Clicca
qui per stampare questo articolo |
9 marzo 2009
E' forte in queste ore la tentazione
di spargere sulle macerie del Partito Democratico veltroniano
le ulteriori lacrime del confronto, elettoralmente impietoso
per la sinistra italiana, con l'America del presidente Obama.
Ma se andiamo oltre le cifre altisonanti del successo elettorale,
solleviamo il velo televisivo delle folle che acclamano una
svolta attesa dopo i deludenti anni di Bush (mentre qui i
delusi semmai rafforzano il deludente), scopriamo che il dibattito
politico negli Stati Uniti mostra parecchie aree oscure e
contraddittorie. Una di queste è il perenne guado di
difficoltà economiche attraversato dai programmi radiofonici
di ispirazione democratica e liberal. A fronte di una destra
radiofonica sempre più pimpante, ascoltata e danarosa,
gli animatori dei talk show progressisti, inclusa la popolare
Randi Rhodes, oggi addirittura impossibilitata a mettere in
onda il suo programma, sono assolutamente minoritari e non
riescono a trovare pace e ascoltatori. Dopo le difficoltà
di Air America, network liberal per eccellenza, ceduto, ricomprato
e sempre in bilico, ora è la volta di Nova M, finora
ultimo rifugio della Rhodes. In questo articolo del Wall Street
Journal si racconta che anche Nova M ha dovuto chiedere la
procedura fallimentare. Andando sul sito Web dell'organizzazione,
si legge della creazione di un nuovo network, On Second Thought
("ripensandoci"), che con tutte le probabilità
non porterà ad alcun ripensamento da parte del pubblico.
Il cuore della talk radio americana batte a destra, non a
sinistra. In ogni caso questa è la pagina degli stream
di Nova.
Strano destino, quella del giornalismo radiofonico di sinistra,
che affonda proprio mentre le ragioni del progressismo trovano
a Washington la loro massima affermazione. Intanto, proprio
da Washington arriva una parola forse definitiva sul problema
della possibile reistituzione della Fairness Doctrine, la
par condicio: una legge che imponeva alle stazioni radio l'equal
time sui dibattiti politici e che era stata mandata in pensione
dall'amministrazione Reagan. Oggi che alcuni parlamentari
parlano di ripristinarla, la talk radio conservatrice sta
erigendo le sue barricate. Ma ieri, un portavoce presidenziale,
Ben LaBolt, ha reso noto a FoxNews (altro baluardo del giornalismo
schierato a destra), che il presidente Obama non pensa affatto
che sia il caso di rispolverare la par condicio. Dopo tutto
Obama è un giurista esperto, un teorico, e sa che una
legge di questo tipo, oltre a incorrere in possibili conflitti
costituzionali, peserebbe negativamente sulla percezione della
sua politica.
-------------------------------------
Liberal Nova M Radio Files for Liquidation
By SARAH MCBRIDE
Nova M Radio Inc., a competitor to
troubled radio network Air America, is filing for bankruptcy
liquidation, according to the company's co-founder, amid mounting
disarray in the small world of liberal talk radio.
Anita and Sheldon Drobny, a married couple from Chicago, founded
Nova M in 2006 and have been funding the business partly out
of their own pockets. Compounding their troubles: Nova M's
highest-profile host, Randi Rhodes, vanished from the airwaves
earlier this month. Mrs. Drobny also said that her husband
is currently hospitalized for problems stemming from the stress
of dealing with the network, which has 34 affiliates.
Nova M hired Ms. Rhodes last year after she fell out with
Air America, which is now run by Pendulum Media LLC. A person
familiar with the matter says that Nova M was supposed to
have promised to cover certain legal costs for Ms. Rhodes,
who some herald as the liberal answer to Rush Limbaugh. But
she quit after discovering that her employment contract didn't
offer such indemnification.
A message on Ms. Rhodes's Web site blames her disappearance
on Nova M's failure to correct an unspecified problem and
says she is seeking a new home for her show. Ms. Rhodes's
lawyer, Robert Gaulin, blamed "technical problems."
Anita Drobny says she can't discuss the terms of Ms. Rhodes's
contract.
Stations that aired Ms. Rhodes are left scrambling. KKGN "Green
960" in San Francisco has found a replacement. But programming
director John Scott fumed in a posting on the station's Web
site that while conservative radio is organized, liberal radio
is plagued by "drama, inconsistency, miscommunication,
ego and a trail of wreckage."
Ms. Rhodes has been replaced on station WJNO in West Palm
Beach, Fla., by conservative talk host Sean Hannity.
Ms. Rhodes left Air America last year after she made inflammatory
comments about Geraldine Ferraro and Hillary Clinton during
a stand-up comedy performance. Although Air America has found
new financial backers, it doesn't have the high profile its
founders had hoped for. The Drobnys, who helped get Air America
off the ground, are no longer involved with that company.
Nova M's other host, Mike Malloy, is switching to another
would-be Air America competitor: Phoenix-based start-up On
Second Thought Radio Network LLC. The backer of On Second
Thought, Dr. Mike Newcomb, who was involved with Nova M until
last year, describes his new network as "talk radio for
independent minds." He plans to use former Nova M station
KNUV in Phoenix as his company's flagship.
Ms. Drobny says she and her husband had poured their own money
into Nova M, but the business became unsustainable last fall.
As advertising revenue plummeted, so did the Drobnys' personal
portfolio, making it impossible for them to keep supporting
the company. Toward the end, Nova M lost $100,000 a month.
The financial stresses eventually affected her husband's health,
she says, leading to the breakdown that landed him in the
hospital.
"There were so many wealthy progressives out there that
could have made [progressive radio] happen," she said,
but they didn't want to help. "It ended up being on Sheldon's
shoulders."
***
Obama Nixes Fairness Doctine Revival
By Anne E. Kornblut
President Obama does not support
reviving the so-called Fairness doctrine, an aide said on
Wednesday, knocking down speculation that Obama was open to
reinstating the rule requiring broadcasters to air alternate
perspectives on controversial issues.
Some administration officials had made non-committal remarks
about the policy. But Ben LaBolt, a White House spokesman,
said Obama "does not support the Fairness Doctrine,"
and never had. He pointed to comments from a spokesman during
the 2008 campaign to that effect, saying Obama was now "reaffirming"
his opposition to the abandoned rule.
Conservatives fiercely oppose the doctrine, and have threatened
to cut off funding to the Federal Communications Commission
if it tries to impose editorial limits on broadcasters, as
some Democrats have occasionally urged.
(radiopassioni.it)
|