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Wednesday, September 14,2011

Issue of the Week: The Big Lie: Liberal Talk Radio Doesn't Sell

Event of the Week: Fighting Bob Fest X

By Shepherd Express Staff
 
Back in the 1980s, Rush Limbaugh was just getting his radio career off the ground. In 1984, the conservative pot-stirrer launched his local talk show on Sacramento's KFBK AM station before syndicating his show nationally and becoming a dominant force in conservative politics.

Limbaugh's success is often chalked up to market demand. According to this line of thought, conservatives listen to talk radio, while liberals don't. And if liberals wanted to listen to programs that are more in line with their beliefs, then the market would provide it, right? After all, huge corporate radio station owners like Clear Channel are only interested in making money. If they could make profits off of liberal talk shows, they'd do it, conservatives argue.

But Sue Wilson, who will screen her documentary Broadcast Blues in Madison on Saturday as part of her media reform tour of Wisconsin, has a much different take on Limbaugh's success and liberal radio's alleged failure in the marketplace.

As Wilson, who is based in Sacramento, explained during her interview with the Shepherd, Sacramento's 50,000-watt KFBK is the powerhouse station in the area and reaches 10 million people throughout California's Central Valley. And Limbaugh got a 7 rating.

But Limbaugh wasn't the only political pundit on the air. Air America, which featured liberal commentators, also began airing in Sacramento—albeit on a 1,000-watt station that could reach far fewer people. And guess what? Even on that weak station, Air America's programming earned a 1.7 rating. So, Wilson argued, if Air America had the kind of wattage that Limbaugh had, its ratings would be through the roof, leaving Limbaugh in the dust.

But Air America—and other progressives who want to get on the air throughout the country—has been shut out of the radio market. Not because liberal programs cannot attract listeners, but because large corporations snapped up the biggest, most powerful stations around the country after the 1996 Telecommunications Act, which vastly increased the number of stations one corporation—like Clear Channel—can own.

“All of the progressives got the crumbs after the banquet,” Wilson explained.

So when conservatives brag that they're beating liberals in the marketplace of ideas on the radio, they're telling you a big lie. Progressives simply do not have the kind of resources on the public airwaves that the corporate-backed right-wing pundits currently enjoy. Once again, conservative corporations are using public resources to advance their political agenda.

Event of the Week

Fighting Bob Fest X

Celebrate progressive politics and network with like-minded Wisconsinites at the 10th Fighting Bob Fest in Madison. On Friday, Sept. 16, the Barrymore Theatre will play host to an event featuring Congressman Dennis Kucinich as well as commentators and journalists Thom Hartmann, Jim Hightower, Greg Palast, Ruth Conniff and John Nichols. Tickets are $8 in advance or $10 at the door. On Saturday, Sept. 17, the action moves to the Alliant Energy Center's Veterans Memorial Coliseum. Speakers include Princeton University professor and activist Cornel West, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, Congresswoman Tammy Baldwin, activist Ellen Bravo, former Congressman David Obey and musician Peter Leidy. For more details, including information on a Milwaukee-Madison bus, go to www.fightingbobfest.org.

Heroes of the Week

Literacy Services of Wisconsin Volunteers

Adults who can't read face additional hurdles when looking for employment in a fiercely competitive job market. Literacy Services of Wisconsin (555 N. Plankinton Ave.) strives to help individuals and the community by ameliorating the problem of adult illiteracy.

For a token fee to cover the cost of materials, LSW offers one-on-one tutoring to adults who want to improve their reading and spelling skills, learn English as a second language or prepare for their GED certificate. Volunteers make up the bulk of the tutors and also help to staff the nonprofit's special events. One such event is the LSW Book Sale, taking place 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Sept. 15-18 at the former Borders bookstore (101 W. Wisconsin Ave.). Readers interested in becoming tutors are encouraged to call 414-344-5878 or visit www.literacyservices.org.

 

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REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
I think if Liberal radio talk was a money money, the big stations would play it. I've listened to McNally's program on AM129. Once you get to Waukesha County it fades out. And their sponsors are low budget types. A lot of dead time is wasted up with bad music. Dennis Miller and Howard Stern seem to do well for the liberal types. I find them entertaining. But I'm thinking radio is for people who drive cars. People who drive cars work. And people with private sector jobs tend to be Republican. People who choose not to have a car or choose not to work tend to be Democrats. So I can see how most of talk radio is geared towards right thinking people

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
Absolute foolishness. If Clear Channel thought it could make money with a radio show geared toward Communist Broccoli Enthusiasts, they would be airing the "Reds Who Love Greens Show" 24/7. With liberals, it's never, ever that their content is boring, illogical, unwanted, or just plain silly. It's always one of two other straw-man arguments- (1) We just didn't get the message out- despite our complete control of the mainstream media for decades, or (2) The message was misunderstood by the ignorant masses. A third, lesser used excuse is the argument that the vast right-wing conspiracy is blocking the message. That despite the fact that America elected a fully Democratic congress and a Democratic president just a few years ago... The straw man arguments are just as illogical as the arguments presented by Stuart Smalley on Air America. Rush, Belling, Sykes, Levin- these guys barely have room for all the advertising on their shows, and the stations that carry them are doing booming business in an antiquated medium- but that medium that is embracing the digital age much more enthusiastically than print or TV (bastions of liberal bias) ever will.

 

Remember that many of those Democrats were from southern states. Since Democrats were the ones AGAINST the Republican known as Abraham Lincoln, there was no way they would work with a "darkie" sitting in the Whitehouse.

And even if you take race out of the equation, there is still the on-going battle between federalism and state's independence from federal interference. Interference like forcing all states to behave the same, to uphold the same standards, to grant their lower class citizens (or non-citizen "occupants") the same rights. Long story there, and it is not a happily-ever-after fairy tale!

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
Air America failed how many times???? "Fightin' the Left, for it's the right thing to do"

 

REPLY TO THIS COMMENT
This author is just pissed because the big, evil capitalist outfits like Clear Channel snapped up most of the frequencies before George Soros could get to them. It wouldn't have mattered, though, because as Levin said after Air America went bust for the umpteenth time, "their problem is, you gotta have an audience!" Not enough people want to hear some Liberal whinefest night after night.

 

 
 
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