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Radio in black and white.


NEW YORK CITY New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 

'FOR the rawest, highest-rated bigotry in town--attacks on blacks, gays, even the elderly--tune in Bob Grant's afternoon drive-time show on WABC WABC Worldwide Association of Business Coaches
WABC Westamerica Bancorporation (NASDAQ symbol)
WABC World Aquatic Babies Congress
WABC World Association of Business Coaches
WABC World Aquatic Babies & Children
." Thus did New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 magazine introduce its October 17 cover story by Philip Gourevitch. The piece described Grant's work on the air as "racist, alienated, bullying, embittered em·bit·ter  
tr.v. em·bit·tered, em·bit·ter·ing, em·bit·ters
1. To make bitter in flavor.

2. To arouse bitter feelings in: was embittered by years of unrewarded labor.
, hyperbolic--the white equivalent of gangster rap." Gourevitch accused Grant of bigotry (he called Haitian boat people "sub-human scum") and vulgarity (he called Bill Clinton a "sleazebag sleaze·bag  
n. Slang
A person regarded as sleazy.
").

In a pretense of balance, the same issue of New York contained a piece on Conrad Muhammad, Louis Farrakhan's New York representative. Fatuously fat·u·ous  
adj.
1. Vacuously, smugly, and unconsciously foolish. See Synonyms at foolish.

2. Delusive; unreal: fatuous hopes.
 titled "My Anti-Semite," this "nuanced" piece pronounced Muhammad a "moderate" and the Nation of Islam Nation of Islam: see Black Muslims.
Nation of Islam
 or Black Muslims

African American religious movement that mingles elements of Islam and black nationalism. It was founded in 1931 by Wallace D.
 "irrelevant to the future of Jewish America."

The contrast between New York's treatment of Grant and of Muhammad reflects a general tendency on the Left to condemn white bigotry while minimizing or ignoring the black equivalent. The wider controversy that New York's Grant article sparked is a striking example of this double standard.

The magazine interviewed Grant in June but did not publish the article until three weeks before the elections. A few days after the article appeared, a group of black New Jersey clergymen demanded of Governor Christine Whitman, for whom Grant had campaigned last year, that she denounce him, which she did, saying she would no longer appear on his show. Then Democratic Senator Frank Lautenberg challenged his opponent, conservative Chuck Haytaian--for whom Grant had been campaigning--to do likewise. Meanwhile, Jesse Jackson campaigned with Lautenberg in New Jersey, joined the black clergymen in condemning Grant, and called on Al Sharpton to organize a sponsors' boycott of Grant's show. Lautenberg, who is on the Senate's transportation subcommittee, pressured Amtrak Amtrak, the National Railroad Passenger Corp., authorized to operate virtually all intercity passenger railroad routes in the United States. Amtrak was created by Congress in 1970 in response to more than two decades of continuous operating deficits by privately run  to cancel its advertising on the show.

Grant has been called a racist for years, and not without justification. In a telephone interview, I read him a quote from his show: "We have in our nation ... millions of sub-humanodis, savages, who really would ... feel more at home careening The careening of a sailing vessel is laying her up on a calm beach at high tide in order to expose one side or another of the ship's hull for maintenance below the water line when the tide goes out.  along the sands of the Kalahari ... people who ... have not become civilized." He tried to explain the remark. "I use 'savages' to apply to a person's conduct, not their appearance," he said.

"But the reference to the Kalahari puts the 'sub-humanoids' in Africa," I noted.

"Well, it speaks for itself," he replied. "I said that." He called his language "unfortunate" and "unwise," adding that there is no bigotry in his heart.

So Grant's critics have a point. But they are curiously quiet about bigotry when it doesn't come from white conservatives. Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting (FAIR) is a media criticism organization based in New York, New York, founded in 1986.

FAIR describes itself on its website as "the national media watch group" and defines its mission as working to "invigorate the First Amendment by
 (FAIR), which joined the attack on Grant to advance its crusade against the "white, right-wing line-up" on talk radio, issued a press release citing dozens of Grant quotations it said "reveal a pattern of racial bigotry." FAIR called on "politicians and journalists to demonstrate a consistent standard on bigotry."

If only FAIR took its own words to heart. You don't see the organization monitoring bigotry on the notoriously hateful black radio stations WWRL and WLIB--both, like WABC, located in FAIR's home base of New York City. Hosts, callers, and guests on WLIB and WWRL (who have included Conrad Muhammad, Leonard Jeffries, and Steve Cokely) promote anti-white racism and anti-Jewish conspiracy theories. Yet FAIR senior analyst Steven Rendall appeared on WWRL to rail against Grant, Rush Limbaugh, and WABC. "We chose to look at ABC ABC
 in full American Broadcasting Co.

Major U.S. television network. It began when the expanding national radio network NBC split into the separate Red and Blue networks in 1928.
 because it's the major flagship corporation," Rendall said. He also noted that Grant aids prominent Republicans: "Grant is a guy that D'Amato, Giuliani, and Christine Whitman called up to thank for his role in their successful election."

FAIR claims Grant incites violence, but it remains silent when WLIB talkshow host Clayton Riley puts white journalists on his hit list: "Man, there are some things I would like to say to John Taylor, but the FCC (1) (Federal Communications Commission, Washington, DC, www.fcc.gov) The U.S. government agency that regulates interstate and international communications including wire, cable, radio, TV and satellite. The FCC was created under the U.S.  prevents us. ... We talk about what Colin Powell said: 'You find the enemy, you isolate it, you kill it.' ... OK, John Taylor, you're number two on the list. Jim Sleeper tops the list." Jim Naureckas, editor of the FAIR publication Extra!, told me FAIR has not called attention to such inflammatory statements because WLIB is a local station, and FAIR's focus is national. Rendall said FAIR has confronted anti-Semitism on the Pacifica radio network.

Other critics of Grant have an even more serious credibility problem. Jesse Jackson, who called Grant's comments "foul" and "divisive," has been known to use the terms "Jewboy," "Hymietown," and "kike kike  
n. Offensive Slang
Used as a disparaging term for a Jew.



[Origin unknown.]

Noun 1.
." Jackson boasts of a "sacred covenant" with Farrakhan, and he is a WLIB shareholder and a frequent guest on the station. Sharpton, too, is an odd crusader against bigotry. As a candidate for the U.S. Senate, he accepted Farrakhan's endorsement and defended Khalid Muhammad, the Nation of Islam official whose racist and anti-Semitic remarks at Kean College caused a public outcry last year. "I agree with much of what [Muhammad] said," Sharpton declared. "He is a very articulate and courageous brother." Blasting black politicians who had denounced Muhammad, Sharpton vowed, "We're going to retire some of you Toms this year."

During his campaign, Sharpton participated in a WLIB program hosted by Gary Byrd. "You talk about mobsters Mobsters is a 1991 crime drama detailing the creation of the National Crime Syndicate/The Commission. Set in New York City during the Prohibition era, it's a somewhat fictionalized account of rise of Charles "Lucky" Luciano, Meyer Lansky, Frank Costello, and Benjamin "Bugsy" !" Sharpton bellowed. "The real mobsters in our community often wear blue uniforms and carry nightsticks."

A listener identified as Brother Abdul called from Brooklyn to suggest that blacks "start shooting these cops. ... Only then ... when you start ... blowing their brains out, will they understand."

"I'm sure everyone understands the feeling," said Byrd. "Brother Sharpton, how do you deal with this kind of situation?"

Sharpton did not exactly jump at the opportunity to condemn murder. "Whatever violence comes down," he said, "it has been incited by white police misconduct."

To expose the hypocrisy of Bob Grant's detractors is not to condone Grant's gratuitous offensiveness. And the publicity generated by the controversy may have done some good. Grant's ideology hasn't changed, but lately he has been challenging bigoted big·ot·ed  
adj.
Being or characteristic of a bigot: a bigoted person; an outrageously bigoted viewpoint.



big
 callers and watching his own choice of words Noun 1. choice of words - the manner in which something is expressed in words; "use concise military verbiage"- G.S.Patton
phraseology, wording, diction, phrasing, verbiage
. WWRL and WLIB might benefit from similar attention. Perhaps it's time for the professionally indignant to switch channels.
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No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 1994, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:bigotry in radio broadcasting
Author:Southgate, Minoo
Publication:National Review
Date:Dec 5, 1994
Words:1013
Previous Article:Getting to zero. (deficit reduction)
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