landtuna said:
Told by who? Their management? That would make sense to me. If they are primarily a music station why would they branch off into ranting and raving nonsense?
So what forum are we sitting in? URBAN/URBAN AC/R&B OLDIES. I'm not surprised you and ShawtyBlack would see this issue differently.
I spent the first 14 years of my life in a Southwestern county that may not have had a single African American resident for all I know.
Because of my father's health we moved to a Southern State community that may have had 25 African American residents, all of them living in one small neighborhood where the primary occupation was farm work and picking cotton in particular.
When the Civil Rights upheaval of the 1950s and 1960s hit, I was "doing radio" in the Mississippi Delta area, and in the mid 60's when national turmoil was really boiling and roiling, I found myself selling radio in a Midwestern city for a station that spent half a day broadcasting
Urban and R&B. For a guy who "never had a dog in that fight"... I had to grow up right quick!!! Our corporate management stepped up to the plate and we did some things to meet the needs of our audience... and took our chances with our audience in other day-parts.
I then moved on to another station in the market and Eldon Campbell of Time-Life Broadcasting recruited me to serve on an industry committee and the local level on how broadcasting would respond to the issues of the day. We encouraged open dialog on a topic that had to be resolved in this country.
What the event in Florida tells us is that we haven't finished resolving civil rights issues in this country. ShawtyBlack is on target. If a corporation has chosen a programming content that obviously reaches and depends on a segment of our society, by all means do something to serve that segment!
The argument that leaves unsolved is: What does "do something" mean? What should a station serving an audience that has strong interest in the court case do? Holding your hands in the classic "See no evil, Hear no evil, Say no evil" pose is probably not the right answer. Broadcasters didn't know the exact time the verdict would come down, but they had three weeks of wall-to-wall opportunity to follow the trial and formulate a company approved response. "No Response" actually turns out to be a form of response that causes discussion.... like we are having here.