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Why Hasn’t Clear Channel Punished Rush Limbaugh?

Rush Limbaugh’s been facing a wave of protest since his ugly attacks on Georgetown Law student Sandra Fluke: he called her a “slut” and a “prostitute” after she testified before Congress about the importance of employer coverage of contraception. In response, advertisers have begun to pull out of the show. And in a near-unprecedented move, Limbaugh issued an apology for his choice of words, though not for the sentiments behind them. But Limbaugh’s efforts to save his show seem unlikely to stop advertisers from fleeing the show or to stem the tide of criticism from figures ranging from Sen. John McCain, to New York’s Cardinal Dolan—to one of Limbaugh’s colleagues in the shock jock game, former CBS radio host Don Imus.

“So were it me, and I ran a radio station or whatever, I would make him go down there and apologize to her face-to-face. He owns a Gulfstream 4, get on it, go to Washington, take her lunch, tell her, ‘look, I’m sorry I said this stuff and I’ll never do it again,” Imus said. He recalled that when he made offensive remarks about the Rutgers women’s basketball team, referring to them as “nappy headed hoes,” “Look at what I did. It was a lame attempt to be funny, and it was three words. And I went and met with these people after I’d been fired…If he was on my radio station, he wouldn’t be on it.”

Imus’s criticism also illustrates that Limbaugh is held to different standards than his fellow commentators on radio and television. Here are some of the punishments Limbaugh’s counterparts have faced for ugly sexual remarks about women:

-In 2009, after Imus made his remarks about the Rutgers basketball team, CBS Radio suspended him for two weeks without pay, MSNBC stopped simulcasting the program on television, and CBS eventually fired him even though his program netted $15 million in annual revenue. Imus apologized at the time and publicly acknowledged his comments were “really stupid.”

-Last May, MSNBC suspended host Ed Schultz for a week after he used language similar to Limbaugh’s during his radio show. Talking about Laura Ingrahm, a staple of right-wing radio, he described her as “this right-wing slut, what’s her name? Laura Ingraham? Yeah, she’s a talk slut.” He apologized to Ingraham on television, calling his language “vile and inappropriate,” and saying “It was wrong, uncalled for, and I recognize the severity of what I said. I apologize to you, Laura, and ask for your forgiveness.”

-In February, Clear Channel suspended California radio hosts John Kobylt and Ken Chiampou for two days after a segment about Whitney Houston’s death in which Kobylt imagined what it must have been like to be Houston’s friends, saying: “It’s like, ‘ah Jesus, here comes the crack ho again. What’s she gonna do? Oh, look at that, she’s doing handstands next to the pool. Very good, crack ho. nice.’ After a while, everybody’s exhausted. And then you find out she’s dead.” The hosts agreed to attend sensitivity training and bring on guests to discuss why their remarks were so ugly.

Fluke was asked today whether she thought Limbaugh should be fired. She said that was a choice for Clear Channel and Limbaugh’s advertisers. But we’ll ask for her: what makes Limbaugh immune—thus far—from punishment by his employer for an ugly, extended personal attack on a woman performing her civic responsibilities? Maybe it’s that, given the profits Limbaugh rakes in, Clear Channel’s established the price of a woman’s reputation.

NEWS FLASH

‘Imus In the Morning’ Mocks Chris Christie’s ‘Numbnuts’ Comment | On this morning’s Imus In The Morning radio show, Rob Bartlett mocked New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie (R-NJ) for calling openly gay state Assemblyman Reed Gusciora (D) “numbnuts.” Christie made the comments on Monday, in response to Gusciora’s outrage over the governor’s suggestion that the Civil Rights movement could have been decided through a popular vote, and doubled down on his characterization later in the week. Barlett went on to impersonate Christie and give out nicknames to other public figures including, Marcus Bachmann:

LGBT

Don Imus Urges Chris Wallace To Ban ‘Bigoted Idiots Like Rick Santorum’ From Fox News Sunday

This morning, radio host Don Imus urged Fox News’ Chris Wallace to stop inviting “bigoted idiots like Rick Santorum” on his Sunday political talk show, saying that Santorum “diminishes your program” by suggesting that openly gay and lesbian soldiers “cause problems for people living in close quarters.” Imus’ remarks come after Santorum appeared on Fox News Sunday and doubled down on his claim that the recent repeal of Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell inserts “sexual activity” into the military. Watch the exchange:

Wallace also hit back against criticism from Ann Coulter, who said that “Juan Williams should have punched Chris Wallace in the face” for likening Santorum’s rhetoric about gay people to the arguments deployed by opponents of racially integrating the military during the 1940s. “You know, ever since Ms. Coulter attacked the 9/11 widows and said they were self-promoters, who were enjoying their husband’s death on 9/11, I stopped paying attention to her,” he said. [HT: Mediaite]

Media

Imus Calls Anderson Cooper Beating ‘A Stunt’ To Gain Publicity

Our guest blogger is Elon Green, a freelance writer living in Brooklyn.

The protests in Egypts have already resulted in a great deal of bloodshed and journalists, foreign and domestic, have not been exempt. As The New York Times recently noted, “[J]ournalists were chased through the streets and had their equipment stolen or smashed. Some were beaten so badly that they required hospital treatment.” News organizations across the political spectrum have been on the receiving end: a Fox News correspondent was the target of a Molotov cocktail; ABC staff was threatened with beheading; and, mostly famously, CNN’s Anderson Cooper and his colleagues have been twice attacked.

Right wing personalities have reacted to these incidents with either apathy or derision, arguing that journalists in the thick of the Egyptian uprising are simply narcissists or hungry for ratings. Until now, however, they have avoided suggesting the incidents mentioned above are staged.

But yesterday on his radio show — which is also broadcast of Fox Business Channel — Don Imus managed to do just that. Here’s Imus reacting to the news that Cooper, in response to the attacks, has gone into hiding,” claiming that Cooper made the whole thing up just for ratings:

MCGUIRK: And he doesn’t know this morning when he can leave his little secret hiding spot.

IMUS: That is a scam to get them to watch CNN.

MCGUIRK: No, no, caught on tape the whole thing.

IMUS: Yes, but, wrestling, like wrestling, not really doing that. Come on, I like Anderson Cooper.

MCGUIRK: A stunt, you call it a stunt.

IMUS: I call it a CNN stunt, getting killed by Fox and he said what can we do? Let’s see. For example how will they get the reporters out of there?

Watch it:

Media

Wallace Backtracks After Implying That Fox Is The Right-Wing Mirror Of ‘Far’ ‘Left’ Helen Thomas

Following Hearst columnist Helen Thomas’ retirement, reporters have been chattering about who will take her front row seat at White House press briefings, with the main contenders said to be Bloomberg and Fox News. On Don Imus’ Fox Business show today, Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace advocated for his network getting the chair, saying that it would be “the final, sort of, payment for, for Helen Thomas.”

“If this were to happen because obviously she was very far to the left wing and if her seat were to be taken by Fox News it would just be kind of poetic justice,” said Wallace. Imus quickly noticed that Wallace was all but saying that Fox was right wing and gave Wallace the opportunity to walk back his comment:

IMUS: But what are you suggesting about Fox News then?

WALLACE: Pardon?

IMUS: What are you suggesting about Fox News?

WALLACE: Well, I just realized that’s probably not the way to go on this. In any case.

IMUS: No it wasn’t, was it.

WALLACE: We’re fair and balanced. That’s the point.

IMUS: Let me dig you out.

WALLACE: She’s off to the left.

IMUS: Good. Why don’t we dig out out of the hole you’ve just dug for yourself.

WALLACE: You know what the old line is. Just stop digging. So, in any case.

IMUS: By the way, say hi to Roger when he calls you. It’s a little joke.

Watch it:

This isn’t the first time Wallace has slipped up on the Fox party line that denies the network’s right-wing leaning. In November 2009, when Wallace did an interview with Rush Limbaugh, the conservative talker included Fox News as an example of the “conservative media” that has been spawned in the wake of his success on the radio. Wallace didn’t push back on Limbaugh’s assertion about Fox’s ideology and instead just moved on to the next question, saying, “let’s talk about you.”

Politics

Glenn Beck refuses to endorse ‘fat phony J.D. Hayworth’ on Don Imus’ show.

Yesterday, on Don Imus’ Fox Business Network show, Glenn Beck made clear that he is no fan of Sen. John McCain (R-AZ) — who he refers to as a “progressive Republican” who should go “off into the sunset” after this year’s midterm elections. Nonetheless, Beck also insisted that that does not mean that he is a supporter of McCain’s opponent, former Rep. J.D. Hayworth (R-AZ), who Imus derides as a “fat phony” and an “undisciplined maggot”:

BECK: I think he’s an honorable man, but I think it’s for him…to go off into the sunset. [...]

IMUS: You’re for that fat phony J.D. Hayworth?

BECK: Oh no I’m not.

IMUS: That fat undisciplined maggot. Talk show jock — that’s what you’re for?

BECK: No. Just because I’m for John McCain going away now, does not mean I’m for J.D. Hayworth.

Watch it:

Despite the fact that Hayworth feels that he is the “candidate of a majority of tea partiers,” tea party leadership has largely shunned him. According to The Hill, Beck has dealt a big blow to the Hayworth campaign, which reportedly indicated to reporters back in March that they were “hoping to have Beck’s endorsement.” Beck has also added himself to a growing list of right-wing tea party sympathizers who have refused to align themselves with Hayworth. However, while Hayworth might be too radical for the likes of Sarah Palin or Dick Armey, several polls show he is virtually tied with McCain among Arizona Republican voters. During his interview, Beck also defended Arizona’s new immigration law, saying that the Constitution is “not a suicide pact” and that if the government “won’t do the things it has to,” then it’s basically okay to circumvent it.

Media

Wallace Responds To Cokie Roberts’ Criticism By Joking About Her Watching Kristol Crawl Around In A Dog Collar

In February, while asking Fox News Sunday host Chris Wallace about an upcoming interview with Sarah Palin, Don Imus inquired, “When you interview her, will she be sitting on your lap?” “One can only hope,” responded Wallace. Fox & Friends’ Gretchen Carlson criticized Wallace and Imus the next day, wondering, “Would you ask that of a man?” In a segment that aired on NPR yesterday, Cokie Roberts continued the criticism, calling it “appalling.” “They would never make such jokes about a minority, you’d be in terrible trouble,” said Roberts. “But you can still make sexist jokes about women and get away with it.”

During an appearance on Imus’ radio show this morning, Imus asked Wallace if he was “upset because Cokie Roberts has been slapping you around.” At first, Wallace acted like he didn’t know who Roberts was, but later in the segment, he joked about her watching a bondage scene that Imus imagined between the Weekly Standard’s Bill Kristol and Fox News’ Dick Morris:

IMUS: Oh, Bill Kristol’s a creep. Anyway, we’ll find him with a dog collar on with Dick Morris, crawling around some hotel room before it’s all over.

WALLACE: What, what…

IMUS: And you’ll be there with Sarah Palin on your lap, won’t you.

WALLACE: And if I am, Cokie Roberts will probably be watching.

Wallace then conceded that his original exchange about Palin sitting on his lap was “a big mistake,” but was amazed by “the idea that people would take any of this stuff seriously.” “It’s disturbing,” replied Imus. Watch it:

Unfortunately, it’s not surprising that that Wallace wouldn’t understand why people take sexism “seriously.” In January 2009, when FreedomWorks’ Dick Armey responded to an argument by Salon.com editor Joan Walsh with the sexist comment, “I’m so damn glad that you can never be my wife,” Wallace told right-wing radio host Mike Gallagher that he thought it was “pretty funny” that “feminists are very angry” about Armey’s sexist comments.

Transcript: Read more

Politics

Imus: Pat Robertson ‘should be put to sleep.’

Yesterday, soon after the devastating 7.0 magnitude earthquake hit much of Haiti, Rush Limbaugh took the opportunity to attack President Obama, saying the White House will “use this to burnish their…credibility with the black community — the both the light-skinned and dark-skinned black community in this country.” But televangelist Pat Robertson took it one step futher, saying the earthquake happened because Haitians “swore a pact with the devil.” Today on his Fox Business show, Don Imus went after Limbaugh. “One would think that you could just wait a few days – Rush – until you know you can run your fat mouth about it then,” he said. But Imus had some particularly harsh words for Robertson:

IMUS: You know, I’m not sure whether sometimes I’m ambivalent about whether I support the death penalty or not. I guess I do if I didn’t have to do it, but in his case, I’d pull the switch on him myself. I mean he should be put to sleep. How does that contribute anything? It’s insanity.

Watch it:

Media

Fox Business’ Imus Mocks And Fact-Checks Fox’s Brit Hume, Reports That He’s Wrong About Buddhism

On Fox News Sunday yesterday, Brit Hume offered some candid ecumenical advice to Tiger Woods as he deals with his marriage infidelities:

HUME: He’s said to be a Buddhist. I don’t think that faith offers the kind of forgiveness and redemption that is offered by the Christian faith. So my message to Tiger would be, “Tiger, turn to the Christian faith and you can make a total recovery and be a great example to the world.”

This morning, Hume’s colleagues on the Fox Business network decided to do a little digging into his claims. The Don Imus show crew reported that Hume doesn’t quite have his facts straight on Buddhism:

IMUS: Well, we checked this morning and unfortunately, or perhaps fortunately if you are a Buddhist, there is a path to recovery and redemption. Right? Well yes there is. The idea of redemption — nirvana under Buddhism — is achieving the state of being freed from greed, hate, and delusion.

Imus’ co-host Charles McCord tried to defend Hume by arguing that he was merely stating that Buddhism didn’t offer “the kind of path to redemption”; rather, it’s a different path. Imus responded, “But wouldn’t one infer from what he said…is that there was no path to redemption?” “You could,” agreed McCord.

Appearing later in the show, Fox Business anchor Dagen McDowell began mocking Hume. “He might as well have just let out like an Ernest Angley-style ‘be healed!’ and ‘to the Lord, for he is good! Put your hand on the TV!” Watch a compilation:

Imus noted that Hume’s colleagues on the panel — including “the nut from wherever he’s from — [Bill] Kristol” (who is not Christian) — appeared to be stunned into silence and “looking at their shoes” while Hume proselytized.

Politics

CNBC Says Dobbs Will Not Be Hired, Dobbs Denies Talks With Network Took Place

Yesterday, the New York Times reported that former CNN anchor Lou Dobbs held talks with CNBC and raised speculation that Dobbs might be hired as a commentator by the business news network. A CNBC spokesperson has now affirmed that Dobbs will not be hired by the network. The New York Times Mediadecoder reports:

The business news network said Tuesday evening that it was no longer talking to Mr. Dobbs, the former CNN anchor, about a potential job.

The statement came after The New York Times reported on Tuesday morning that Mr. Dobbs had “held talks with the business news network CNBC in recent weeks.” A network spokesman did not deny the report about the talks, but said: “We are not in talks or negotiating with Lou Dobbs. He is not going to work for CNBC.”

This morning, in an interview with Don Imus on Fox Business Network, Dobbs denied ever talking to CNBC:

IMUS: So I read in the paper that you’re going to CNBC, that can’t possibly be true. Is it?

DOBBS: I have no idea where they even got that. I am sitting her in Florida at our vacation home, thinking about what I’m going to be doing.

IMUS: Did you talk to anybody at CNBC?

DOBBS: Absolutely not, absolutely not.

Watch it:

However, Dobbs did admit to Imus that he talked to Fox News president Roger Ailes. Dobbs stated that Fox News did not offer him a job, but that he would “consider” working there if they did. He added that he would also “consider being President of the United States” amidst widespread reports that Dobbs is contemplating either launching a 2012 presidential campaign or a senatorial run against Sen. Bob Menendez (D-NJ).

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