...and invented in the first place, via PBS.My youngest daughter is deaf, so we always have closed captions "on" on every screen. That is an important effort that the government required.
...and invented in the first place, via PBS.My youngest daughter is deaf, so we always have closed captions "on" on every screen. That is an important effort that the government required.
Funny, but John Catsimatidis has repeated all of these false claims and more over his WABC airwaves. It was also probably the motive behind his alleged attempt to purchase WCBS (AM) from Audacy nearly a year agoAnd so, when the right goes after Soros, it accuses him, without evidence, of:
- Paying protestors to commit violent acts in Charlottesville in 2017
- Organizing and funding caravans of migrants to overwhelm the southern border of the United States
- Funding "white genocide" and controlling the media
- Personally buying 220 radio stations to "control the news narrative"
- Owning the fact-checking website Snopes and rigging it to show right-wing conspiracy theories in a bad light
And, look, the list goes on from there...
David, a million thanks to you and the others for the tremendous base of knowledge that you bring to this board. šš¼š. It is one of the highlights of my day to check in here and read the thoughtful dialog and your latest thoughts. ā Daryl LynnThanks, DL.
It is hard today to separate radio from politics, and I admit to being sensitive on the subject... likely due to my experiences in far less open societies in other parts of the world.
But somehow we seem to keep getting back on the subject of "what's on the radio" and the forces and people who make it happen... even if we disagree!
There is a very strong feeling on the right that the traditional networks are very left of center; the late-night talk shows actually confirm this. But, because of that, the conservatives find fault in the network newscasts, shows like "60 Minutes" and the morning shows, particularly the one with former Democratic Party activist Stephanopolus.However, this particular chairman has done numerous interviews including one mentioned by the senator where he is concerned about the Audacy bankruptcy approval because of one investor. That's the issue mentioned in the OP's fundraising letter. He apparently made some kind of content agreement with the new owner of Paramount. He is doing things that some interpret as partisan. Those are just two examples. Some of this was discussed at an FCC symposium over the weekend:
I agree that any and all FCC opinionated about content they do not and can not regulate should be muffled. I think Archie Bunker could have beaten him in a debate!This is a new activist FCC that is using its power in ways that involves content.
"Must say" moment: a good example of dialog is Michael and my discussion of population and migratory patterns. I disagree with his conclusions and even some of his interpretations of word meaning, but his points are well supported and worthy of evaluation.David, a million thanks to you and the others for the tremendous base of knowledge that you bring to this board. šš¼š. It is one of the highlights of my day to check in here and read the thoughtful dialog and your latest thoughts. ā Daryl Lynn
This is removed from radio and TV, but: did you know that all theaters with reasonably modern equipment will provide either amplified / enhanced audio headsets to the hard of hearing or little subtitle screen devices for the deaf?My grandma was also deaf, due to a mumps infection when she was 12. She told me on a TTY chat we had that when closed captioning on TV came about in the early 80's, her friend told her about it and she got a decoder box that hooked up to her TV and showed the closed captions on the screen. She said she really enjoyed being able to get more out of watching TV, and she also loved going to open caption movies.
There is a very strong feeling on the right that the traditional networks are very left of center;
And those networks own OTA TV stations, which the FCC does regulate.
it is hard for any conservative to understand why all three major networks only have liberal-leaning shows.
There is a very strong feeling on the right that the traditional networks are very left of center; the late-night talk shows actually confirm this. But, because of that, the conservatives find fault in the network newscasts, shows like "60 Minutes" and the morning shows, particularly the one with former Democratic Party activist Stephanopolus.
In other words, the extreme progressive opinions on the late-night shows taints all three networks.
And didn't I say that at the end of my post?That's fine for them. It's not fine for the chairman of the FCC. He is supposed to be non-partisan. He works for all taxpayers, not just the ones on the right.
I know that, and certainly lived through the torment of having to deal with "Fairness" in a part of the U.S. where there were at least three parties and often four or five vying for the mike.Once again, there is no fairness doctrine, and there is no requirement that any late night show needs to appeal to any particular political party.
The Fox OTA TV network is not the same division of the Fox conglomerate as Fox News, a cable talk web. The Fox Network has no evening or morning news, and no late-night talk show.The Fox Network also owns OTA stations, and we don't see the news channel forcing its political views on its owned stations. We also don't see this FCC forcing Fox to present other sides.
Been tried, and did not work. Perhaps someone will try again, what with so many AMs now near the "take them off life support" condition.As it is hard for anyone to understand why every talk station in this country only features one political point of view. If we are going to require fairness, that might be a place to start.
But there is an expression in Spanish, "Dime con quien andas y te dirƩ quien eres" or "tell me with whom you associate and I will tell you who you are". Guilt by association, etcetera. Even I have a hard time believing that there is not a "mood in the building" set by the sum of its programming parts.It's a trojan horse. An excuse to use. There is no point of crossover or commonality between late night and news. Lorne Michaels does not influence content or coverage on NBC Nightly, nor do the execs who oversee Colbert and Kimmel have any influence on CBS Evening or ABC World.
But Gutfeld is on Fox News, not the Fox Network. One is cable, the other is OTA. The OTA is mostly a bunch of cooking shows, some sports and some game shows... and no news and commentary. And things like "The Quiz With Balls"... FOX - TV Schedule & Listings Guide .The only late-night talk show in lock-step with its news division is Gutfeld on FOX. And conservatives seem totally cool with that.
But there is an expression in Spanish, "Dime con quien andas y te dirƩ quien eres" or "tell me with whom you associate and I will tell you who you are".
The Fox OTA TV network is not the same division of the Fox conglomerate as Fox News, a cable talk web. The Fox Network has no evening or morning news, and no late-night talk show.
Been tried, and did not work. Perhaps someone will try again, what with so many AMs now near the "take them off life support" condition.
Would anyone try a liberal line-up of shows to offer to the many remaining AMs that have "good enough" signals?
I've worked in very blue markets and encountered "extreme progressives." They regard the likes of Colbert as "corporate" and "neo-liberal." They're also prone to not vote due to purity tests and impatience. People proud of being far left or progressive as a label have no use for Colbert, Kimmel and even Jon Stewart.In other words, the extreme progressive opinions on the late-night shows taints all three networks. And those networks own OTA TV stations, which the FCC does regulate.
While the content providers should be totally free to create whatever they want, with ratings and the public being the judge, it is hard for any conservative to understand why all three major networks only have liberal-leaning shows. So there will be ongoing protests as it does seem "unfair and unbalanced" (to modify a cable network's slogan).
Not under the current administration. And if (for example) Soros had tried it, as he's supposedly plotting to do with Audacy or those Spanish stations his group was involved with, well, we know what the FCC and conservative media would do before the first minute of programming had aired. But as @TheBigA has pointed out, many advertisers don't want to be involved with "controversial" programming of any style. Conservative radio has a lot of its own "in group" accounts to supplant the loss that started with Limbaugh's poor taste remarks about Sandra Fluke.Would anyone try a liberal line-up of shows to offer to the many remaining AMs that have "good enough" signals? It would seem that there is an opportunity there. I think advertisers would like that, as then they could buy the conservative talk stations they avoid now out of fear of accusation of bias. If they buy both the liberal and the conservative talk outlets, they are "balanced" and partial to nobody.
The Fox OTA TV network is not the same division of the Fox conglomerate as Fox News, a cable talk web. The Fox Network has no evening or morning news, and no late-night talk show.
Paying all the "No Kings" protesters (hey George, did you lose my direct deposit info? And couldn't you spring for porta-johns?)Funny, but John Catsimatidis has repeated all of these false claims and more over his WABC airwaves. It was also probably the motive behind his alleged attempt to purchase WCBS (AM) from Audacy nearly a year ago
Itās not a fact-based allegation. It is a tactic intended to erode trust in mainstream media among low-information voters who donāt watch it anyway and wouldnāt know. But they repeat it to other low-information voters to the point where it becomes an article of faith.While that is obviously true, those who are (incorrectly) sensing a left-wing bias against the other big three networks conveniently ignore that distinction. But Fox News (the cable channel) has content that neatly fits into their ideology, so in their eyes the nightly news on ABC, CBS, and NBC -- and the Sunday morning "talking heads" shows, and Colbert/Fallon/Kimmel -- should emulate Fox News.
Just to prove that fallacy, here are the stories ABC's World News Tonight with David Muir covered this evening:
This is what the conservatives call left-wing bias on the evening news?
- The heat wave across the eastern half of the country with triple digit temperatures across the entirety of the eastern coastal areas
- Collision of a barge that struck a sailboat in Miami, killing two young girls who were passengers, with two more in critical condition
- Casino shooting in Reno
- Trump saysthat he has the power to pardon Ghislane Maxwell; no commentary in the story, clip of him saying it during a press conference even though he admits no one has approached him about it, then more clips saying why he had a falling out with Jeffrey Epstein and saying he never "had the privilege" of visiting Epstein's island
- Trump again, saying there is "real starvation" in Gaza (more clips) but again, no commentary. Report includes Netanyahu says "there is no starvation", then another Trump clip where he disses Vladimir Putin, then details on trade deal with the European Union
- Report on man at Walmart in Traverse City MI threatening people with a knife, brief clip of interview with the private citizen who aimed a gun at the man "to draw his attention away from the others", update on condition of those injured
- Search for person who killed two people at a state park in Arkansas
- Feds arrest co-pilot of a Delta flight upon its landing in San Francisco, accused of sex crimes against a child
- Small plane crash in Palm Beach FL, plane skimming a car before impact
- New research study on lifestyle changes having positive effect on Alzheimers
- Deion Sanders diagnosed with aggressive form of bladder cancer
The Fox Network has no evening or morning news, and no late-night talk show.
No, this is a branding of the information efforts of ABC, CBS and NBC based on the obvious political slant of each one's late night talk show. This is sort of (and this is the best comparison I could come up with quickly) of considering that "all the stuff at Walmart is cheap Chinese goods."Itās not a fact-based allegation. It is a tactic intended to erode trust in mainstream media among low-information voters who donāt watch it anyway and wouldnāt know. But they repeat it to other low-information voters to the point where it becomes an article of faith.
I've told over and over how specific news stories get told differently by different sources. I don't want to go into a discussion of the actions that don't involve radio or TV of the prior left administration that "the right" sees as destructive and wrong. But this is where we find that media gets overly analyzed.And, cāmonā¦itās gotten to the point where anything other than slavish praise of the right is called out as bias. Davidās language in one of these posts (and Iāll be damned if Iām gonna go read it twice) is telling. The right āperceivesā the facts differently.
That is not right. Fox-the-OTA-Network was established as an anchor for independent stations, with a bare minimum of two hours of prime time and not early evening network news, no morning show, no afternoon shows and no night talk show. It was set up as an alternative to the Big Three; at the same time two other industry companies tried to do networks and created WP and UPN, now the also-ran CW.You have to ask yourself why that is. The answer is that Murdoch is no fool. Just as Soros is no fool with Audacy. Murdoch knows if he required his O&Os to run a right wing late night show or right wing evening news, it would hurt those stations in those very blue cities, and wouldn't attract the kind of advertising they currently receive. Other station owners like Sinclair try to force right wing politics on their blue state O&Os, and it's called out for what it is.
No, this is a branding of the information efforts of ABC, CBS and NBC based on the obvious political slant of each one's late night talk show.
That is not right. Fox-the-OTA-Network was established as an anchor for independent stations,