New York – Radio Campaign Next Step Against Rush Limbaugh

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    FILE - In this Jan. 1, 2010 file photo, conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh speaks during a news conference at The Queen's Medical Center looks on in Honolulu, after he was rushed to the hospital after experiencing chest pains during a vacation. Limbaugh's opponents are starting a radio campaign against him Thursday, seizing upon the radio star's attack of a Georgetown law student as a New York – Rush Limbaugh’s opponents are starting a radio campaign against him Thursday, seizing upon the radio star’s attack of a Georgetown law student as a “slut” to make a long-term effort aimed at weakening his business.

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    The liberal Media Matters for America is using a past campaign against Glenn Beck as a template. In Limbaugh, however, they’re going after bigger game. He’s already fighting back and the group’s stance has provoked concerns that an effort to silence someone for objectionable talk is in itself objectionable.

    Media Matters is spending at least $100,000 for two advertisements that will run in eight cities.

    The ads use Limbaugh’s own words about student Sandra Fluke, who testified at a congressional hearing that contraception should be paid for in health plans. Limbaugh, on his radio programs, suggested Fluke wanted to be paid to have sex, which made her a “slut” and a “prostitute.” In return for the money, he said Fluke should post videos of herself having sex. Under sharp criticism, Limbaugh later apologized.

    In one of the anti-Limbaugh ads, listeners are urged to call the local station that carries Limbaugh to say “we don’t talk to women like that” in our city.

    Ad time was purchased in Boston; Chicago; Detroit; Seattle; Milwaukee; St. Louis; Macon, Ga.; and Cedar Rapids, Iowa. The cities were selected to support active local campaigns against Limbaugh or because of perceptions Limbaugh may be vulnerable in that market, said Angelo Carusone of Media Matters.

    “What we’re really looking for is a way to demonstrate the persistence of the effort and the fact that it is on a wide scale,” Carusone said.

    A spokeswoman for Premiere Radio Networks, which syndicates Limbaugh’s show to more than 600 radio stations nationally, said Media Matters has gone beyond criticism of Limbaugh’s words to an attempt to silence him and intimidate advertisers.

    “This is not about women,” said Rachel Nelson, Premiere spokeswoman. “It’s not about ethics and it’s not about the nature of our public discourse. It’s a direct attack on America’s guaranteed First Amendment right to free speech. It’s essentially a call for censorship masquerading as high-minded indignation.”

    Limbaugh, on his radio show Wednesday, said he’s being targeted in an attack that was long-planned – not mentioning it was his words that lit the fuse.

    “They’re not even really offended by what happened,” he said. “This is just an opportunity to execute a plan they’ve had in their drawer since 2009.”

    Determining how much of a financial impact the Fluke comments have already had on Limbaugh is murky business.

    Radio stations in Hawaii and Massachusetts have dropped his show. Media Matters claims that 58 companies have specifically asked that their ads be excluded from Limbaugh’s show. Radio-Info.com’s TRI Newsletter said Premiere has circulated a list of 98 advertisers who want to avoid “environments likely to stir negative sentiments,” essentially all politically pointed talk shows.

    There’s more. TRI also said a group with several stations that air Limbaugh sent out a list of 31 advertisers who don’t want to be on Limbaugh’s show.

    Premiere notes that a list is sent out four times a year reminding stations of advertisers who don’t want to be part of controversial programming, and suggests a reported exodus is exaggerated. The company offered no list of its own, or a comparison that could show advertisers resistant to Limbaugh or other controversial shows that predated the Fluke comments.

    Some companies said not to want to advertise within Limbaugh’s program – JC Penney, NAPA Auto Parts, Chapstick, Gold Bond, Green Mountain Coffee – did not respond to requests to clarify their policies. One company listed, NBC-TV, said the network was unaware of any policy or past efforts to advertise with Limbaugh.

    Valerie Geller, a veteran radio consultant who worked at Limbaugh’s WABC flagship in New York, said it appears that advertising money coming into Limbaugh’s show is slowing down. “I think it’s a very big wakeup call,” she said.

    Whether the advertisers return is another question. Limbaugh has a daily audience estimated at between 2 million and 3 million people, according to Talkers magazine.

    “I suspect some people will permanently stay away,” said Tom Taylor, executive editor at Radio-Info.com. “I suspect some people will drift back to Rush. What you won’t see is a press release of someone saying, `Hey, we’re back with Rush!'”

    While a law student, Carusone was active in a campaign to reach Beck’s advertiser that began after the commentator said in July 2009 that President Barack Obama had “a deep-seated hatred for white people.” Eventually, more than 400 advertisers said they didn’t want to be part of Beck’s show and, for Fox, the ad revenue was nowhere near what would be expected for a TV show as popular as Beck’s. When Beck left Fox in June 2011 to take his show to the Web, the parting was mutual.

    The idea with Limbaugh is similar: take advertisers away so rates go down, Carusone said. Couple that with the need to keep track of ever-changing lists of who will advertise with Limbaugh and who won’t, and Media Matters hopes that station managers, market by market, may someday conclude that it’s just not worth the trouble.

    Conveniently, many stations will soon have a choice. Former GOP presidential candidate Mike Huckabee is launching his own syndicated radio show in April that will air at the same time as Limbaugh’s, and Huckabee’s backers are touting the show as a more civilized alternative.

    Beyond the First Amendment concerns, industry experts like Talkers magazine publisher Michael Harrision are concerned that Media Matters’ effort will simpy take some advertisers out of radio altogether when they have different options.

    Carusone said Limbaugh has a chilling effect of his own. “There are plenty of people who self-censor out of fear that Mr. Limbaugh will smear them,” he said.

    The means of protest puts Media Matters and the conservative Media Research Center in the unlikely position of agreeing with each other. Brent Bozell, founder of the conservative media watchdog, said his group also informs advertisers of things it considers objectionable.

    “We all have free speech,” Bozell said.

    That’s where the agreement stops. Bozell this week called on MSNBC chief Phil Griffin to resign, citing objectionable things said in the past by Ed Schultz and Al Sharpton, both MSNBC show hosts. It’s in part retaliation for attacks on Limbaugh, he said. The Fluke story was covered extensively by MSNBC.

    “There’s a great sense of selective outrage that is going on here,” he said.


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    21 Comments
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    12 years ago

    If Rush were a (n Orthodox) Jew, he would be vilified by Frum Jews for fomenting hate. It’s really sad that the conservative (lowercase c) Jewish world gives him a pass.

    Burich
    Burich
    12 years ago

    God bless Rush Limbaugh among the other chassidei umos ha’olam.

    12 years ago

    Go Rush Go!

    Speak your mind

    Kanaim
    Kanaim
    12 years ago

    I happen to work at one of the stations that carry his show. These people that call and email are just a bunch of liberal attention seekers who will follow anything that yells loud enough. When they call to complain, I tell them that Baskin Robbins makes 31 flavors. Pick a different one if you don’t like this one.

    Mark Levin
    Mark Levin
    12 years ago

    So where does this stop? There are people unhappy with what is said on VIN, does that mean this blog should be stopped as well? This is freedom of speech being steped on by a few rotten liberal democRATS.

    leahle
    leahle
    12 years ago

    This is capitalism at its best – what are you all so worried about? Rush doesn’t have as large an audience as you all think. He’s on a lot of stations, but his ratings in individual markets are generally not so good. If the conservatives who own him and his stations (Bain Capital) decide that it is not a good business decision to keep him, then the market has spoken.

    12 years ago

    Media matters is support by george soros [one world order] who has many other liberal 501c companies bashing anything from center to the right of center. They want to shut down conservative radio, tv , or news so the liberals can have their way. End story COMMUNISM. obama is soros’ puppet. We can give everything to everybody; people need to work to get a head and not depend on the nanny state. They want the nanny to feed and change their diapers

    reder
    reder
    12 years ago

    Sorry, I don’t agree with any of you. I am a frum “conservative” Jewish woman and I did find his words very offensive.
    I love listening to talk shows while I work, but I stopped listening to Rush Limbaugh a long time ago. He is the epitome of hypocrisy. He espouses family values but certainly does not live that life at all. He has had multiple marriages; he has no children; and was a serious drug abuser.
    By the way, there are many times that dayanim today advise the use of birth control in chareidishe circles, and I would not want the government interfering with those decisions.
    What I do object to, though, is that the left is so blatantly biased. Bill Maher, a liberal TV host, used the ugliest words on Sarah Palin, and the press to this day has given him a pass.To me it is very scary when one selectively tries to repress free speech (how foul it may be) just because the object of the attack is on the other side.
    Where this has manifested itself in the worst way is in the colleges, and boy does THAT frighten me!

    JOTHEPROFESSOR
    JOTHEPROFESSOR
    12 years ago

    First ammendment rights include the right to expose the falsehoods and distortions in other persdons excercise of free speech rights.

    SherryTheNoahide
    SherryTheNoahide
    12 years ago

    I don’t get it. I thought if a person lost business through HIS OWN FAULT (or rather, his own mouth), and his sponsors want to drop him… why can’t they?!

    Why do they HAVE to keep a foul-mouthed, disgusting, hypocritical, blowhard on the air, if they don’t want to anymore?!

    You people assume because he has a large radio audience… that means he’s got something important to say?! (lol)

    All it proves is that there’s a TON of foul-mouthed, religious “wannabes” in this country, who LOVE Rush’s little jokes about us women & who don’t mind cherishing every word of his nonsense, despite the fact that the man sets NO proper example for us religious or spiritual folks.

    Any “religious” person who listens to this man’s foul mouth every day, is nothing more than a political junkie, who has put politics ahead of G-d a long time ago & made the Republican Party their new religion.

    Don’t get me wrong… I’m a Democrat & even rather Liberal! But I’m also a RELIGIOUS WOMAN, and that comes before my politics!

    Therefore, I wouldn’t spend *MY* time as a religious person, listening to Bill Maher’s filth on HOB or Keith Olbermann’s propaganda on Current Tv! (lol)

    STOP making excuses for Rush!

    Phineas
    Phineas
    12 years ago

    Whether you are conservative or liberal, can’t we all admit that his show is horrid? He lies about statistics and studies, talks about the same thing day after day, calls out liberals for every problem under the sun even of it’s misguided, shields conservatives from valid criticism.

    I have no problem with conservatives but what ever happened to the William F. Buckleys and Irving Kristols that were armed with facts and could debate people in a civil manner while still winning many of those debates.

    Today’s conservative commentators are such hacks except maybe Bob Grant.