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sws4420
04-10-2007, 01:19 AM
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NEW YORK - After a career of cranky insults, radio star Don Imus was fighting for his job Monday following one joke that by his own admission went “way too far.”

CBS Radio and MSNBC both said they were suspending Imus’ morning talk show for two weeks following his reference last week to members of the Rutgers women’s basketball team as “nappy-headed hos.”

The suspension begins next Monday.

While CBS made its announcement without comment, MSNBC said Imus’ regret at making the inappropriate comment and his stated dedication to changing the show’s discourse made it believe this was the appropriate response.

“Our future relationship with Imus is contingent on his ability to live up to his word,” the network said. MSNBC simulcasts his radio program weekday mornings.

Imus continued to apologize Monday, both on his show and on a syndicated radio program hosted by the Rev. Al Sharpton, who is among several black leaders demanding his ouster.

Both MSNBC and CBS Radio said they would go ahead and air the previously scheduled Imus radiothon in support of the Tomorrow's Children's Fund, the CJ Foundation for Sudden Infant Death Syndrome research and the Imus Ranch planned for Thursday and Friday.

Apologies continue
Imus could be in real danger if the outcry causes advertisers to shy away from him, said Tom Taylor, editor of the trade publication Inside Radio.

“Everyone is on tenterhooks waiting to see whether it grows and whether the protest gets picked up more broadly,” Taylor said.

Imus isn’t the most popular radio talk show host — the trade publication Talkers ranks him the 14th most influential — but his audience is heavy on the political and media elite that advertisers pay a premium to reach. Authors, journalists and politicians are frequent guests — and targets for insults.

He has urged critics to recognize that his show is a comedy that spreads insults broadly. Imus or his cast have called Colin Powell a “sniffling weasel,” New Mexico Gov. Bill Richardson a “fat sissy” and referred to Sen. Ben Nighthorse Campbell of Colorado, an American Indian, as “the guy from ‘F Troop.”’ He and his colleagues also called the New York Knicks a group of “chest-thumping pimps.”

Yet, over the years, Imus' success was often a result of his caustic on-air barbs.

"That Imus is in trouble for being politically incorrect is certainly not new," said Tom Taylor, editor of the trade publication Inside Radio. "He's lived his life in and out of trouble ... This is something CBS will be watching very carefully."

Recent controversies involving Imus focused on a member of his morning team, Sid Rosenberg, who was fired two years ago after a particularly vile crack about cancer-stricken singer Kylie Minogue. Prior to that, a racially tinged comment by Rosenberg about Venus and Serena Williams stirred another controversy.

But the NABJ cited two other incidents involving Imus himself: the host's insults toward a pair of black journalists. Imus has called PBS' Gwen Ifill a "cleaning lady" and described William Rhoden of The New York Times as "a quota hire," the group said.

On Sharpton’s program Monday, Imus said that “our agenda is to be funny and sometimes we go too far. And this time we went way too far.”

The Rutgers comment has struck a chord, in part, because it was aimed at a group of young women at the pinnacle of athletic success. It also came in a different public atmosphere following the Michael Richards and Mel Gibson incidents, said Eric Deggans, columnist for the St. Petersburg Times and chairman of the media monitoring committee of the National Association of Black Journalists, which also wants Imus canned.

“This may be the first time where he’s done something like this in the YouTube era,” Deggans said. Viewers can quickly see clips of Imus’ remarks, not allowing him to redefine their context, he said.

On his show Monday, Imus called himself “a good person” who made a bad mistake.

“Here’s what I’ve learned: that you can’t make fun of everybody, because some people don’t deserve it,” he said. “And because the climate on this program has been what it’s been for 30 years doesn’t mean that it has to be that way for the next five years or whatever because that has to change, and I understand that.”

Future of show unknown
Imus’ radio show originates from WFAN in New York City and is syndicated nationally by Westwood One, both of which are managed by CBS. CBS Radio just replaced chief executive Joel Hollander with Dan Mason. With Imus’ radio show reaching an estimated 2.5 million people a week, his future could conceivably be decided by CBS chief Leslie Moonves.

The show is simulcast daily on MSNBC, where it reached an estimated 361,000 viewers in the first three months of the year, up 39 percent from last year. That’s the best competitive position it has ever achieved against CNN (372,000 viewers).

“He will survive it if he stops apologizing so much,” said Michael Harrison, publisher of Talkers. Imus clearly seems under corporate pressure to make amends, but he’s nearly reached the point where he is alienating the fans who appreciate his grumpy outrageousness.

Even if he were to be fired, he’s likely to land elsewhere in radio, Harrison said.

The Rev. Jesse Jackson and about 50 people marched Monday outside Chicago’s NBC tower to protest Imus’ comments. He said MSNBC should abandon Imus and MSNBC should hire more black pundits.

Julian Bond, chairman of the NAACP board of directors, said it is “past time his employers took him off the air.”

“As long as an audience is attracted to his bigotry and politicians and pundits tolerate his racism and chauvinism to promote themselves, Don Imus will continue to be a serial apologist for prejudice,” Bond said.

Imus was mostly contrite in his appearance with Sharpton, although the activist did not change his opinion that Imus should lose his job. At one point Imus seemed incredulous at Sharpton’s suggestion that he might walk away from the incident unscathed.

“Unscathed?” Imus said. “How do you think I’m unscathed by this? Don’t you think I’m humiliated?”


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/17999196/

MedicCook
04-10-2007, 09:19 AM
I am not a fan of him but it is a shame that his rights of free speach are being compromised.

sws4420
04-10-2007, 09:57 AM
Blacks are so easily frazzled nowadays, it's probably just easier for the networks to give him time off and let shit die down than it is to face the heat for letting racist statements go unpunished. Not to mention the FCC fines they'll probably have to pay for him calling the basketball team jigaboos on the air.

MedicCook
04-10-2007, 10:01 AM
I could see him getting fired over this. Then perfect irony would be him signing on with Howard's Sirius team like so many other Howard haters have now done.

Dave
04-10-2007, 10:56 AM
I think it's bullshit that he may get fired for this. Turn on any comedy show that's on tv, especially HBO, and listen to a black comic. The 'n' word, whitey this and whitey that roles off their tongue's like water. Do they get in trouble? No. What a f'kn double edged sword this crap is. Walk down the street and you hear a black say 'sup n@@@a' to another black and everything is good. Whitey says it and they get shot. I don't understand. Kramer from Seinfeld says something towards a couple black guys that were heckiling him and he gets read the riot act. Bullshit.

On another 'go figure' note....I read Sports Illustrated a month or so ago and there was a story about a 15 year old kid that had been arrested 15 times before his 15th b'day. Instead of doing time in the slammer, it was discovered that he could dribble a basketball. He was then given a full ride to college for some NCAA team. Go figure. Whitey does the same thing this kid does and would most likely get to be black bubba's bitch in jail for the rest of his life. I just don't understand this shit anymore.

sws4420
04-10-2007, 12:33 PM
I could see him getting fired over this. Then perfect irony would be him signing on with Howard's Sirius team like so many other Howard haters have now done.I'm pretty sure that river of hatred runs a little deeper than most.

sws4420
04-10-2007, 01:13 PM
This news conference with the Rutgers Women's Basketball team is hysterical. It's a bunch of college women sitting there offering commentary on the conditions that black women are forced to live with in society. I'm sure being called a nappy headed ho is absolutely devastating, coming from some guy whom I'm sure never even heard of this guy before this week.

Donna
04-10-2007, 02:27 PM
I could see him getting fired over this. Then perfect irony would be him signing on with Howard's Sirius team like so many other Howard haters have now done.

Howard can't stand him........I watched some of al sharpton and imus this am on the today show.......imus is a jerk and whoever posted about the double edged sword, I agree wholeheartedly! I was listening to Beck this am on talk radio, he has it right.......don't fire the guy, just STOP LISTENING to him.......don't like certain tv shows, DONT WATCH........if ya don't consume, it will go away.

Donna
04-10-2007, 02:30 PM
let me clarify my last statement, IT going away i meant the show, not the predjudice. Sensoring just pushes it underground, it doesn't change the mentality. It's like anything that we don't like, if we dont watch it, it goes off the air. Problem solved, kinda.

MedicCook
04-10-2007, 04:36 PM
That is how I feel about everything.

sws4420
04-10-2007, 08:44 PM
I love Glenn Beck.

Donna
04-11-2007, 09:11 AM
I love Glenn Beck.

me too, i like him better than limbaugh and shnit cuz he runs on common sense alot, alot of clarifications of alot of duhhhhhhhsssssss

sws4420
04-11-2007, 09:57 AM
Yeah. I sort of stumbled onto him by accident when Dr. Laura went off the air up here. I listened to him for a few years and then he got replaced by some local retard. I like him, but not enough to pay for his podcasting service. He has a tv show that I catch every now and then.