Can You Play, 'Far Far Away?' Air America invades Black Talk-Radio
Tuesday, November 30, 2004 at 12:17PM
TheSpook
By: Chris Stevenson
Some African Americans who own their own radio
stations continue to not know to do with themselves. Many station
formats border too much on extremes, there's either too much rap or too
much religion and too little dialogue. First there was a purging of
local news staffs, now some stations that have the right dialogue are
under invasion, from the likes of Al Franken, Janeane Garofalo, and
Lizz Winstead.
It's not just Air America alone that is guilty, many felt the White
liberal program wouldn't last after the presidential election, but here
they are, still showing signs of life roughly a month later. The major
life support systems that power conservative talk radio; Clear Channel,
TRN (Talk Radio Network), or Salem Broadcasting wasn't about to sign
them on. This left various local AM outlets open to integrating Air
America into their airwaves. Funded heavily by liberal investor George
Soros, Air America's first target was none other than New York's famed
former Black activist driven radio station AM1190 WLIB; "The Voice of
Radio Revolution." This was on 3/31/04, the strange thing about the
merger was it was done under some protest, but Air America went to WLIB
under the pretext of "African Americans had just stopped listening to
WLIB." Of course this doesn't mean people are listening to WLIB now.
Personally I don't mind the existence of Air America, right wing talk
radio is a dominent force that even it's fleet of manipulative talk
show hosts can't deny. And I certainly have no problem with Air America
taking over White conservative outlets as they did with Rochester's
WROC, my concern is targeting Black stations like WLIB, and later
Philadelphia's WHAT (AM 1340), this is quite a different ballgame,
Black talk stations have lesser known line-ups of good mostly-local
informative hosts familiar only to mostly-Black listeners. Infiltrating
Black radio can only put some Black talk show hosts out of work, while
Ann Tripp, Mark Riley, Dahved Levy, Carlos Russell, and news director
Wayne Gilman remain, the only entity at 1190 that seems to have
suffered was it's prime music format. According to the Columnist/editor
of the popular African American website The Black World Today, Herb
Boyd, WLIB simply was not the radio force it once was anyway, and they
had began mostly playing Carribean music: "The talk radio component of
that switched over to late night hours, that's where you can find
Carlos Russell... WLIB was hemmoraging, they were bleeding, they were
losing money each and every year. They been losing money for the last
20 years, that's what Percy Sutton told me, they were not getting the
advertising dollars." Pierre (Percy) Sutton is the Chairman of Inner
City Broadcasting Corporation which owns WLIB, they partnered with
Progress Media to bring Air America to the airwaves under a 2 year
contract.
Twenty years puts them back to the old days of broadcasting from the
Appollo Theater amidst the city's racially heated incidents and issues,
Tawanna Brawley, Howard Beach, Police Brutality. WLIB was the most
dominant voice of Black resistence in a city of northern blue-collar
White hate, where many Whites actually believed that Black response was
the real hate. Those were 'LIB's Gary Byrd years, when personalities
such as Imhotep Gary Byrd, Alton Maddox, and Felipe Luciano raged
against the machine, and New York at large had it in for them back
then. Boyd went on to tell me that when Byrd left, that left a big void
at the station. But WLIB is now in mid-town Manhattan and Byrd is now
with WBAI (FM 99.5). Before when ratings were down, the station had an
internal restructure, times have changed, the lure of the White
corporate dollar is a power that few Blacks care to fight, even if you
are a NY civil rights veteran and former attorney for Malcolm X as
Sutton was. White America's fixation with the independant goings on of
Black companies and firms for the specific purpose to merge and
water-down their agenda is once again served, only this time in the
personage of several fed-up White comedians.
"I don't know how Air America is going to broaden the reaches of 'LIB,"
said one anonymous source to reporter Karen Juanita Carillo of
SACOBSERVER.COM. "As far as I've heard, they've got a couple of Whites
who just really want to go after Sean Hannity, Bill O'Reilly and all
the others. You can't convince me that that's going to be something
good for Black and Hispanic people," But therein lies Al Franken's
greatest talk radio credential; he really really wants to go after
so-and-so the conservative talk show host, but to paraphrase the words
of his most famous Saturday Night Live character Stuart Smally; is he
"good enough, smart enough, andgosh-darn-it," do African Americans like
him?
Walt Cooper, the new program director for WHAT recently had this to
say, "of course with any change where you go to a satilite situation or
whatever, where before it was formerly live, things are gonna change,
and it could be some folks ending up not staying on. A lot of folks
lost jobs for example, behind the "Tom Joyner Show"... it's going to
take another ratings period or two I would say, to really see the
impact of Air America from an Arbitron standpoint, depending on how
much you believe Arbitron and that's a whole 'nother discussion." ICBC
also owns Philly's WHAT (along with 13 more stations across the
country), having taken on Air America back in August (what?). A nasty
sub-plot to WHAT's ratings was violent storm that hit the Philadelphia
area last December, this all but destroyed the old tower, and they were
broadcasting on a reduced signal for 6 months. They have since
installed a new tower, and ground system, but are scrambling to make up
for lost listenership, and revenue.
"We have heard from word of mouth that people Black and White are
warming up to the Air America piece," said Cooper in the 11/23
interview, "some of it depends on which host you are talking about, we
don't carry the whole schedule from Air America, we just take Al
Franken and Randi Rhodes, but a lot of Black folks love Randi Rhodes,
she connectes very well with Black folks in a way that's not
patronizing, she get's it. This is a blond girl-I don't know if her
eyes are blue or green-she spent a lot of years in local radio in
Florida, and came to New York, and then came onboard for the whole Air
America piece... she's an actual radio person," chuckled Cooper. "But
with Al Franken, some folks like him, some ain't feelin' him, I mean
you can tell where he's coming from, and politically it's like 'yeah
well Ok I agree with that, but he doesn't have that connect. Remember
his background, he's a comedy writer, he came out of SNL, listening to
his program sometimes, a lot of it sounds like SNL skits." It would be
sheer irony that the very survival of Air America may depend on whether
or not the man who wanted it the most, should even stay on the air, but
that's the situation Franken could eventually find himself in. He is
simply not a radio guy.
WHAT has new faces for more reasons than just Air America, Cooper for
example signed on a couple months after the takeover, and the station
now has the syndicated "Bev Smith Show" during it's live time slot of
6-10pm Monday-Friday. Other WHAT hosts are still on-albiet time shift
changes. Philly legend Mary Mason has the morning 6-9 time-slot, Thera
Martin-Connelly is on from 9-12pm, Reggie Bryant runs after Smith,
10-1am. Franken and Rhodes are back-to-back noon to 7pm. "I know Chuck
D is on Air America too, and there's a local 'LIB guy-he's the only one
that survived the changeover-Mark Riley," adds Cooper. Gone from WHAT
as a direct cause of Air America's link is Karen Warrington, Todd
Smith, and producer Torry Smith. "The theme of 'The Voice of the
African Community,' they don't use that any more," said another
departed WHAT talk host; former NFL defensive back Johnny Sample.
Sample-a 14-year-veteran of WHAT-is the only talk jock whose recent
move was unrelated to Air America, but he told me that a good portion
of the audience didn't like his ouster or the takeover: "They don't
want 'em to talk you know, they told the people that's still on the air
not to talk about the situation, they didn't want the on-air people who
are still there to discuss why we were let go, but if you listen to the
station on a regular basis, they [the listeners] know whats going on.
Black media is the worst culprit of all this kind of stuff because they
feel they have to knuckle under in order to survive." While the jury is
still out regarding Air America's connection to Black radio, it's
important to realize that the all-important element of Black talk
radio, is that it traditionally has fought the Limbaughs, Savages, and
O'Reillys just by existing. They don't have to talk about them, simply
being a voice and urging dialogue within the inner city is a problem
for consevatives by default. Black radio need only to promote their
shows as Whites do.
- Stevenson is a columnist for the Buffalo Criterion
and www.TheBrownWatch.com . Pointblank can be read at
www.voiceoffreedom .com. email comments to Stevenson at
pointblankdta@yahoo.com
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