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Author Topic: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO  (Read 5148 times)
truthsayer
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #30 on: April 13, 2007, 04:12:28 PM »

 If the word "ho" is so offensive to some. they need to take a look at the music and culture around them.  There seems to be a double standard that irritates the hell out of me.

Where this goes wrong is not with the word, but the double standard implied here.

The music that broadcast every hour on Rap formats nationwide is disgusting whether you are black, white, hispanic, or whatever.  If you have any decency at all  you know this is a fact.  I do not agree the N- word is ok as long as it's used in a black to a black senerio.  The word is wrong period!  The word is all over rap stations, this is where the problem lies.

Words are not defined ok to use in certian racial groups.  They are wrong or right to use period!  It is the fault of poor standards this country has adapted.  The time has come to change!

Mr. Imus made a stupid comment he has paid dearly for and has gracfully apoligized.  Though as of ten minutes ago our airwaves are full of trash and smut lowering the standard more. 

When Americans wake up and meet their neighbor we might just make friends.  Broadcasters need to meet the people they serve and find the real soul that burns to acomplish and show pride.  The hate from the past can't hold a people back in the future.  People let's get it together.

Very Respectfully
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radioguy1580
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #31 on: April 13, 2007, 04:55:17 PM »

I don't know if everyone is aware how this comment got to be so reported. There is a media watchdog group that tapes Imus' show daily and listens to it. The person who is responsible for monitoring his show heard the comment and reported it to his superiors. They then sent the wavefile to the National Black Journalists group and it took on a whole new life of it's own.

So it was not any regular listeners who complained. It was Big Brother!
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BryanDurio
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #32 on: April 13, 2007, 05:33:05 PM »

By the way "nappy" means the derogatory reference to a "black" hair type.

Then I think you'd better explain that to Stevie Wonder. Remember the first line of "I Wish?"

Looking back on when I was a little nappy-headed boy...
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Chris_Rose
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #33 on: April 13, 2007, 08:46:51 PM »

It sure seems from these posts that there are alot of racist white males in the radio industry. As for blacks using terms that are self-denigrating. It is a form of oppression known as internalized oppression. External oppression becomes internalized oppression when blacks come to believe and act as if the oppressor's beliefs system, values, and life way is reality.

I could go on and on but if anybody here really cares to learn about the viciousness of American racism (a.k.a. "white supremacy") and exactly how bad the problem is, they should read The Isis Papers by Francis Cress Welsing.

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/customer-reviews/0976531704/sr=8-1/qid=1176515167/ref=cm_cr_dp_pt/104-8661926-5969521?ie=UTF8&n=283155&s=books&qid=1176515167&sr=8-1

« Last Edit: April 13, 2007, 08:50:38 PM by Chris_Rose » Logged
cklw800
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #34 on: April 13, 2007, 09:30:07 PM »

BryanDurio.  That was 1976 for "I Wish" by Stevie Wonder from "Songs In The Key of Life".  He says when HE was a nappy-headed boy.  He didn't point out a group of innocent female teens who play basketball.  I can bring up some song analogies, too, by many rock groups using the "n" word.  Stevie Wonder calling HIMSELF a nappy-headed boy 31 years ago...wow Bryan.
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microbob
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #35 on: April 13, 2007, 09:50:07 PM »

BryanDurio.  That was 1976 for "I Wish" by Stevie Wonder from "Songs In The Key of Life".  He says when HE was a nappy-headed boy.  He didn't point out a group of innocent female teens who play basketball.  I can bring up some song analogies, too, by many rock groups using the "n" word.  Stevie Wonder calling HIMSELF a nappy-headed boy 31 years ago...wow Bryan.

Exactly right... Imus was not well liked by MSNBC, and I bet he had enemies at CBS. As soon as the $$$ went away from his advertisers after they dropped him for remarks he made after the incident His show was history.  The color Green is the Issue here.
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superhead
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #36 on: April 13, 2007, 11:57:31 PM »

Here are some questions:

Q: How is the term "Ho" considered racial?

It's not racist but sexist and also does not belong on air.

Q:  Was it "racist" when Imus referred to a white female as a "Ho"? (ie., Paris Hilton, on many occasions)

No.

Q:  What would the reaction have been if Imus used "Ho" to refer to the all-white women's golf team at Yale?  Would anybody consider this racist?

Still sexist.

Q: Webster's Dictionary defines "nappy" as "kinky or frizzy."  Where is the racial reference?

The fact that only one ethnic group in America has hair of this type. It doesn't take a brain surgeon to realize that.

Q:  Was there an election in which the majority of African-Americans elected Al Sharpton as the official spokesperson for all black people?  When was this election held?

It wasn't and many from within the African community have said that publicly for years now.

Q: Who will fire all the rappers who have used the term "HO" to sell records and make millions of dollars?

How this moves forward is anyones guess. Most likely it will fade away with little change which is a crime itself.

Q:  Will CBS fire air personality Steve Harvey for his daily comments utilizing humor based on stereotypes of African-Americans?  How will we stop Chris Rock, Cedric The Entertainer, D.L. Hughley, Bernie Mac and other comedians from making racial references in their standup comedy routines?

I have never heard Mr. Harvey's show so I can't specifically comment. In Rock's last HBO special he did a bit about how he loves hip hop but found it hard to defend due to the content. It is a totally different situation when a comedian makes observations that while may be based on a stereotype are not hateful.

The biggest point that has been missed in all of this is that as a broadcaster you have a responsibilty to hold yourself to a higher standard. You are broadcasting on public airwaves. That words that could only mean to demoralize and continue to perpetuate negative views of minorities are not to be tolerated.

It's not comedy....unless you are warming up the next KKK meeting.

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klinker
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #37 on: April 14, 2007, 12:30:43 AM »

One more point to add is that the FCC can't fine any of stations because of free speech.  CBS radio and MSNBC don't like free speech I guess.  They're both a bunch idiots that at one point will have this blow up in there face.  I've finally made my decision to go to sirius.  Howard Stern was right when he said the PC police are out to get radio hosts.


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inthecity
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Re: A VERY GREAT DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #38 on: April 14, 2007, 11:07:31 AM »

If you believe that there are others saying degrading things about other races on-the-air, then speak out. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton's influence is not so persuasive in today's society. It was the National Women's Organization, a CBS Director and Sponsors pulling out that led to Imus being fired.

If a show loses its sponsors because of the content, then whoever programs for that show will be fired because they ruined business, financially. And that is exactly what happened.

By speaking out against anyone who speaks racial slurs or stereotypes, it helps to bring the racial divide closer to an end. I just hope that you don't only do this in retaliation to African-Americans or Women who protested this man.

When you get to the top, you are an example. And Imus is the example that there are more to come.

...standby.
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mikeAtlanta
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Re: A VERY SAD DAY IN RADIO
« Reply #39 on: April 14, 2007, 12:12:59 PM »

Good riddance to bad rubbish.
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