But frustration has been mounting among consumers and politicians over radio's rampant consolidation, and subsequent charges that enormous, out-of-town corporate owners no longer adhere to local standards. Radio is also in trouble because for years it looked the other way as crude, sex-obsessed shock jocks, interviewing strippers and reviewing porn movies on the air, clearly violated FCC rules that forbid the broadcasting of sexually explicit programming between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m., when children may be tuning in.
"That type of thing doesn't belong on the public air space," argues Belendiuk. "If you want to tell me what two consenting adults do in their bedroom is their own business, I agree. But if two adults are on the corner of Fifth and Main Street, that's a different standard. And [radio] broadcasts to the corner of Fifth and Main."
Grappling with ways to deal with indecency and the admittedly vague rules that seem to guide the FCC, Clear Channel in January called for an industry-wide "Local Values Task Force" to develop indecency guidelines. Yet Clear Channel's decision to yank Stern and the way the company took such a gratuitous swipe at the jock -- and indirectly at their competitor, Infinity -- signals a new, every-man-for-himself strategy among radio broadcasters worried about the buzz over indecency.
"Someone has to be made to be the poster child of bad behavior and Clear Channel is saying, 'It's not us,'" says Belendiuk. The clear implication of Clear Channel's move to drop Stern is that Infinity continues to broadcast a vulgar, offensive program.
"It's interesting, because Stern is not a big part of Clear Channel's programming, he's only on in six markets for them," says Unmacht. "So banning him serves a double benefit for Clear Channel. It looks like they're doing something about indecency, and they get to kick their competitor [Infinity] in the teeth. It almost looks like Clear Channel's filing an indecency complaint against Howard Stern."
"Clear Channel is a company with a history of being Machiavellian," notes Sean Ross, vice president of music and programming at Edison Media Research and former radio editor at Billboard magazine. "That said, it looks like people are in a defense mode, not a Machiavellian one. Broadcasters don't casually toss off a major-market morning show like Stern." (Conservative talk-show host Rush Limbaugh, whose program is syndicated by Clear Channel, misled listeners on Thursday by suggesting it was the government, not Clear Channel, that was attempting to "censor" Stern.)
A Clear Channel spokesperson did not return calls seeking comment.
Still, an obvious question arises from the housecleaning: How is it that programs that have been broadcast day in and day out for years on Clear Channel stations are suddenly deemed to be indecent? "It's kind of like 'Casablanca' -- they had to have known what was going on," says Unmacht. "Clear Channel didn't have a chance to listen to Howard Stern's show over the last five years?"
"Of course they knew about the programming," adds Belendiuk. "Bubba was the No. 1-rated show in Tampa. He could have been sacrificing virgins on the radio and the Mays [family] couldn't have cared less."
In fact, Clem did sacrifice a boar on the air, and Clear Channel executives shrugged. In February 2001, his morning show broadcast first the castration of a live boar and then the killing of the beast from the station's parking lot. The Tampa station then posted pictures of the blood-soaked stunt on its Web site. (It was the third time in a year that an animal was killed or tortured on-air at a Clear Channel station.) Bubba was brought up on charges for animal cruelty and was eventually acquitted. The story became a local Tampa media spectacle. Was Clear Channel simply unaware?
Or what about the morning of Sept. 11, when Bubba and his morning crew joked about breaking news that a plane had crashed into the World Trade Center. Bubba suggested they crank call and tell workers there, "In case you guys don't know it, the building's on fire!" One sidekick joked, "You won't be able to go to Windows on the World for lunch today!"
But on Thursday, Clear Channel's Hogan struck an apologetic tone, telling members of Congress he was "ashamed to be in any way associated with Bubba The Love Sponge's words. More than anything else, I am embarrassed by Bubba's broadcasts." The shows, he added, "are tasteless, they are vulgar, and they should not, do not and will not represent what Clear Channel is about."
Now he tells us.
About the writer
Eric Boehlert is a senior writer at Salon.
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