> From: Robert Seeberger <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

> From: "The Fool" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
 
> 
> > http://archive.nytimes.com/2003/03/25/opinion/25KRUG.html
> >
> > Channels of Influence
> > By PAUL KRUGMAN
> >
> >
> > By and large, recent pro-war rallies haven't drawn nearly as many
people
> > as antiwar rallies, but they have certainly been vehement. One of the
> > most striking took place after Natalie Maines, lead singer for the
Dixie
> > Chicks, criticized President Bush: a crowd gathered in Louisiana to
watch
> > a 33,000-pound tractor smash a collection of Dixie Chicks CD's, tapes
and
> > other paraphernalia. To those familiar with 20th-century European
history
> > it seemed eerily reminiscent of. . . . But as Sinclair Lewis said, it
> > can't happen here.
> >
> > Who has been organizing those pro-war rallies? The answer, it turns
out,
> > is that they are being promoted by key players in the radio industry
�
> > with close links to the Bush administration.
> >
> > The CD-smashing rally was organized by KRMD, part of Cumulus Media, a
> > radio chain that has banned the Dixie Chicks from its playlists. Most
of
> > the pro-war demonstrations around the country have, however, been
> > organized by stations owned by Clear Channel Communications, a
behemoth
> > based in San Antonio that controls more than 1,200 stations and
> > increasingly dominates the airwaves.
> >
> > The company claims that the demonstrations, which go under the name
Rally
> > for America, reflect the initiative of individual stations. But this
is
> > unlikely: according to Eric Boehlert, who has written revelatory
articles
> > about Clear Channel in Salon, the company is notorious � and widely
hated
> > � for its iron-fisted centralized control.
> 
> Most of the individual facts in this article may be true, but the part
about
> Clear Channel being the organizing force behind the pro-war rallies is
pure
> crap. Those rallies were organized live on the air in great part, and I
> happened to be listening during some crucial conversations when the
idea was
> cooked up. For the most part it started with the syndicated host Glenn
Beck,

You don't understand just how centralized clear channel is.  There are no
'Live' local broadcasts (or radio personalities), there are canned
braodcasts playing in hundreds of venues made to look like local
broadcast, but they aren't.  

http://www.salon.com/ent/clear_channel/

> and I heard the rant that was the genesis of rallies. Later that day I
heard
> the conversations with other hosts (from the local stations where his
show
> is aired). I also heard both of the hosts of local shows start to
organize
> the local rally, and asking the public for help to do so.

Clear channel 'disc jokeys' say what they are told to say, or they are
fired.

> There was one quite humorous period on Becks show in which Cleveland
and
> Columbus Ohio got into a "flame" war over which city Beck would visit
since
> their rallies were on the same day.
> 
> In any case Clear Channel is not the only radio company with
conservative
> talk shows or with hosts pushing pro-America rallies.

_______________________________________________
http://www.mccmedia.com/mailman/listinfo/brin-l

Reply via email to