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- <text id=89TT1272>
- <title>
- May 15, 1989: Bugle Boys Of The Airwaves
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1989
- May 15, 1989 Waiting For Washington
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- RADIO, Page 88
- Bugle Boys Of the Airwaves
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Talk-show hosts stir up a storm of political action
- </p>
- <p>By Richard Zoglin
- </p>
- <p> Not long after oil began spilling from the tanker Exxon
- Valdez in Alaska, anger started welling up in Mike Siegel. From
- his base in Seattle, Siegel launched a national anti-Exxon
- campaign: distributing bumper stickers, organizing picket lines
- and traveling to the company's New York City headquarters to
- dump 2,000 protest letters on the president's desk.
- </p>
- <p> A phone call last December from consumer advocate Ralph
- Nader spurred Jerry Williams of Boston to help organize a
- citizens' revolt against the proposed 51% congressional pay
- raise. Among the tactics: deluging members of Congress with tea
- bags as a reminder of the Boston Tea Party.
- </p>
- <p> Tom Leykis of Los Angeles prefers more dramatic measures.
- When singer Cat Stevens expressed support of the Ayatullah
- Khomeini's death threat against author Salman Rushdie, Leykis
- donned a hard hat and crushed a pile of Stevens' records with
- a steamroller.
- </p>
- <p> Who are these feisty activists? They span the political
- spectrum from liberal to conservative, though most share a
- populist sympathy for the little guy and a suspicion of Big
- Government and Big Business. Like protesters of the 1960s, they
- have a flair for attention-grabbing gestures. But much of their
- power derives from a factor that distinguishes them from
- grass-roots activists of the past.
- </p>
- <p> They're on the radio.
- </p>
- <p> Yes, folks, these are hosts of radio call-in shows. Such
- programs, of course, have long served as a sort of national
- party line, a place where average citizens can rant, in
- blissful anonymity, about everything from the local baseball
- team's losing streak to the Bush Administration's arms policy.
- The hosts are often loud and abrasive, with an opinion for every
- issue and a put-down for every adversary. But in the past few
- months, a clutch of conversationalists has crossed the line from
- simply mouthing off to orchestrating nationwide political
- protests.
- </p>
- <p> The defining event for these radio activists was the battle
- early this year over the proposed congressional pay raise.
- Inspired by outraged callers, a number of talk hosts initiated
- letter-writing and phone-in campaigns, and kept in touch with
- each other to exchange information and plot tactics. The radio
- campaign was widely credited with helping scuttle the pay
- increase. Now several of these hosts are leading the protests
- against Exxon's slow cleanup of the Alaska oil spill, collecting
- cut-up Exxon credit cards and advocating a company boycott. More
- such crusades may be in the offing. Williams, of Boston's
- WRKO-AM, has invited his fellow talk hosts to a convention in
- June. The aim, he says, is to "see what we have in common and
- see if we can get together on some issues."
- </p>
- <p> This new strain of talk radio, Nader maintains approvingly,
- "is the working people's medium. There's no ticket of admission.
- You only have to dial." Congressman Chester Atkins, a
- Massachusetts Democrat who was a chief target of pay-raise
- opponents, gamely praises the format as well. "Talk radio is in
- touch with the anger and hostility and frustrations that people
- feel with respect to government in their daily lives," he says.
- </p>
- <p> But the current radio activism also has elements of a Meet
- John Doe nightmare. The hosts have unique access to large
- constituencies, yet they often seem motivated as much by
- ratings as by the public weal: political protest sells. In
- their inflammatory zeal, moreover, they tend to offer
- simplistic, emotionally satisfying remedies for complex
- problems. "It's a desperate attempt to get ratings," says
- Michael Jackson, the longtime ABC TalkRadio host. "Rather than
- tackling an issue from many angles, (the activist hosts) would
- sooner be the little boys with the bugles leading the charge."
- </p>
- <p> In defense, Mike Siegel of Seattle's KING-AM argues that
- "we don't manipulate, coerce or control. We're just the means
- through which the public is heard." Siegel, 44, is a relatively
- well-credentialed member of the talk-show fraternity. A
- Brooklyn, N.Y., native, he has a Ph.D. in speech communications,
- and began doing radio talk shows while a college professor in
- Massachusetts. In 1980 he moved to Miami's WNWS-AM, where his
- first big on-air campaign helped defeat a proposed rate increase
- by Southern Bell Telephone.
- </p>
- <p> Siegel, who is comparatively mild-mannered as talk hosts
- go, joined KING last November. He has railed against local
- police for laxity in the antidrug war and against Eastern Air
- Lines Chairman Frank Lorenzo (he joined a picket line during the
- current Eastern strike). Soon he hopes to stir passions over the
- savings and loan bailout. "I'm not a Pied Piper," he says, "but
- I do believe in what I do."
- </p>
- <p> So does Jerry Williams, 65, a cantankerous veteran of more
- than 30 years of talk shows and a fixture at WRKO in Boston
- since 1981. A onetime liberal who now calls himself a populist,
- Williams often had Malcolm X as a guest during the '60s; today
- he spends much of his time inveighing against Governor Michael
- Dukakis. Before his role in the pay-raise controversy, Williams'
- most notable on-air campaign was against Massachusetts'
- mandatory seat-belt law: he helped gather 40,000 signatures on
- a petition calling for a referendum, which led to the law's
- repeal.
- </p>
- <p> Like Siegel, Williams downplays the power that radio talk
- hosts wield. "All we did," he says of the anti-pay raise jihad,
- "was direct passions and emotions to the right place." Not
- everyone regards him so benignly. Columnist Tom Moroney of the
- suburban Middlesex News has charged that Williams "does a
- disservice to the political process" and claims that he isn't
- legally registered to vote in Massachusetts. (Williams denies
- the charge; Moroney, he counters, is "evil incarnate.")
- </p>
- <p> If Williams and Siegel are generals in the new radio army,
- there are plenty of eager lieutenants vying for attention. Mark
- Williams, who came to San Diego's XTRA-AM from Phoenix last
- July, ticks off his on-air crusades with self-promotional
- relish. "In Phoenix," he relates, "I killed an antiabortion bill
- in the house by one vote, going on the air a couple of hours
- before and giving out the phone numbers of undecided
- legislators. I also managed to put together a spousal-rape law."
- </p>
- <p> Some of these on-air campaigns have drawn fire. When
- Leykis, of KFI-AM in Los Angeles, announced plans for a public
- burning of Cat Stevens records (fire-department objections
- forced him to switch to a steamroller), fellow KFI talk host
- Geoff Edwards denounced his tactics as "fascist" and refused to
- air his promotional spots. Edwards lost his job as a result.
- "You've got a lot of people with questionable credentials
- manipulating people's emotions," he gripes. "A guy who was a
- rock-'n'-roll deejay last week (might be) calling for the
- bombing of Iran.''
- </p>
- <p> Edwards is not alone in his concerns. Several talk hosts
- have opted out of the Exxon boycott ("We felt that cutting up
- credit cards hurts the local guys running the gas station," says
- Steve Cochran, of Minneapolis' KDWB-FM). Others oppose efforts
- to organize radio hosts nationwide. "All the bad it can do
- outweighs the good it can do," says talk-show veteran Larry
- King. A number of prominent talk hosts are staying away from the
- convention being organized by Jerry Williams, and the management
- of New York City's WABC-AM has forbidden its employees to
- attend. "We feel that unifying talk-show hosts on any political
- topic is undue and unfair concentration of media power," says
- program director John Mainelli.
- </p>
- <p> The activists pooh-pooh such fears. "Collectively and
- individually, talk-show hosts have the fattest egos you'd ever
- want to bump heads against," says Mark Williams. "So the
- likelihood of them agreeing on a national agenda is minimal."
- If they do, however, it might be time for listeners to follow
- an oft-repeated bit of talk-show advice: Turn your radio down.
- </p>
- <p>--Elaine Dutka/Los Angeles and Leslie Whitaker/New York
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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