M
MikeShannon914
Guest
Really, it's about time. After Dr Laura repeated the "N" word on her radio show more times than you hear in one rap song, she said her "1st Amendment rights have been violated" (or something like that) and will be stepping down when her contract ends at the end of 2010.
I listened to Dr Laura for a couple of years while I was spending my days on the road. It was kinda by default, since KRLD decided to drop Jody Dean's great afternoon talk show in favor of Dr Laura. When you chipped away the BS, Dr Laura actually *USED* to have a real message there. But when she got on her political and religious agenda, it was yawns-ville. Then the naked photos knocked her off her high horse. Then her TV show, canned after one year, cleared at 3AM by most stations, and later was revealed that she packed her audience with paid extras and pre-planned questions. Then it was her anti-gay diatribes that got her in hot water. Oh, and the long-lingering question about how a doctorate in history gives her the authority to dispense psychological advice?
But it was a nice run that netted her millions, a show that often served as a constant platform to peddle her own books (where do you think Hannity learned the technique?) and was a place to flaunt her self-righteousness and holier-than-thou attitude and to brag on her perfect life and perfect family. As I've said before, that type of radio is pretty well dead, and I'm sure a review of her current affiliate list would show her mostly on religious stations and out of the mainstream.
I listened to Dr Laura for a couple of years while I was spending my days on the road. It was kinda by default, since KRLD decided to drop Jody Dean's great afternoon talk show in favor of Dr Laura. When you chipped away the BS, Dr Laura actually *USED* to have a real message there. But when she got on her political and religious agenda, it was yawns-ville. Then the naked photos knocked her off her high horse. Then her TV show, canned after one year, cleared at 3AM by most stations, and later was revealed that she packed her audience with paid extras and pre-planned questions. Then it was her anti-gay diatribes that got her in hot water. Oh, and the long-lingering question about how a doctorate in history gives her the authority to dispense psychological advice?
But it was a nice run that netted her millions, a show that often served as a constant platform to peddle her own books (where do you think Hannity learned the technique?) and was a place to flaunt her self-righteousness and holier-than-thou attitude and to brag on her perfect life and perfect family. As I've said before, that type of radio is pretty well dead, and I'm sure a review of her current affiliate list would show her mostly on religious stations and out of the mainstream.