I don't know if anything should be done about it. I do know their "news" is a joke. It is full of lies and these companies rely greatly on the good favor and graces and government and thus toe a two party line. I don't read or watch them for the truth and increasingly fewer Americans do. NBC? CBS? CNN? New York Times? They are losing viewers and readers by the day. I don't think these media conlomerates are the future.

But I take your point. In the real world in which government is a reality- perhaps there should be some sort of breakup of big media companies. I generally disfavor such action on the part of government but since the reality is that media sucks up to government since it has regulatory power- it is more than a little dangerous to have the media is so few hands.

So if gubmint is going to be involved in media by way of regulations- it should have the power to break up the larger companies.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-04-12   18:43:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#75. To: scrapper2 (#72)

A "Fairness Doctrine" would please liberal believers in the two party fraud in that all these silly reichwinger talk programs wouldn't exist. But- what would replace them? Basically more "civilized" and "serious" "Meet the Press" type programs that have your standard Beltway approved "Liberal" and standard beltway approved "conservative" "debating" nothing fraud issues. The "issue" on Iraq would be what it is today- body armor for the troops, who loves the troops more, who wants to take care of the troops, and who is for killing more dirty moslems? That is the "Debate" the "fairness Doctrine" would bring. Or- Rush wouldn't go off the air- he would just hire some limp wristed setup "liberal" to provide the "balance"- like Alan Colmes supposedly does on Hannity's program. LOL!

The problem with a "Fairness doctrine" is that it can so easily be abused and manipulated and used to control and stifle opinion to almost nothing- to fake absurd positions.

Now- I am not blind to the possibility that Clear Channel and the goobermint are in cahoots and that it is curious how this reichwinger radio stays on the air despite how effing sad it is- but a "Fairness doctrine"- while it may "feel good" to get to the likes of Rush off the air- would do nothing to address the lack of debate in this country and the freedom of the press. It would hand gubmint the tools to control the range of opinion.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-04-12   18:52:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#76. To: Mekons4 (#51)

You know what a "Fairness Doctrine" would look like? Imagine a talk show host saying that Bush lied when he said that AQ and Iraq "worked together" then having to give "equal time" to the likes of a BAC to spew his Newsmax lies and silly juvenile illogical pettifogging nittery. It wouldn't matter if this host exposed this BAC's lies in the past- he would have to be given a platform to repeat his same tired old refuted 1000 times lies from his silly dopey reichwinger rag sheets every time the host said Bush lied about Iraq and AQ ties. Where could a host go with that? He could never get anywhere. He would eventually end up talking about moss growing - sounding like George Will or Tim Russert- contrived, staid, and utterly predictable = saying nothing controversial at all- not exploring anything - not even trying to connect the simplest of dots.

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-04-12   19:02:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#77. To: Burkeman1 (#70) (Edited)

See- why does it have to be "leftie"?

Yep. But that is where it would end under this so-called 'fairness' doctrine. [EDIT: Note that elections are virtually only lefties or righties--it is because they've made frigging election laws such that others have virtually no chance of success--and that is just the way they want it.] Other opinions, as you noted, would be lost, if ever initially found, in the shuffle of 'liar, liar pants afire' crap emanating from the righties or the lefties.

I want to listen to whoever I want to listen to--or to listen to no one. I can think for myself--I sure as hell don't need the pilldown man or a nutty rebuttal from a leftie.

Next thing you know, people will be demanding that laws be passed to make people be smarter/think smarter/do it 'their' way/blah blah blah.

The market will take care of it....IMO.

rowdee  posted on  2007-04-12   19:09:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#78. To: rowdee (#77)

The problem is that the media market in this country may be rigged. Thus I can see why people are groping about for "solutions". But a "fairness doctrine" would be a treatment worse than the disease.

It would merely have the effect of making our political discourse sound more Sovietesque and boring. Rush and Hannity and O'Reilly- put on a show- and dress up their beltway toadyism as somehow "popular."

Burkeman1  posted on  2007-04-12   19:13:31 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#79. To: Burkeman1 (#74)

Any government subsidy to media at all

We break up monopolies to foster competition. No govt subsidies - just have many PRIVATE owners who don't cross own other media companies.

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-12   19:16:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#80. To: Destro (#79)

But...the people...they want a homogenous product that's easy to digest.

"People like truth, it gives us a fucking benchmark." - dakmar

Dakmar  posted on  2007-04-12   19:18:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#81. To: Burkeman1, Mekons4 (#76) (Edited)

You know what a "Fairness Doctrine" would look like?

Look up how Johnny Carson would make fun of those kinds of fairness doctrine moments - though it was before my time I do know of his skist through repeats I saw.

"Floyd R. Turbo", a dimwitted yokel responding to a TV station editorial.

Floyd R. Turbo is a recurring character on The Tonight Show.

Floyd R. Turbo - Opinionated super-patriot first seen in 1977 during skits on the late night talk variety show THE TONIGHT SHOW WITH JOHNNY CARSON/NBC/1962- 92.

Floyd R. Turbo (played by Johnny Carson) was an "everyman" type who taped editorial messages for television, (a la Gilda Radner's befuddled Emily Litella character). Billed as "Mr. Silent Majority," (and based on characters he encountered in his northeast Nebraska childhood) Floyd R. Turbo dressed in a plaid hunting jacket and hat, and stood nervously in front of a TV camera as he delivered his opinions on gun control, war, women's lib, and hunting ("If God didn't want us to hunt, He wouldn't have given up plaid shirts; I only kill in self defense-what would you do if a rabbit pulled a knife on you?").

Johnny Carson told Rolling Stone reporter Timothy White "He's (Turbo) the epitome of the redneck ignoramus. I find the things (characteristics) each week when I go out to do...his gestures at the wrong time, his not knowing where he's supposed to be, his feeble attempts at humor, his talks about things he doesn't quite understand."

Here's an example of Turbo's wisdom on nuclear reactors. "And what's all this fuss about plutonium: How can something named after a Disney character be dangerous? So what if an atomic plant blows up? The people who say that, they are afraid to die. I'm not afraid to die because all my life I have lived by the Good Book, the American Legion magazine...They say atomic radiation can hurt your reproductive organs. My answer is, so can a hockey stick, but we don't stop building them....Sure, nuclear leaks will affect the forest animals. So what if a deer grows up with two rear ends? They're easier to shoot...So in my simple way, I' m asking that you support nuclear energy. Remember being an American means being powerful, proud and pushy, and in conclusion let me finish by ending...Thank You." And on the draft Turbo offered this opinion: "This station wants no draft. They want to deprive a boy of the Army. The Army is educational. The Army teaches you how to do dental work-with the butt of a rifle....how to tell what time it is by making a sundial out of a dead person...how to make beer out of bird droppings and also how to make a rubber girl out of an inner tube...In conclusion, I say we should not end the draft. We should increase it. We have a moral obligation to give Bob Hope soldiers to entertain. Fellow Americans, it is a honor to be drafted and to serve your country. Thank you, bye-bye, and buy bonds."

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-12   19:22:35 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#82. To: Destro, Burkeman1, Mekons4, bluedogtxn, rowdee (#73)

The REAL CENSORSHIP has been the fucking right wing backing the deregulatio n/media consolidation of media ownership that monopolized the air waves.

See my above about breaking up the media crossownership.

Sorry I didn't have time to read your post at the time I wrote mine and posted it - I added you and others on the ping list with edit function after.

It's not as simple as evil GOP vs wonderful looking out for the people's interest Dems, Destro.

Degregulation had already started before GWB took office - actually it started under the Clinton Admin.- Bush appointed Chair of the FCC to accelerate the process that his surrogate brother, Billy Jeff had begun. ( radio had already been deregulated and cross ownership was allowed)

http://www.forbes.com/2002/ 04/10/mpowell.html

Based on what I read the deregulation in 2003 came about as a result of successful previous Supreme Court challenges to the existing FCC rules. Admittedly instead of having Congress draft lawsuit proof new media legislation, the FCC in 2003 merely threw out the baby with the bath water.

In fact a report that showed the disasterous effects of de-regulating in radio was suppressed in 2003. Diane Feinstein received a copy.

The happy news is that "Most of the rules the commission voted on in 2003 were thrown out by an appeals court in Philadelphia. The agency is reconsidering them."

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/washington/articles/2006/09/18/senator_says_me dia_study_suppressed/

"Senator says media study suppressed" 09/18/06

So Humpty Dumpty can be be put back again in a better lawsuit proof version if Congress so chooses.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-04-12   19:38:06 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#83. To: Mekons4 (#47)

I'm not confusing anything. I'm pointing out the Law of Unintended Consequences so that you realize what you are getting into.

The moment a "Fairness Doctrine" is put into place, do you have any doubts that it will be exploited?

Realistically, what you want is censorship and marginalization. What you are going to get is a bloodbath and a fight if you open up doors to people who are a lot smarter, a lot more clever, and a lot more conniving than you are.

"Fairness" will never exist. Get used to that idea. There will always be someone waiting in the wings to exploit the system and they will. There is nothing you can do about it.

I've said it before and I will say it again: If you fix a defect, you introduce a new one. The Law of Unintended Consequences ALWAYS strikes, no matter how air-tight you design a system.

Press 1 to proceed in English. Press 2 for Deportation.

mirage  posted on  2007-04-12   19:49:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#84. To: Burkeman1 (#78)

The problem is that the media market in this country may be rigged.

There may be some back room shady deals the gubmint uses to get its propaganda out but there is no shortage of available bandwith for opposing views to get out. It's just the typical whining of people who don't want to pony up the money.

A top 50 market station can be had for less than people on the coasts pay for a decent house.

http://www.buysellradio.com/

http://www.radiobroker.com/

http://broadcaststations4sale.com/sale.html

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   19:52:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#85. To: SmokinOPs (#84)

It's just the typical whining of people who don't want to pony up the money.

LOL, hells yes, let's buy out VIACOM. You put up the money and I'll be the brains of the outfit.

"People like truth, it gives us a fucking benchmark." - dakmar

Dakmar  posted on  2007-04-12   19:56:30 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#86. To: Destro, Burkeman1, rowdee, Mekons4 (#79)

We break up monopolies to foster competition. No govt subsidies - just have many PRIVATE owners who don't cross own other media companies.

It sure needs to be done. Check out this chart of limited and cross ownership of our media - it will make you positively gag:

http://www.mediachannel .org/ownership/chart.shtml

Here's an activist site giving info on what the issues are regarding media ownership monopoly and what we as consumers, voters can do.

http://www.freepress.net/issues/

I think for starters anti-trust laws need to be applied properly to this media ownership cabal that has developed over time. From the above-mentioned site:

"Antitrust prosecution is potentially a powerful recourse in the fight against media consolidation."

Antitrust prosecution is potentially a powerful recourse in the fight against media consolidation. Antitrust might be a way to break up the largest firms, shift control from corporations to consumers, and create a more democratic media system. Yet antitrust has yet to be employed to stop a major media deal.

The very foundation of antitrust law is the idea that concentrated private power threatens democratic government – which is exactly what’s happening to the media. Yet Washington currently considers antitrust as merely a way to manage price-fixing and minor market failures. Under the current system, each merger is dealt with separately. Thus if one large company is allowed to get bigger, all of its competitors must be allowed to do the same. A more productive approach would be to look broadly at how a merger (or the likelihood of successive mergers) may affect the entire media landscape.

A market that seems competitive from the prevailing antitrust perspective may be extremely concentrated from a democratic perspective – which suggests the need for a broader definition of antitrust in the media realm. Antitrust regulation should focus on vertical integration and cross-ownership – not just traditional horizontal integration. While one company doesn’t own all the TV networks, cable systems or radio stations, when just a handful each own 20 percent of these industries, much greater scrutiny is needed."

scrapper2  posted on  2007-04-12   20:48:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#87. To: scrapper2 (#86) (Edited)

Here's an activist site giving info on what the issues are regarding media ownership monopoly and what we as consumers, voters can do.

How can you claim "monopoly" when you just posted a criticism of said monopoly on a website that isn't corporate owned and linked to two websites that also were free to criticize the "monopoly"? The word has a specific meaning.

It's not that people can't hear or read alternative messages, they just don't want to or don't agree with them. I mean most of us can't even open our own family members' eyes or change their minds and we have 24/7 access to them. We're the 5 percenters. Have been throughout history and probably always will be.

Honestly, do you really think if you bought Clear Channel tomorrow and ended Rush's syndication and put on someone more in tune with the 4um view of the world, that they could pull his ratings?

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   21:01:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#88. To: SmokinOPs (#87)

put on someone more in tune with the 4um view of the world, that they could pull his ratings?

How many people would feel empowered? How many people care about feeling empowered? They're the ones the rest of us should watch, except that would constitute busybodying. What a paradox.

"People like truth, it gives us a fucking benchmark." - dakmar

Dakmar  posted on  2007-04-12   21:11:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#89. To: Dakmar (#88)

How many people would feel empowered?

The 5% that agree.

How many people care about feeling empowered?

9.4%

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   21:15:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#90. To: SmokinOPs (#87)

How can you claim "monopoly" when you just posted a criticism of said monopoly on a website that isn't corporate owned and linked to two websites that also were free to criticize the "monopoly"? The word has a specific meaning.

b. It's not that people can't hear or read alternative messages, they just don't want to or don't agree with them. I mean most of us can't even open our own family members' eyes or change their minds and we have 24/7 access to them. We're the 5 percenters. Have been throughout history and probably always will be.

c. Honestly, do you really think if you bought Disney tomorrow and ended Rush's syndication and put on someone more in tune with the 4um view of the world, that they could pull his ratings?

a. You are right. Monopoly in the context of media ownership has a specific meaning - it applies to print, audio, and visual media media industries.

The internet is not owned by the media moguls and that's why I can post on Christine's site and that's why an activist site can exist on the net.

b. It's easier for people to get their news from print or radio or TV and that's not going to change for a while - not everyone is comfortable with or adept at or can afford the luxury of surfing the net to get news and or read diverse opinions. Therefore I think the media monopolies of "traditional" media need to be broken up for modern day America to have a chance at a less corporate manipulated general public.

c. It's not a matter of new ownership for Disney. It's a matter of the DOJ using anti-trust laws to force Disney to sell off its ownership of subsidiaries across the film, TV, newspaper, radio spectrum. Disney would need to choose to concentrate on one of the 4. And if an independent buyer like me could afford to buy the Disney radio channel, perhaps I'd keep Rush on. But the following hour I might have a liberal talk show host on like Rachel Maddox. Who knows? It would be all up to me and not up to a bunch of corporate suits in LA who attend cocktail parties with the Viacom CEO and political insiders who together decide albeit informally what message the elites want to promote on any given day or week or month as I suspect happens now.

scrapper2  posted on  2007-04-12   21:48:08 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#91. To: scrapper2, SmokinOPs, Burkeman1, rowdee, Mekons4 (#90)

One example of how bad media consolidation was for radio listening: Media consolidation has meant that niche radio stations (that made profits but not the margins I imagine a Clear Channel would like) that catered to Oldies music or Jazz, etc have vanished from the scene. New York used to have 6 rock stations now they have half a rock station - half talk and half rock on weekends. They replaced the Oldies station (I am more of a 90s music guy) with a concept they call 'Jack' - yes Oldies were getting less popular as the 50s generation was getting older dying but they still made a profit. The audience for these stations were loyal and they were left without their music source - in other words the old stations served their communities and were commercially viable. Now the main mandate of over the air radio - to serve the community in exchange for the air license over public airways is not being met. In fact the airwaves have become defacto private property with radios only mission is to make money and screw the community.

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-12   22:11:47 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#92. To: scrapper2 (#72) (Edited)

Fairness Docterine would stifle free speech because it would add yet another bureaucracy of well paid pencil pushing obnoxious gov't silly servant news-balance-checker-nazis.

It didn't do this for fifty years. Why should it suddenly start? For most of Radio's existence the Fairness Doctrine has been in place. It didn't go away until Reagan decided to give a boost to the GOP political radio.

Your idea is to let Mays, Bush's best friend and biggest campaign contributor decide who gets on? That is what is happening now.

The GOP fear mongering that is now coming out didn't happen then, why should it happen now? Coulter didn't run the national networks then and she won't now. Children won't be required to listen to Limbaugh 12 hours per day any more than they were the last time the doctrine was in effect.

People who are slandered by the on air personalities will however have an opportunity to request time to rebut the allegations. I know the GOP is terrified of this, and I see the fear tactics they are using to demonize the idea, but it was and is a basically fair system and one they will not be able to oppose when the facts are out. Hence the wild eyed hysteria right now.

.

...  posted on  2007-04-12   22:47:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#93. To: SmokinOPs (#84)

There may be some back room shady deals the gubmint uses to get its propaganda out but there is no shortage of available bandwith for opposing views to get out. It's just the typical whining of people who don't want to pony up the money.

I think the stations you are talking about here are the local stations in sparesly populated regions with ranges of about thirty miles. They have to shut down at night to allow the clear channel stations to take over. They have a very small audience reach and that is why they are cheap.

.

...  posted on  2007-04-12   22:50:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#94. To: Brian S (#0)

I'm boycotting NBC, MSNBC, and CBS.

Besides, they're shit networks.

Paul Revere  posted on  2007-04-12   22:57:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#95. To: Destro (#91)

One example of how bad media consolidation was for radio listening: Media consolidation has meant that niche radio stations (that made profits but not the margins I imagine a Clear Channel would like) that catered to Oldies music or Jazz, etc have vanished from the scene.

Buy an I-Pod.

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SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   23:21:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#96. To: ... (#93) (Edited)

I think the stations you are talking about here are the local stations in sparesly populated regions with ranges of about thirty miles. They have to shut down at night to allow the clear channel stations to take over. They have a very small audience reach and that is why they are cheap.

Nope, many of those listed are Class As. You can buy a station in Raleigh NC with a metro population of 1 million for under 500k. I hope you weren't thinking you were going to start off with a transmitter on the Chrysler building for 10,000.

Hop to it. If people like what you have for programming you can take your profits and buy another and another. You'll be a media mogul in no time.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   23:28:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#97. To: ... (#92)

For most of Radio's existence the Fairness Doctrine has been in place.

Yeah, and there wasn't hardly any political radio. Great, I can't wait for Lawrence Welk to reclaim his AM throne.

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SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   23:29:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#98. To: scrapper2 (#90) (Edited)

It's easier for people to get their news from print or radio or TV and that's not going to change for a while...

Here you go. Grab your pocket book.

http://www.buysellradio.com/

http://www.radiobroker.com/

http://broadcaststations4sale.com/sale.html

http://lite.globalbx.com/Newspapers%5Clitecatlistings.html

http://www.businessnation.com/Businesses_for_Sale/Media-Publishing/Publishing/

http://www.mergernetwork.com/c/newspaper-publishers-for-sale/

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SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-12   23:32:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#99. To: SmokinOPs (#96)

Nope, many of those listed are Class As. You can buy a station in Raleigh NC with a metro population of 1 million for under 500k.

Just scanned your list and it looks like anything over 5kW goes up to at least a million bucks right away. You are not going to change the world with a low power transmitter covering a medium sized town in South Carolina.

.

...  posted on  2007-04-12   23:41:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#100. To: SmokinOPs (#97)

Yeah, and there wasn't hardly any political radio.

There is very little political radio now. About all I see on FM is GOP propaganda.

Do you think Hannity, Limbaugh and Savage or good sources of information? I mean, other than to see what the GOP wants to goobers to believe at any given moment?

.

...  posted on  2007-04-12   23:43:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#101. To: SmokinOPs (#95) (Edited)

Buy an I-Pod.

I own an I-Pod just like I OWN a portion of the public airwaves that is held in trust in my name as well as that of every citizen. A corporation does not own the airwaves - they utilize them on a privileged basis only.

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-13   0:02:24 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#102. To: ..., Burkeman1, Smokin'OPS, Destro (#92) (Edited)

Your idea is to let Roger Ails, Bush's best friend highest campaign contributor decide who gets on? That is what is happening now.

You are so blinded by your stereo typing of people into your GOP/Dem pigeon holed slots it's impossible to have a open debate with you.

Applying anti-trust laws properly, as I have suggested, to break up media cross owning monopolies does not mean letting "Roger Ails, Bush's best friend highest campaign contributor decide who gets on" You are being irrational. As for what is happening now, did you bother to read any of the material I linked to regarding how the monoplies came about. This situation did not come about as a result of GWB's election. It started long before and Fair Doctrine did not prevent it. The problem comes from a combination of successful Supreme Court challenges, Congressional ineffective action or inaction, and mis-application of the anti-trust laws on the books.

How did the Fairness Doctrine help America be better informed since its inception in 1949 to the time it was side-lined under Reagan in the late '80's? In that time span we sailed through the McCarthy Commie witch hunts, the Kennedys' and Martin Luther King assassinations, the white wash of the Warren Commission, the faux Tonkin Incident, the MIC fueled Vietnam War, conscription for a war of lies, Israel's attack on the USS Liberty, the secret bombing of Cambodia, Carter starting the CIA support and training of the muhjadeen in Afghanistan, the Iran Contra deal taking place.

The Fairness Doctrine instead of ensuring both sides of a controversial issue was heard on radio with the threat of fines or licenses being yanked did nothing of the kind. Instead it ushered in a time of quiet acquiescence non controversial lame news reporting that did not help one bit in giving us both sides of issues.

In fact you know why a guy like Rush became so popular with initially liberals ( I hate to break it to you) and conservatives alike? It was because Rush was COLORFUL, CONTROVERSIAL, OPINIONATED and Americans - even if they did not agree with Rush - were STARVED for outside the box take it or leave it controversial opinions news analysis, instead of boring bland packaged pablum.

In other words 40 years of Fairness Docterine made a guy like Rush a star and it gave rise to a TV market who swooned over Fox News, because as unbalanced as it was, FOX served up glitz and controversy and "the other side."

You want Fairness Doctrine - go for it - the 2003 FCC regs have been thrown out by courts - press your Dem controlled Congressmen to bring back Fair Doctrine - and then you'll have to listen to guys like BAC presenting their schtick on Air America. Be my guest. Maybe it'll keep BAC occupied so he has no time to post his newsmax here.

Here's the problem we have in this nation regarding the media and Fairness Doctrine has zero to do in serving as an antidote to the problem at hand. Look beyond your left/right pigeon holes.

http://www.mediachannel .org/ownership/chart.shtml

scrapper2  posted on  2007-04-13   0:25:15 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#103. To: Destro (#101)

I own an I-Pod just like I OWN a portion of the public airwaves...

You do? How much can you sell it for? How many shares do you own? Maybe you don't know what ownership is.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-13   0:28:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#104. To: ... (#100)

There is very little political radio now.

And it looks to me like you want even less. Are you going to make all those mom and pop stations follow the fairness doctrine too?

So when they criticize the city council or the local garbage service they have to allow a rebuttal? How long do you think it will be before they switch to automated Golden Oldies?

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SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-13   0:31:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#105. To: SmokinOPs (#103)

Maybe you don't know what ownership is.

Are you now claiming that the airwaves have become private property? What aspect of public property do you not understand?

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-13   0:38:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#106. To: SmokinOPs (#104)

So when they criticize the city council or the local garbage service they have to allow a rebuttal?

What would be wrong with that? It worked for fifty years, first as the Mayflower Doctrine and then as the Fairness Doctrine. If they criticize a person on the air, that person should be allowed time to reubut. The Fairness Doctrine never mandated absolutely equal time, it mandated a reasonable opportunity to rebut. The GOP fear mongering is saying "absolutely equal time" - and it is understandable why they are terrified of this.

So you think that non-stop single sided propaganda parroting government issued talking points is preferable to golden oldies? You think that's political discourse? It isn't even close.

.

...  posted on  2007-04-13   0:41:42 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#107. To: ... (#99)

Just scanned your list and it looks like anything over 5kW goes up to at least a million bucks right away. You are not going to change the world with a low power transmitter covering a medium sized town in South Carolina.

5kw isn't a low power transmitter. It's a Class B and a pretty good radius.

This station right here will get you coverage of atleast 1.5 million during the daytime in the capital of the most populous state in the country. That's 33 cents per potential listener.

"NORTHERN CALIFORNIA... right off major interstate near the State Capital. Daytime with very good coverage, 1560 on dial, nice equipment. Lease both studio and tower site on very long term lease, now in place. Asking $600,000 with $250,000 down. Balance to be paid over 5 years. Call or email Ted Gray at (336) 570-9133 for more details."

Are you going to call the bank about a loan or keep bitching about how you can't get your message out. Hell, in a few years every major city will probably have total wi-fi coverage and you'll be able to broadcast at home for free in your underwear.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-13   0:42:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#108. To: Destro (#105)

What aspect of public property do you not understand?

I understand it's an oxymoron.

Free Image Hosting at www.ImageShack.us

SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-13   0:43:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#109. To: SmokinOPs (#107)

5kw isn't a low power transmitter. It's a Class B and a pretty good radius.

This station right here will get you coverage of atleast 1.5 million during the daytime in the capital of the most populous state in the country. That's 33 cents per potential listener.

Nice Red Herring and you are doing a good job of pumping it.

But why should I have to buy a radio station to get back the public airways? This was decided back in the 1940s. They are the public domain. They should serve the public and not mearly function as a vehicle for pro government propaganda outlet.

.

...  posted on  2007-04-13   0:46:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#110. To: ... (#106)

If they criticize a person on the air, that person should be allowed time to reubut.

They can. Letters to the editor, web page, pamphlets, buy their own station, internet broadcasting, billboard, etc.

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SmokinOPs  posted on  2007-04-13   0:47:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#111. To: SmokinOPs, ... (#107)

1560 kHz with 1 kW/Daytime-only power? They use those frequencies to broadcast local high school games and ethnic programs to small communities. Don't piss down his back and tell him it's raining.

The 1500s kHz and up is AM radio’s version of the boondocks – the top of the dial where AM signals are weakest.

"The desire to rule is the mother of heresies." -- St. John Chrysostom

Destro  posted on  2007-04-13   0:49:28 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#112. To: SmokinOPs (#110)

They can. Letters to the editor, web page, pamphlets, buy their own station, internet broadcasting, billboard, etc.

Sure, or let them stand in their bathroom and scream. It all has the silly effect of sidestepping the issue.

Why not give them a chance to use THEIR public airwaves to answer the charge with equal dignity. Is the Republican party so weak and corrupt that it has to use these underhanded mike cutting tactics to keep its propganda viable? I guess you don't need to answer that. Where would Fox News be if it couldn't turn off the mike? Where would the GOP be if facts entered the debate?

.

...  posted on  2007-04-13   0:51:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  



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