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Dems push fairness doctrine

It's even more vague than that.

Here is the info on HR 501 from house.gov. Doesn't say anything about talk radio or fairness.

Valerie Plame Wilson Compensation Act (Introduced in House)

HR 501 IH

110th CONGRESS

1st Session

H. R. 501

For the relief of Valerie Plame Wilson.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

January 16, 2007

Mr. INSLEE introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence (Permanent Select)

A BILL

For the relief of Valerie Plame Wilson.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the `Valerie Plame Wilson Compensation Act'.

SEC. 2. VOLUNTARY RETIREMENT FROM THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY.

For purposes of any determination of rights under title III of the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.), Valerie Plame Wilson of Washington, District of Columbia, shall be considered to have met the age and consent requirements that apply under section 302(b) of such Act (50 U.S.C. 2152(b)) by virtue of section 233(a) of such Act (50 U.S.C. 2053(a)).
 
Al Johnson said:
It's even more vague than that.

Here is the info on HR 501 from house.gov. Doesn't say anything about talk radio or fairness.

Valerie Plame Wilson Compensation Act (Introduced in House)

HR 501 IH

110th CONGRESS

1st Session

H. R. 501

For the relief of Valerie Plame Wilson.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

January 16, 2007

Mr. INSLEE introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Select Committee on Intelligence (Permanent Select)

A BILL

For the relief of Valerie Plame Wilson.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the `Valerie Plame Wilson Compensation Act'.

SEC. 2. VOLUNTARY RETIREMENT FROM THE CENTRAL INTELLIGENCE AGENCY.

For purposes of any determination of rights under title III of the Central Intelligence Agency Retirement Act (50 U.S.C. 2001 et seq.), Valerie Plame Wilson of Washington, District of Columbia, shall be considered to have met the age and consent requirements that apply under section 302(b) of such Act (50 U.S.C. 2152(b)) by virtue of section 233(a) of such Act (50 U.S.C. 2053(a)).

I give up. some people just lack basic reading skills.

Al, follow the links I provide. This bill was introduced in the 109th Congress, not the 110th.
 
I give up. some people just lack basic reading skills.

Al, follow the links I provide. This bill was introduced in the 109th Congress, not the 110th.

My reading skills got me an "A" in Civics in the 9th grade, where I learned that an unvoted bill dies at the end of a congress. And, thank you, I prefer to go to sites I consider reliable, such as Thomas.

Rep Louise Slaughter (D-NY) introduced HR 501 in the early weeks of the first session of the last (109th) Congress. Slaughter represents the Buffalo-Rochester region of Western New York. Her district includes two liberal talk stations. She is currently chair of the House Rules committee making her the second most powerful member of the House (in the previous congress, she was ranking Democrat). Her bill was referred to a sub-committee where, like most bills, it died when the 109th congress adjourned. No action was taken. The bill is not currently active and has not been re-introduced, which suggests this legislation is not a priority for the majority party or even Slaughter. As chair of the Rules Committee she has considerable power to determine which bills reach the House floor for a vote.

This now-dead bill was a statement of general principles, resembling the former fairness doctrine. It would have limited the term of broadcast licenses to four years and would allow members of the public to challenge a station's application to renew its license on the grounds of "the applicant's failure to afford reasonable opportunities for presentation of opposing points of view on issues of public importance in its overall programming." Under the terms of this bill, renewal would not have been as automatic as it is now. The bill would have also required stations to "cover issues of importance to their local communities in a fair manner, taking into account the diverse interests and viewpoints in the local community." The only thing new here was a requirement for stations to hold semiannual hearings on the "needs and interests of the community" (not just keep a file).

Coverage of local issues might well have been the most far-reaching aspect of this dead bill. It could have resulted in challenges to stations which are all-syndicated, all-automated and all-voice tracked with no local programming, possibly even with no local news, local talk or local public affairs programming.

The language of this bill would have cut both ways; it would have allowed conservatives to challenge the licenses of public radio stations, liberal talk stations and network-owned television stations on grounds of liberal bias.

Bottom line: This legislation, like the old fairness doctrine, would have had little impact on political talk radio as it operates now. As long as callers and guests with different viewpoints get on the air, a station is in compliance (even if the host disagrees with some points of views and disparages callers and guests who hold them).

I can see why the NAB would not have liked this bill. I don't see what fans of political talk had to be so upset about, except Rush and others have told them they should be upset. And NAB members sign talk show hosts' paychecks.

Personally, I like it. I hope it gets re-introduced with the addition of ownership caps.

[c]Fairness and Accountability in Broadcasting Act (Introduced in House)

HR 501 IH

109th CONGRESS

1st Session

H. R. 501

To enforce the public interest obligations of broadcast station licensees to their local communities.

IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES

February 1, 2005

Ms. SLAUGHTER (for herself, Mr. HOLT, Mr. GRIJALVA, Mr. FILNER, Mr. RANGEL, Mr. OWENS, Ms. WATSON, Mr. KUCINICH, Mr. HINCHEY, Mr. MCDERMOTT, Ms. WOOLSEY, and Mr. GEORGE MILLER of California) introduced the following bill; which was referred to the Committee on Energy and Commerce

A BILL

To enforce the public interest obligations of broadcast station licensees to their local communities.

Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled,

SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.

This Act may be cited as the `Fairness and Accountability in Broadcasting Act'.

SEC. 2. FINDINGS.

The Congress finds the following:

(1) The Communications Act of 1934 requires the Federal Communications Commission and broadcast licensees to promote the `public interest,' a phrase that appears 40 times in the legislation.

(2) Because broadcasters receive free licenses to use the public's airwaves, estimated to be worth hundreds of billions of dollars, they have an obligation to uphold the public's interest, and to adequately inform the public about news and opinion.

(3) From 1949 to 1987, a policy of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) required that radio and television stations air all sides of important or controversial issues, and give equal time to all candidates.

(4) Since the rescission of the Fairness Doctrine, the country has experienced a proliferation of highly partisan networks, news outlets, and ownership groups that disseminate unbalanced news coverage and broadcast content.

(5) News consumers, particularly those of talk radio, are overwhelmingly exposed to a single point of view. A 2004 survey by Democracy Radio revealed that 90 percent of all broadcast hours on talk radio are characterized as conservative. This imbalance results in issues of public importance receiving little or no attention, while others are presented in a manner not conducive to the listeners' receiving the facts and range of opinions necessary to make informed decisions.

(6) The 2004 survey, done by Democracy Radio, found that there were 2,349 hours of local conservative programs broadcast every week versus 555 hours of local progressive programs, and 39,382 hours of national conservative programs broadcast every week versus 2,487 hours of national progressive programs.

(7) An April 2004 poll, conducted by Media Matters for America of likely voters shows overwhelming support across the political and demographic spectrum for restoring rules requiring fairness and balance on the public's airwaves. When asked whether television and radio stations that use the public's airwaves should be required to present the sides of an issue in a reasonably balanced way including giving time to opposing points of view.

(8) Democracy is built on the concept that the views, beliefs, and values of an informed citizenry provide the best basis for political decision-making.

SEC. 2. IMPLEMENTATION OF PUBLIC INTEREST STANDARDS.

Section 309 of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 309) is amended by adding at the end the following new subsection:

`(l) Implementation of Public Interest Standard-

`(1) PURPOSE- The purposes of this subsection are--

`(A) to restore fairness in broadcasting;

`(B) to ensure that broadcasters meet their public interest obligations;

`(C) to promote diversity, localism, and competition in American media; and

`(D) to ensure that all radio and television broadcasters--

`(i) are accountable to the local communities they are licensed to serve;

`(ii) offer diverse views on issues of public importance, including local issues; and

`(iii) provide regular opportunities for meaningful public dialogue among listeners, viewers, station personnel, and licensees.

`(2) STANDARDS FOR PUBLIC INTEREST DETERMINATIONS- The Commission may not issue or renew any license for a broadcasting station based upon a finding that the issuance or renewal serves the public interest, convenience, and necessity unless such station is in compliance with the requirements of this subsection.

`(3) COVERAGE OF ISSUES OF PUBLIC IMPORTANCE- Each broadcast station licensee shall, consistent with the purposes of this subsection, cover issues of importance to their local communities in a fair manner, taking into account the diverse interests and viewpoints in the local community.

`(4) HEARINGS ON NEEDS AND INTERESTS OF THE COMMUNITY- Each broadcast station licensee shall hold two public hearings each year in its community of license during the term of each license to ascertain the needs and interests of the communities they are licensed to serve. One hearing shall take place two months prior to the date of application for license issuance or renewal. The licensee shall, on a timely basis, place transcripts of these hearings in the station's public file, make such transcripts available via the Internet or other electronic means, and submit such transcripts to the Commission as a part of any license renewal application. All interested individuals shall be afforded the opportunity to participate in such hearings.

`(5) DOCUMENTATION OF ISSUE COVERAGE- Each broadcast station licensee shall document and report in writing, on a biannual basis, to the Commission, the programming that is broadcast to cover the issues of public importance ascertained by the licensee under paragraph (3) or otherwise, and on how such coverage reflects the diverse interests and viewpoints in the local community of such station. Such documents shall also be placed, on a timely basis, in the station's public file and made available via the Internet or other electronic means.

`(6) CONSEQUENCES OF FAILURE-

`(A) PETITIONS TO DENY- Any interested person may file a petition to deny a license renewal on the grounds of--

`(i) the applicant's failure to afford reasonable opportunities for presentation of opposing points of view on issues of public importance in its overall programming, or the applicant's non-compliance with the Commission's programming rules and policies relating to news staging and sponsorship identification;

`(ii) the failure to hold hearings as required by paragraph (3);

`(iii) the failure to ascertain the needs and interests of the community; or

`(iv) the failure to document and report on the manner in which fairness and diversity have been addressed in local programming.

`(B) COMMISSION REVIEW- Any petition to deny filed under subparagraph (A) shall be reviewed by the Commission. If the Commission finds that the petition provides prima facie evidence of a violation, the Commission shall conduct a hearing in the local community of license to further investigate the charges prior to renewing the license that is the subject of such petition.

`(C) OTHER REMEDIES- Nothing in this subsection shall preclude the Commission from imposing on a station licensee any other sanction available under this Act or in law for a failure to comply with the requirements of this subsection.

`(7) ANNUAL REPORT- The Commission shall report annually to the Congress on petitions to deny received under this subsection, and on the Commission's decisions regarding those petitions.'.

SEC. 3. TERM OF LICENSE.

(a) Amendment- Section 307(c)(1) of the Communications Act of 1934 (47 U.S.C. 307(c)(1)) is amended by striking `8 years' each place it appears and inserting `4 years'.

(b) Effective Date- The amendment made by subsection (a) shall be effective with respect to any license granted by the Federal Communications Commission after the date of enactment of this Act.
 
Al Johnson said:
Bottom line: This legislation, like the old fairness doctrine, would have had little impact on political talk radio as it operates now. As long as callers and guests with different viewpoints get on the air, a station is in compliance (even if the host disagrees with some points of views and disparages callers and guests who hold them).

Al, thank you for at leat admitting you didn't follow my links, and did not read the bill. Whether or not it came from 'Thomas', what I posted was correct.

When I did listen to Err Amerika, almost every show ( with the notable exception of Randi Rhodes ) did not encourage or have 'callers' on to debate. It was rare when that occured, if it happened at all.

One of my biggest beefs with Limbaugh, is after the oxy-cotin scandal, anyone who disagreed with him was a'seminar caller'. The ongoing dittoheads choir and lack of honest debate has made me turn the dial.

I listen to talk radio for the debate. I find very few syndicated N/T hosts that honor it. But, I don't want the Govt involved in rectifying that situation. I want the marketplace to do it.

You seem to feel that's okay. You also seem to feel that the new FD would not have an effect, as the old FD did not. We can agree to disgaree on that~ this argument has been had before, and even 'respected journalists' like Dan Rather have argued the old FD DID have a negative effect.

It still does not change my assertation that Rush accurately predicted that the dems would try to re enact the FD in an attempt to silence him and others like him.
 
evnlee said:
When I did listen to Err Amerika, almost every show ( with the notable exception of Randi Rhodes ) did not encourage or have 'callers' on to debate. It was rare when that occured, if it happened at all.

One of my biggest beefs with Limbaugh, is after the oxy-cotin scandal, anyone who disagreed with him was a'seminar caller'. The ongoing dittoheads choir and lack of honest debate has made me turn the dial.

I listen to talk radio for the debate. I find very few syndicated N/T hosts that honor it. But, I don't want the Govt involved in rectifying that situation. I want the marketplace to do it.

I don't think we disagree on this point. As I've said before, I think talk shows would avoid any problem with the fairness doctrine (as originally enacted or as proposed in 2005) by allowing, even encouraging, callers and guests who disagree with the hosts. I agree that this kind of "debate" would make the shows better and more interesting. The constant parade of ditto-heads (on all the shows, ditto-heads left and right) has gotten old. Yes, broadcasters, syndicators and talk show hosts should have been smart enough to do it themselves but they haven't. This wouldn't be the first time the government made broadcasters do something that turns out to be for their own benefit. The new format trends show news/talk is continuing to drop (although personality talk shows some growth). Maybe you and I aren't the only ones getting tired of a constant stream of mega-dittos. And for the record, I reiterate conservative and liberal hosts are all guilty of not only preaching to the choir but of mostly taking calls from the choir.

Don't take my comments about links personally. I've noticed that most of the links posted here are to political blogs which I have found of questionable value. As rule, I don't following links to URLs I don't know, at least not without a quote, paraphrase or summary of what I'm going to find that hooks me (which happens occasionally). I did not recognize for your earlier comment that the link contained the actual text of the 2005 bill (and I would still have double-checked with Thomas because some of these political blogs have been known to take liberties with the facts to make their point). The name "Thomas" comes from the 3rd president who left his personal library to start the Library of Congress but I also like the name for its association with the skeptical apostle, which whom I can identify.

If Dems in the 90s want to silence Rush, it shows how the political mind works. Now with a Republican administration, GOPers want to squelch libtalk. Politicians talk about open debate of issues but few really want it.
 
As I've said before, I think talk shows would avoid any problem with the fairness doctrine (as originally enacted or as proposed in 2005) by allowing, even encouraging, callers and guests who disagree with the hosts. I agree that this kind of "debate" would make the shows better and more interesting. The constant parade of ditto-heads (on all the shows, ditto-heads left and right) has gotten old. Yes, broadcasters, syndicators and talk show hosts should have been smart enough to do it themselves but they haven't. This wouldn't be the first time the government made broadcasters do something that turns out to be for their own benefit. The new format trends show news/talk is continuing to drop (although personality talk shows some growth). Maybe you and I aren't the only ones getting tired of a constant stream of mega-dittos. And for the record, I reiterate conservative and liberal hosts are all guilty of not only preaching to the choir but of mostly taking calls from the choir.

Do you realize the can of worms you'd be opening by allowing unelected government bureaucrats to make value judgements on whether or not the amount of time allotted to opposing points of view was sufficient? Or how "opposing" those opposing views have to be? For example, would someone who said that the President should increase the amount of air power used in Iraq in place of ground force action be counted as "for" or "against" the current Iraq war policy? If someone like Jim Quinn has nothing but positive things to say about the President's policy on national defense and the war on terror, but is 180 degrees opposed to the President's policy on illegal immigration have himself balanced by being pro administration on one topic and anti on another? Does that make his program self-balanced?

How would this bureaucratic "civil servant" decide how much was enough opposition to balance? Would it strictly be based on using a stop-watch to count number of minutes or airtime, or would their be a points system to give especially well-stated opinions more weight than poorly stated opinions.

If a talk show screener would never allow any articulate callers speak for the opposition, but would always put any inarticulate dimwit on the air who opposes the host's point of view, how would the bureaucrat deal with that? If Rush Limbaugh only had educated, well-spoken callers who agreed with him, but took several calls per show from obvious lunatic crazies who disagreed with him, so long as the amount of time given to both sets of callers was even, would that be "fair and balanced"?

Can you see that some idealistic ideas might sound good in theory, but flat-out wouldn't work at all in the real world?
 
Radio_Realist said:
As I've said before, I think talk shows would avoid any problem with the fairness doctrine (as originally enacted or as proposed in 2005) by allowing, even encouraging, callers and guests who disagree with the hosts. I agree that this kind of "debate" would make the shows better and more interesting. The constant parade of ditto-heads (on all the shows, ditto-heads left and right) has gotten old. Yes, broadcasters, syndicators and talk show hosts should have been smart enough to do it themselves but they haven't. This wouldn't be the first time the government made broadcasters do something that turns out to be for their own benefit. The new format trends show news/talk is continuing to drop (although personality talk shows some growth). Maybe you and I aren't the only ones getting tired of a constant stream of mega-dittos. And for the record, I reiterate conservative and liberal hosts are all guilty of not only preaching to the choir but of mostly taking calls from the choir.

Do you realize the can of worms you'd be opening by allowing unelected government bureaucrats to make value judgements on whether or not the amount of time allotted to opposing points of view was sufficient? Or how "opposing" those opposing views have to be? For example, would someone who said that the President should increase the amount of air power used in Iraq in place of ground force action be counted as "for" or "against" the current Iraq war policy? If someone like Jim Quinn has nothing but positive things to say about the President's policy on national defense and the war on terror, but is 180 degrees opposed to the President's policy on illegal immigration have himself balanced by being pro administration on one topic and anti on another? Does that make his program self-balanced?

How would this bureaucratic "civil servant" decide how much was enough opposition to balance? Would it strictly be based on using a stop-watch to count number of minutes or airtime, or would their be a points system to give especially well-stated opinions more weight than poorly stated opinions.

If a talk show screener would never allow any articulate callers speak for the opposition, but would always put any inarticulate dimwit on the air who opposes the host's point of view, how would the bureaucrat deal with that? If Rush Limbaugh only had educated, well-spoken callers who agreed with him, but took several calls per show from obvious lunatic crazies who disagreed with him, so long as the amount of time given to both sets of callers was even, would that be "fair and balanced"?

Can you see that some idealistic ideas might sound good in theory, but flat-out wouldn't work at all in the real world?

RR nails it again.

See, while I might not like the fact that the Rush Limbaugh show has evolved into a 'clusterfudge' of praise, I feel that the marketplace will fix this problem.

Getting the Govt involved in the judgement area of 'fairness' is a pandora's box we need not open. What is 'fair to one' ( forcing affilaites to carry libtalk~even when it was proven to fail and not make $$ ) may be very 'unfair' to another.

You need only look at the first 'Patriot Act' to see that the govt will hide it's true intentions under a ridiculous name, so I automatically distrust any bill labeled 'fairness in broadcasting', and I'm a little taken aback any true 'progressive' would not blanch at the very name of the bill in the first place.
 
Sorry, guys. I don't think the scenarios RR envisions qualify as "real world."

If we are talking about the 2005 bill or anything else essentially like the original fairness doctrine, such fears seem ungrounded. Nothing like what RR imagines happened before. Even if he presupposes the new fairness doctrine would end up an expansion of equal time rules, the kind of bureaucratic oversight described has not occurred there either. Maybe some politicians and bureaucrats would like to do what he pictures, but there is not enough money and not enough bureaucrats for the job (unlike the Patriot Act).

The 2005 bill dealt with issues. If Jim Quinn argues a position on immigration, then callers should be allowed to express other views. If he takes a position on Iraq, callers should be allowed to express other views there, too. In this example the issue is not Bush. If Jim Quinn makes Bush an issue, then he should debate callers about that.

The 2005 bill apparently would have made public complaints a basis for not giving an automatic license renewal to a station. Under the old fairness doctrine, this was only invoked a very few times and in cases dealing with station editorials (not talk shows). Stations then provided opportunity for editorial replies but those were almost never "well-stated." And those replies only offered an opportunity for an opposing viewpoint, not all opposing viewpoints. The stations picked the opposing view and the spokespeople. The FCC got involved under the fairness doctrine only when a licensee ran a heavy schedule of his editorial opinions and in addition blacked out any groups or organizations with differing views making replies and from the station's news coverage.

Joe Pyne, Bob Grant, Wally George and others never ran afoul of the fairness doctrine, despite voicing strong or extreme opinions and treating callers who disagreed with them rudely and subjecting them to taunts and insults. However, they did not carry water for an administration or party organization. And they had the guts to take on all comers, not just fawning ditto-heads.

> If Rush Limbaugh only had educated, well-spoken callers who agreed with him....
Now that really doesn't sound like a "real world" situation. LOL Educated people are not who his advertisers target. Besides even ditto-heads don't get to talk much. MegadittosRushthankyoufortakingmycallit'sanhonortotalktoyou and a topic sentence or question are all they get out before Rush pots them down and does his rant. That's the show he does. He has said callers are there only to make the host look good and feed him a straight line. He's gotten lazy. The show has gotten dull. If Rush's show is about influencing elections (like Air America) then, yes, call screeners would look for dummies or clowns to disagree with Rush. If his show is about entertaining an audience, the call screeners will get interesting callers for him to interact with.

Again, fairness is a two-edged sword. Democratic politicians would be bigger idiots than even I give them credit for to pass something Republicans could use to squelch their side of talk radio.

Nobody would be clocking callers or checking their SAT scores. We might have license renewal hearings again in some egregious cases. Some bush league Citizen Kane type would get his wrist slapped, promise to do better and then get his license renewed. I doubt if hearings would be held over Rush or a schedule of the current national right-wing hosts if they allow some debate from callers.

Here is who would be likely to get called in for a hearing under the 2005 bill or the old doctrine: A guy who owned a station not far from me used to run a saturation schedule of anti-abortion spots ("sucks the life out of a mother's womb...abortion is evil!"). He would not allow Planned Parenthood or other pro abortion/pro-choice groups to buy time. He would not allow them to do PSAs to promote events or activities completely unrelated to abortion, or to appear as guests on talk shows. He would not allow any of these groups to be covered or mentioned in local news broadcasts. When both sides held demonstrations, only the anti-abortion/pro-life demonstration could be mentioned on the local news.

The market has had plenty of chances to make corrections. It has not done so. The market has not worked. The old fairness doctrine did.

Evn: I'm glad your distrust of government is consistently applied to both the fairness doctrine and the Patriot Act.
 
Ok.....I'll agree to it, if Papers, Internet Blogs and EVERYONE in the public HAS to do it.. See how screwed up we'd be bringing it back as a TRUE politically correct FAIRNESS Doctrine... (And now the rebutal to Dr. Graham's sermon, given by Satan, please stay tuned)....
 
I don't think the scenarios RR envisions qualify as "real world."

Then clearly, you've never inhabited the real world. Or, at least you've never had any dealings with a government bureaucrat.
 
Al Johnson said:
I thought I should post before this thread gets moved to Take It Outside.

Except for Baroosk, it seems like few people here really know what they are talking about, but talk radio is based on not letting facts get in the way of a good argument.

The way some people are so obsessed with "Dems push fairness doctrine" makes me think maybe "Dennis the Menace" is on to something.

Those of you who hate the fairness doctrine have convinced me: Maybe we should bring it back. In fact, let's bring back all the old rules: Ownership limits. News and public service. Radio was a lot better then. Radio had more jobs then. Radio was making money then. People were listening more then. Coincidence? I think not.

Not that any of this matters much. Political talk won't last that much longer any way. Every day, it seems, another talk show host gets fired, suspended or reprimanded. And we keep seeing some story about advertisers pulling out. Already major advertisers won't touch political talk radio (left or right). Talk radio subsists on relatively small number of bottom feeder advertisers, just one step up from the people running infomercials. Verbal advantage for ignorant. eHarmony for the desperate. Fly-by-nite insurance for the gullible. And all sorts of drugs for the infirmities and conditions people out of the money demos used to accept as part of getting old. You can tell more about the state of political talk by listening to the spots than by listening to the hosts.

But if some of you are so opposed to the fairness doctrine, by all means, let's bring it back.

PS: Why is it so many of you who are claiming your rights to free speech will be taken away by the fairness doctrine are so quick to want somebody to lose his job just because he says something you don't like? How come with Republican political talk so dominant in the medium, you are so afraid of a few small liberal talk stations? How come your "free speech" depends on the absence of free speech for those who disagree with you?

This board used to have a lot of postings about libtalk. It seems that all dried up when a consultant to contalk stations started sponsoring this board. What's that about?

Basically, what you are saying is that radio was better in the good old days. Well, that is simply a matter of opinion, not fact. In other words, you liked station WXYBD when it had a classical music format versus Top 40 programming, for example. I know it makes you feel superior to berate individuals that disagree with your political viewpoints. If someone in the United States wants to listen to liberal or conservative talk, fine, it is the right of freedom and the First amendment. It sounds to me that you want the government to step in the radio business because a station is broadcasting a program or commerical counter to your points of view. Quite honestly, this sounds like the rantings of someone who used to work for the old Soviet paper, Pravda. As it was stated in the 1970's, if you do not like the programming, change the channel, very simple. The same people who did not want the government to interfere with their right to watch sexually explicit programming, are the same people that want the government to censor talk radio, remember the Supreme Court case with the words, "Chilling effect?" On the one hand, certain people favor and advocate for extreme individualism to watch porn on television. Yet, they will not extend those same rights to people that want to listen to talk programs that disagree with their world or the way they view the United States and its institutions. Contrary to your belief, individuals that disagree with your political points of view are not a simple bunch of yahoos waiting to be redeemed by your "enlightened" perspective.

Shark
 
Radio for the most part WASN'T making money in the 60s and 70s. Many of the larger stations were owned by corporations whose main business was something else (RKO-Tires, Avco-Financial and other services, Nationwide-Insurance, and the list goes on and on). There may have been more jobs, but technology largely took those away (blame Bill Gates). Even if we still had 7/7/7 ownership caps, people would be voicetracking from their basement studios. As far as news an PA requirements, it's so easy to turn off anything you don't want to listen to, it would be pointless.
 
Basically, what you are saying is that radio was better in the good old days. Well, that is simply a matter of opinion, not fact.
The industry was more profitable.
Audience numbers (cume, TSL) were better.
Those are facts. My opinion is those are good things so that would make radio better then.
And, for the record, I never did listen to Classical format radio.

I know it makes you feel superior to berate individuals that disagree with your political viewpoints.
And how does it make you feel to berate people who disagree with you?
pro·jec·tion: noun
Psychology.[/n] a. the tendency to ascribe to another person feelings, thoughts, or attitudes present in oneself,


Don't worry. Be happy.
 
50,000 watt WBAP 820 in Fort Worth is typical...Starting at 9 AM, 2 hours and 45 minutes of Mark Davis, 15 minutes of Paul Harvey (part of our American Destiny was giving smallpox infected blankets to Native Americans) then 3 hours of Rush Limbaugh, then 3 hours of Sean Hannity (calls his show the "Stop Hillary Express") then 2 hours of Mark "get off the phone you big dope" Levin.

An 11 hour a day Republican Party infomercial.

Callers with opposing viewpoints are either screened out, mocked, asked "why do you hate America?" or hung up on.


The public airwaves should not be for the exclusive use of the GOP any more than the public roadways, air or water.
 
The industry was more profitable.
Audience numbers (cume, TSL) were better.


Actually, the best times Radio ever had were in the 1920's, 30's, and 40's when radio was the only mass communications and entertainment medium that could be enjoyed in the home. When radio had the airwaves to itself, it was far more profitable and had far more listeners. Then television came along and spoiled things for radio.

No law will ever bring back to radio the success it enjoyed before the internet, iPods, and satellite radio. Individual, none of those three things would have hurt radio very much. Collectively, those three things have made some major changes.

The "good old days", as you might remember them, are gone. They are never coming back. Get over it.

The public airwaves should not be for the exclusive use of the GOP any more than the public roadways, air or water.

Nor should the airwaves that carry CBS, NBC, and ABC television and their left-wing coverage of the Democrat Party. Those of you on the left are quick to cry foul when the "public" airwaves dedicated to radio might carry more conservative than liberal programming (ignoring NPR, which not only carries water for the Democrat Party but also does it with tax payers' money), yet you ignore the exact same thing happening on the same "public" airwaves on the television portion of the spectrum.

Not that any of this is new. It has all been covered in depth in earlier posts in this thread.
 
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