Bad enough that last year nobody in LA Radio was deemed "worthy" to receive a coveted Star on the Hollywood Blvd. walk of fame. At the time this oversight was mainly attributed to the fact that not a single person from the Radio biz was even part of the nominating process. So in its infinite wisdom, the Hollywood Chamber of Commerce "fixed" that problem by naming Clear Channel's market manager Greg Ashlock to the voting committee to decide this year's recipients. Lo and behold, when the new winners were announced this morning, Radio was indeed represented -- by none other than Clear Channel's Ellen K. Gee, what a complete utter surprise!
Can anyone spell "Conflict-Of-Interest"? Obviously, with the elevation of Ashlock to the powerful position of being Radio's sole representative on the deliberating panel, The Fix was clearly in from the beginning.
And in the unlikely event anyone is still unsure where that peculiar rotten stench was coming from this morning, anyone with a working sense of smell (and/or ethics) would have no difficulty whatsoever in tracing the whole thing back to its point of origin: a straight line, running all the way from Hollywood Blvd. directly to 3400 W. Olive in Burbank.
Too bad about all the clearly superior LA air talents who might have deserved a chance at their very own star along the Hollywood "Walk Of Fame," but -- unless they were Clear Channel employees -- they obviously never had a chance from the beginning.
Can anyone spell "Conflict-Of-Interest"? Obviously, with the elevation of Ashlock to the powerful position of being Radio's sole representative on the deliberating panel, The Fix was clearly in from the beginning.
And in the unlikely event anyone is still unsure where that peculiar rotten stench was coming from this morning, anyone with a working sense of smell (and/or ethics) would have no difficulty whatsoever in tracing the whole thing back to its point of origin: a straight line, running all the way from Hollywood Blvd. directly to 3400 W. Olive in Burbank.
Too bad about all the clearly superior LA air talents who might have deserved a chance at their very own star along the Hollywood "Walk Of Fame," but -- unless they were Clear Channel employees -- they obviously never had a chance from the beginning.