> Hannity screens the beejesus out of callers who care to
> speak against the talking point de jour he is selling that
> day. its tough to get through a screener if you disagree
> with them.
Hannity and most of the others do the "go right to hold" thing you mentioned, as do many local stations. Hannity, also, does indeed screen pretty rigorously, but the first time I spoke with him and disagreed he gave me three minutes. Of course, when you challenge his guests, like I did the second time, I got cut off after one sentence.
> I have not tried too many other conservative people (Beck,
> Liddy, etc). I respect my own intelligence too much to even
I think since Beck doesn't take many callers, that typically when you call in, they'll promise to "pass your comments along" (we all know that really happens!) and hang up. I suppose that's better than putting on a caller that's not really good, though.
> Tim, her screener,gives first time callers more opportunity
> or at least tries to.
Can we forget the first time caller thing? "Long time listener, first time caaaaaaaaaaaaaaaller."
Locally, The Big Talker in Philly is probably the most professional from what I've dealt with.
> Now thats not true or maybe less true....i have heard Rush
> smack down the liberal callers (the few that get in), he is
> not good with non-dittoheads.
I wouldn't say that he's not good with such callers, but he can come off as smug and will make fun of you while you're on the air. One particular call from some guy who wanted his mother's rx covered still sticks in my mind...
The best to my mind is Leykis' screener (Dino?)... who BSes with you like you're in a bar, asks every kind of question, your weight, number of sexual experiences last month, etc., etc. When I told him I was calling from Phoenix (where Leykis is not on), he was flabbergasted (Leykis staff, meet streaming), and proceeded to ask me exactly where I was driving, then told me a long story about how he played golf at the club just down the street, met some chic at a bar around the corner ("that was a great lay"), and generally inserted four-letter words as often as possible. I experienced the same thing that happened to you with Rush: the sound of being disconnected from their phone system. Of course, I could never get through again, although I presumed that they disconnected me because the rest of the callers had better stories than I did and they wanted to make room for someone better.