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Is the (Dixie) Chicks ban over now?

In recent years, I’ve noticed The Chicks played frequently on stations that lean toward classic country, even in conservative markets. Even on the station I used to work at in the early 2000s, which banned the Dixie Chicks right after the infamous incident, is now playing them frequently (as the station shifted toward classic country).

So what exactly is happening here? Have listeners forgotten the event? Or has public opinion on Bush changed so much that the incident doesn’t carry as much weight? Or has so much time passed that today’s audience was still in diapers in 2003 and they don’t care either way?
 
So what exactly is happening here? Have listeners forgotten the event? Or has public opinion on Bush changed so much that the incident doesn’t carry as much weight? Or has so much time passed that today’s audience was still in diapers in 2003 and they don’t care either way?

That's kind of it. We did some research on it, and there is still a lot of love for their music. That sort of overshadows the politics after all these years. The context of that situation, in the middle of the Iraq war, has long since dissipated. What's left are these songs, and there's no question about the music. We started playing them again more than ten years ago.

The irony is the song that was in the chart when Natalie said her thing was "Traveling' Soldier." Once again, a great song then, and it fits well now. Cody Johnson recorded a version of the song, and it's become a staple at his shows. Cody is no apologist for the Chicks, but he knows a good song when he hears it.
 
Multiple changes happened in the past two decades from change in presidential administrations to change in management at music labels, radio outlets and the rise of new platforms lead to where the current state of where the Dixie Chicks are at today.
 
I would say after 23 years it's fair enough.

They never lost their public popularity.. Just the radio and fake fans.
 


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