Imus is no Phil Hendrie. Phil Hendrie has amazing talent and is a pioneer, Imus is an extremely poor Stern clone who never innovated anything in this business. He mumbles, says unintelligible things and is a disingenuous pain the ass to everyone he ever worked with--trust me on this one... why do you think that no one came to his defense in the biz when he got in trouble?pberger said:Your radio does have a dial or push buttons, doesn't it? Try using it, nobody had to listen to Imus unless they wanted to.
I frankly liked him; better than listening to Bruce Jacobs or Charles Goyette or Air America. He was entertaining, had a good mix of news, politics, music, comedy. I particularly liked his fake interviews with the mayor of New Orleans, Bill Clinton, and Ted Kennedy. Sort of reminded me of Phil Hendrie. There were serious parts, such as his calls from Tim Russert and other commentators or reporters, discussing current events, that were very informative.
I didn't find his comments that offensive, and he certainly didn't say them with malice. He basically was fishing for a segway, as all jocks have to do most of the time. It was much the same as if he had called a gay, a "------." Had he done that, would he have gotten fired? I doubt it. Probably not even suspended.
Too many public figures are looking for publicity, and set themselves up as self-proclaimed authorities. They are like a set mouse trap, just waiting to latch on to the next victim. I doubt if Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson even listen to Imus, they just latched onto the commotion several days after the actual event. Again, for the publicity.....IMO.
I haven't found anything as entertaining on morning radio since Bob Boze Bell and David K. Jones.
KMGX said:His ratings are microscopic--in Phoenix well under a 1 share... his racism has been well documented on and off the air in years past. While I think it was a joke that he got fired for THIS incident, he should have been fired years earlier.
amnesia440 said:What part of 'Nappy Headed Hoe' translates to 'black woman?'
Imus was plucked off the radio by people who look to turn any publicly stated remark into a battle they can use to promote their own political agenda. It is nothing more than that.
And, like was said before, if you don't like it - turn it off. We now live in an age where off buttons and radio dials are no longer enough. Now we have to 'take down' what ever offends us or we think might be offensive to others. IMO we are turning into a bunch of panzies and this is why RADIO IS GOING TO SUCK in the following years. Nobody will want to do anything or say anything different and we will be stuck with the MOViN's, KOOLS, and KTARs of the world.
Don Imus was a "DJ" playing 12 songs/hour in the 70s/80s, while Stern was creating the Hot-Talk format in Detroit, Washington and eventually New York, and what a surprise, in about 1986 Don Imus decided to start to do a "talk show". He never did on-air bits--try listening to old tapes of his airshifts sometime, you'll understand. It is you that has ignorance of the radio industry and it's past to suggest Imus is anything more than a wannabe who never garnered substantial ratings in any market he was on--example, Phoenix where KXAM wasn't even showing up in the book! The very premise for your argument is therefore false.manwhore said:From a previous post;
Imus is no Phil Hendrie. Phil Hendrie has amazing talent and is a pioneer, Imus is an extremely poor Stern clone who never innovated anything in this business. He mumbles, says unintelligible things and is a disingenuous pain the ass to everyone he ever worked with--trust me on this one... why do you think that no one came to his defense in the biz when he got in trouble?
Calling the I-Man a Stern clone shows a startling ignorance about the radio business. Imus was doing his act over a decade before Stern, in fact paving the way for Stern, and all the Stern wannabes (mancow, O &A, etc.). Imus, love him or hate him, was the original shock jock.
Phil Hendrie pioneered what?
michael hagerty said:Minor corrections...Imus wasn't fired for outrageous behavior at WNBC in '77...the new PD, Bob Pittman, canned the entire airstaff and took a less talk, soft A/C approach. Imus went to afternoons at WHK, Cleveland, playing country and being, if anything, the most outrageous he has ever been. 18 months later, Pittman was gone and Imus, with no restraints, was back at WNBC.
michael hagerty said:You're right, it was NYC where Stern dropped music...but he did it gradually while at WNBC. He was still a DJ for the first couple of years...playing about half the number of records the format called for each hour.