Copp Out
So, I guess that the moral of the story is:
"If you can't compete, legislate."
The biggest problem with the Fairness Doctrine and other legislation that purports to assure "fairness" is WHO determines "what's fair". That's why the old Fairness Doctrine went away in the first place. Two different spokesmen from two different sides of an issue are not necessarily equally prepared to communicate their message. The reality was that the professional working for the radio station was usually vastly superior to the non-professional respondent from the other side of a particular issue. You old SNL fans remember the "Emily Litella" bit, right?
If you think that the FCC has problems determining whether content is obscene or not, imagine the job of trying to determine "fairness" of two political statements. The bottom line was that there were very few political statements because stations just didn't want to deal with the whole issue. Thus, very few opinions were stated.
The liberals seem to have "reinstating the Fairness Doctrine" as part of their agenda because they feel that their viewpoint is shortchanged in in radio as a media. As far as I can see, the problem isn't that the liberal viewpoint doesn't have an outlet as much as it is that there have been relatively few successful liberal shows. Too often, amateurs like Al Franken and Janeane Garofalo have been the liberal spokesmen, and their ability to entertain - and yes, we're talking entertainment here, folks - has been inferior to the entertainment capabilities of Loudmouth Limbaugh and others of his ilk.
If you want more liberal viewpoints on the radio, support the programs and hosts who present that viewpoint. Or, contribute money to buy time on the thousands of stations that accept brokered content and support those programs by listening. That hasn't happened in the marketplace.
As the most recent election pointed out, the bilious spoutings of conservative hosts hasn't exactly created a controlled, lockstep reaction in the general populace. Personally, I find both sides of the spectrum - from Limbaugh to Rhodes - to be more annoying than informative in that both sides twist facts to support their pre-determined agendas, and shed much more heat than light on any particular subject. I, for one, am sick of the constant criticism from both sides, and long for SOMEBODY to present some realistic, concrete proposals for moving forward from this point instead of looking backward and attempting to assign blame.