You're calling the paying of a standard rate "discrimination." It's not. If it was, someone would take them to court. Private companies can offer people discounts for any reason. Buddy could offer a special rate for women-owned businesses. It would be great PR. It wouldn't be discrimination.
No. Only because Buddy doesn't want to subscribe. He has the option to subscribe and he won't. Then he uses another reason to deflect. If they charged him MORE because he's white, that's discrimination. Or if he's the only owner treated this way. But all the other owners have the same choice.
The policy is the policy, and everyone knows it. Private companies are free to operate the way they want. Nobody forces Buddy to play black or female artists. If he wants to make a policy about women or minorities, he can.
Meanwhile, Alex Meruelo is a Cuban-born Hispanic owner of four radio stations in LA. Last year, he felt he was being overcharged by Nielsen. So he unsubscribed. Even though he's Hispanic, his stations didn't appear. Nielsen contacted him and made a deal he approved and now they're back.
Meruelo Media, owner of four FMs in Los Angeles, has stopped subscribing to Nielsen’s PPM ratings service, effective with the Holiday survey. That means ratings for heritage rocker KLOS, rhythmic
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