M
mwebster
Guest
New York Attorney General (who, by the way, just happens to be running for Governor) steps up his so called investigation into radio payola. All Access reports:
<blockquote>Spitzer Payola Probe Moves To Radio Groups
NEW YORK STATE Attorney General ELLIOT SPITZER says that his office's two-year long payola investigation is turning to the nation's nine largest radio conglomerates. ...
SPITZER said that evidence he has gathered clearly shows some of the radio conglomerates have accepted payments from record companies and middlemen for guaranteed airplay for certain songs. "The behavior has been unethical, improper, illegal and a sanction of some severity clearly should be imposed," said SPITZER. ...
SPITZER claims that the new alleged payola differed from previous payola scandals in that much of the money went directly to the companies as opposed to DJs. "We have people in suits coming in with documents rather than cash payments under the table to a DJ," said SPITZER.
The nine companies that have received subpoenas are CLEAR CHANNEL, CBS RADIO, ENTERCOM, EMMIS, CITADEL, CUMULUS, COX, PAMAL and ABC. </blockquote>
Radio stations taking payments! I'm shocked - SHOCKED! Next you'll tell me politicians tell lies, break promises and accept money from interest groups who want favorable treatment from government officials.
Last week, several groups and inviduals supporting Spitzer's campaign for governor and helping to run the campaign in Western New York announced they obtained an LMA to start a "community based" radio station in Buffalo to run programs from Pacifica Radio, various local activist groups (some of the same ones supporting Spitzer's campaign) plus one or two programs from Air America Radio (a "network" also getting backing from people backing Spitzer). Monday, Entercom pulls a pre-emptive strike and flips heritage blow-torch WWKB (WKBW) to progressive talk (although without any programming from Air America Radio). Now Entercom is one of the companies Spitzer subpoenas. Coincidence?
What's next? Will Spitzer investigate the common practice of talk radio syndicators (including Air America Radio) of making payments to radio stations to clear their shows? No, probably not.
<blockquote>Spitzer Payola Probe Moves To Radio Groups
NEW YORK STATE Attorney General ELLIOT SPITZER says that his office's two-year long payola investigation is turning to the nation's nine largest radio conglomerates. ...
SPITZER said that evidence he has gathered clearly shows some of the radio conglomerates have accepted payments from record companies and middlemen for guaranteed airplay for certain songs. "The behavior has been unethical, improper, illegal and a sanction of some severity clearly should be imposed," said SPITZER. ...
SPITZER claims that the new alleged payola differed from previous payola scandals in that much of the money went directly to the companies as opposed to DJs. "We have people in suits coming in with documents rather than cash payments under the table to a DJ," said SPITZER.
The nine companies that have received subpoenas are CLEAR CHANNEL, CBS RADIO, ENTERCOM, EMMIS, CITADEL, CUMULUS, COX, PAMAL and ABC. </blockquote>
Radio stations taking payments! I'm shocked - SHOCKED! Next you'll tell me politicians tell lies, break promises and accept money from interest groups who want favorable treatment from government officials.
Last week, several groups and inviduals supporting Spitzer's campaign for governor and helping to run the campaign in Western New York announced they obtained an LMA to start a "community based" radio station in Buffalo to run programs from Pacifica Radio, various local activist groups (some of the same ones supporting Spitzer's campaign) plus one or two programs from Air America Radio (a "network" also getting backing from people backing Spitzer). Monday, Entercom pulls a pre-emptive strike and flips heritage blow-torch WWKB (WKBW) to progressive talk (although without any programming from Air America Radio). Now Entercom is one of the companies Spitzer subpoenas. Coincidence?
What's next? Will Spitzer investigate the common practice of talk radio syndicators (including Air America Radio) of making payments to radio stations to clear their shows? No, probably not.