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#21
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The ''truth'' is a slippery devil these days. Very hard to get a hold
of sometimes. Everything's spinning... On 6 Dec 2004 08:53:08 -0800, wrote: DAVID, You are the "Voice" of Knowledge, Understanding and the Facts (Some Call It "Da Truth") to 'those' lacking same. keep up the good work ~ RHF . . |
#22
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![]() "David" wrote in message ... ''Plausible deniablilty." I don't trust Texans. Used to live there. Claim: Clear Channel Communications banned their American radio stations from playing specified songs in order to avoid offending listeners. Status: False. Correct. There was a list put together by ONE of the PDs and sent to other PDs to prevent embarassment in the aftermath of 9/11. This was not censorship, but prudence and a desire not to offend Americans following 9/11. There was never a list issued from Clear Channel corporate offices, and no dictate to not play songs. Just some PDs exchanging some lists of tunes that might be wise to play with caution or not at all in that difficult time. Example: [Collected on the Internet, 2001] Those of you in the Thought Police will find the following encouraging. Others of you might find it troubling: In response to Tuesday's terrorist attacks, Clear Channel, the world's largest radio network, has sent out a list of some 150 "lyrically questionable" songs by everyone from the Animals to the Zombies which it has banned its stations from playing. Some songs are overtly violent in their intent, but the majority simply contain metaphorical language or narrative aspects that connect uncomfortably with the tragedy. Again, the list was sent out to the rock PDs by one of the PDs who took the time to think about sensitivities and analyzed every song that might be questinable. There was not ban, no censorship. Just boradcasters doing thier job of measuring what the public wanted to hear and what was, at the time, inappropriate. Accordingly, a program director at Clear Channel Communications (an organization which operates over 1,170 radio stations in the United States), after discussions with program directors at several of Clear Channel Radio's stations, compiled an advisory list of songs which stations might wish to avoid playing in the short term: Exactly. Not a ban, not censorship, just good common sense. |
#23
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I thought it was the old Air America airlines company.I want to fly Con
Air someday.(only joking) cuhulin |
#24
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On Sat, 04 Dec 2004 20:58:04 -0500, Mike wrote:
While CCU will transfer the US rights to the X stations, they will keep the intellectual property of the programming. So Z-90 or any of the other formats might replace the existing format on one o fthe US licensed Clear Channel SD stations. It is unlikely that John Lynch will get 690. He keeps making noises about it, but it sounds like he isn't going to get it. Who gets it will be determined by the late Ed Noble's family. So far as I know they still own it. I believe John Lynch still has pretty good relations with them. I worked for John for 5 years. I wouldn't count him out. Rich |
#25
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On Sun, 05 Dec 2004 00:00:18 -0500, Mike wrote:
formality. Mexicans stations are treated as what they are, Mexican stations that music comply with Mexican boradcast law and all other aspects of the Mexican legal system. I programmed XTRA for 5 years. The US contingent was committed to following both the Mexican as well as FCC regulations. I actually had Norman Vincent Peale use an obscenity when I told him we couldn't air his show that had been sold by our US sales reps. No religion allowed. No alcohol. Far more stringent than the US. That's what I was talking about...the need to get that permit to originate U.S.-based programming on a foreign signal, from the viewpoint of the U.S. programming operator. It's known as 325B. Very hard to get back then, especially when you had San Diego stations petitioning the FCC and threatening ad agencies. We sued the stations for $39 million. The result was a public agreement that we had the right to operate in the San Diego market. And of course, the U.S. operators of the station now known as Fox 6 in the San Diego market had to go through some hassle back in the days when it was an ABC affiliate. That hassle was that Channel 39 (now KNSD, formerly KCST) wanted the affiliation. ABC preferred the XETV VHF Channel 6 even in the city with one of the first and largest cable systems in the country. Last time I heard a Mexican-originated U.S. programmed signal, I do believe it was 690...and I believe those PSAs take the form of tourism promotions for the Mexican government, in English, of course. You can thank Ed Noble (a personal friend of then President Jose Lopez Portillo) for eliminating (for a while) the shortwave-delivered Mexican Hour in favor of Tourism PSAs for the border stations. Rich Former Program Manager - XTRA |
#26
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![]() and bully them into performing at its music venues. The complaint independent promoters have with Clear Channel's concert division is that it can pay performers far more than the smaller companies can. The solution, if performers believe in the little guys, is to take less money. Would that be your choice? The only downside to concertgoers is higher ticket prices. PBS did a scathing documentary on Clear Channel a couple of years ago. No performer was bullied. They were just paid more. They took the money. No sane Clear Channel programmer would boycott a popular song that was selling well and played by the competition (of which there are many) just because they didn't appear at a Clear Channel venue. Rich |
#27
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On Mon, 06 Dec 2004 06:37:40 GMT, m II
wrote: There seems to be some dispute over that. The government has made it VERY easy for one company to have a monopoly situation. Where? Monopoly means no competition. Control of a market. Clear Channel owns a small number of the total stations in the US and is legally limited by coverage. They cannot own all stations in a market unless the market has only one. Rich |
#28
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On Mon, 06 Dec 2004 14:49:11 GMT, David wrote:
You never saw the post 9-11 list of banned songs? Hmm. I recall it to be a list of songs considered insensitive considering what happened. I don't believe anyone was forbidden to play them. It's really no different than airlines not running movies with plane crashes in them. Rich |
#29
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On Wed, 08 Dec 2004 18:29:09 -0500, Rich Wood
wrote: Last time I heard a Mexican-originated U.S. programmed signal, I do believe it was 690...and I believe those PSAs take the form of tourism promotions for the Mexican government, in English, of course. You can thank Ed Noble (a personal friend of then President Jose Lopez Portillo) for eliminating (for a while) the shortwave-delivered Mexican Hour in favor of Tourism PSAs for the border stations. Yet, according to David, the Mexican National Hour is once again heard even on English-language U.S. targetting stations like XETRA. I'm surprised that the government of Vicente Fox hasn't eased up on it. Mike |
#30
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![]() "Mike" wrote in message ... On Wed, 08 Dec 2004 18:29:09 -0500, Rich Wood wrote: Last time I heard a Mexican-originated U.S. programmed signal, I do believe it was 690...and I believe those PSAs take the form of tourism promotions for the Mexican government, in English, of course. You can thank Ed Noble (a personal friend of then President Jose Lopez Portillo) for eliminating (for a while) the shortwave-delivered Mexican Hour in favor of Tourism PSAs for the border stations. Yet, according to David, the Mexican National Hour is once again heard even on English-language U.S. targetting stations like XETRA. I'm surprised that the government of Vicente Fox hasn't eased up on it. I am not sure about XETRA. I know XEPRS does run the Hora Nacional, but there may be a dispensation based on relationships for XETRA that still prevails. Ed Noble was owner of what was Mexico's largest ad agency, Noble & asociados, and a very influential man. |
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