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Homeland Security Ads on KNX

But non-FCC rules apply to commerce in general. There are hundreds of lawyers in DC alone that specialize in "restraint of trade" issues.

But we were talking about FCC rules ... or at least, we were before you took us down the siding of FTC regulations.

But there are issues, such as my example of putting the EAS tones in an ad, political or otherwise, where a station can have a policy, based by other regulations or laws, against things that would create panic. This is the "calling fire in a theater when there is none" concept.

I would strongly suspect that any candidate who is enough of an idiot to put those in their commercial and then stupidly complain about a station editing those out to comply with FCC regulations, would find his complaint going nowhere.
 
one advertiser per category? right.
You can sell "exclusive coverage" to a program or segment. A newscast can have no other bank that the sponsor, for example. However, if you sell ROS spots to one bank, you can not exclude other for any reason other than a credit check.
This sounds like a loaf of frozen rotten moose turd.. cite chapter and verse to me.. i dont buy it. it sounds assinine to me
It's part of Fair Trade legislation, and when I was a GM I'd immediately call counsel in DC over something like that. It is not part of FCC rules, any more than fire code rules and FICA withholding rules are... but stations have to follow them.
 
But we were talking about FCC rules ... or at least, we were before you took us down the siding of FTC regulations.
I did that because FCC rules don't tell us what advertisers we can accept.
I would strongly suspect that any candidate who is enough of an idiot to put those in their commercial and then stupidly complain about a station editing those out to comply with FCC regulations, would find his complaint going nowhere.
At Univision I saw several political ads written at agencies in the eastern US by persons from the Caribbean or of that heritage that either made no sense in the Southwest of actually had a different and sometimes offensive meaning. Those were put on hold while the agency or buyer was notified so the ad could be revised.
 
At Univision I saw several political ads written at agencies in the eastern US by persons from the Caribbean or of that heritage that either made no sense in the Southwest of actually had a different and sometimes offensive meaning. Those were put on hold while the agency or buyer was notified so the ad could be revised.

That does not constitute "rejection" or "censorship" under FCC rules. Assisting a political campaign with suggestions for better verbiage before the commercial airs is properly avoiding those violations.
 
I did that because FCC rules don't tell us what advertisers we can accept.

At Univision I saw several political ads written at agencies in the eastern US by persons from the Caribbean or of that heritage that either made no sense in the Southwest of actually had a different and sometimes offensive meaning. Those were put on hold while the agency or buyer was notified so the ad could be revised.
Reminds me that years ago of the difficulty of Spanish language stations to air Osco Drug Store ads for the reason that the very name of the business properly pronounced is "asco" a not so nice Spanish word...David may wish to elaborate...
 
Paid commercials directed at undocumented Latinos in English.

Really intelligent marketing strategy.

Maybe these paid commercials are *not* directed at the Latino community at all; maybe they are directed instead at his supporters to say to them, "See? We are *really* doing something about this "problem." But the cost of those ad buys...
 
I heard the DHS spot on a Los Angeles Mexican Entravision station.
If that station is in Los Angeles, how can it be "Mexican"?

"Mexican" is a nationality, not a format.
 
Maybe these paid commercials are *not* directed at the Latino community at all; maybe they are directed instead at his supporters to say to them, "See? We are *really* doing something about this "problem." But the cost of those ad buys...
There have been some statements that the cost "per self deportation" of the advertising is much less than the cost of apprehension, temporary confinement and repatriation.

And the ads are directed at not just Spanish speaking immigrants, but those from all the other nations that arrived without visas or permits.
 
Reminds me that years ago of the difficulty of Spanish language stations to air Osco Drug Store ads for the reason that the very name of the business properly pronounced is "asco" a not so nice Spanish word...David may wish to elaborate...
The solution was to pronounce the store chain name as Oz-coh as in "the Wizard of OZ".

That avoided confusion with "ahss-coh" which means "disgust, nausea, revulsion".
 
In LA, it's both. LaNueva is referred to by RadioInsight as Regional Mexican. Same with LaRaza. Same with Que Buena. Same with La Mera.

I know this is semantics, but there is a big leap between "regional Mexican Entravision station" (which is totally accurate) and "Mexican Entravision station" (which implies the station is in Mexico and not in the U.S.
 
In LA, it's both. LaNueva is referred to by RadioInsight as Regional Mexican. Same with LaRaza. Same with Que Buena. Same with La Mera.
"Mexican" alone is not a format. "Regional Mexican", despite being a gringo-created misnomer, is the standard way of referring to any format based on any of the Mexican country genres such as norteña, ranchera, banda and Mexican cumbia.

And there is no "La Mera." There is a "Mera Mera" which is an idiomatic expression meaning "the most"
 
There have been some statements that the cost "per self deportation" of the advertising is much less than the cost of apprehension, temporary confinement and repatriation.

And the ads are directed at not just Spanish speaking immigrants, but those from all the other nations that arrived without visas or permits.
There are over 100,000 Russians and Europeans here without current documents or any documents at all. But we never hear of ICE raids or arrests of white Europeans. ICE does not consider them to be the problem, apparently. So, the radio ads must be targeted at the Hispanic community.
 
Was it in Spanish or English.
It was the same english spot heard on all the other stations. So they are running it in many places, a real ad campaign not just "red meat for the base". Looks like it's effective too, seeing all the people self deporting. Arguably more effective than ICE. I'm sure some of them are good folks who will become real American Citizens in the future, which is what we need.
 
Looks like it's effective too, seeing all the people self deporting. Arguably more effective than ICE.
It also helps that we're paying them $1000 to leave. (Sorry, hungry American kid, we can't give you a free school lunch, because we have to pay people to leave the country...)

 


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