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Can Protests Bring Hate Spewing Don Imus Down, After Another Incident of Racist Commentary?

A concerted campaign might be able to turn enough heat on Imus's corporate bosses and send the radio shock jock to the sidelines.
 
 
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A range of protestors, including Revs. Jesse Jackson and Al Sharpton, are trying to raise the stakes in the wake of Don Imus's most recent hate language incident on his shock talk radio show. While it is too early to tell if Imus has gone too far this time, a concerted campaign might be able to turn enough heat on his corporate bosses, to send Imus to the sidelines.

The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ), the editor-in-chief of Essence magazine, and well known sports columnists are among a growing number calling for Imus's dismissal over his racially-charged comments about the Rutgers women's basketball team, which finished second in the recent NCAA tournament.

The growing gaggle of critics are clearly not impressed by Imus's on-air apology or his corporate bosses mea culpas and promises of holding Imus accountable. "What he has said has deeply hurt too many people -- black and white, male and female," said NABJ President Bryan Monroe. "His so-called apology ... is too little, too late."

In case the reader is not up-to-date, Imus called the women of the primarily black Rutgers team "nappy headed hos" during a Wednesday morning, April 4 segment of his show, which broadcasts to millions of listeners on more than 70 stations and the MSNBC cable network. In addition Imus's producer Bernard McQuirk called the players "hard core hos" and went on to compare the Rutgers game against Tennessee for the NCAA championship as the "Jigaboos vs. the Wannabees, a take off from Spike Lee's satirical film School Daze.

Imus on Sharpton Show

The fact that the story has legs may have led Imus to decide to go on Sharpton's radio show, today, Monday. April 9, in a surprising development. Nevertheless, Sharpton told the AP his position on Imus was unchanged. He still wants Imus fired, and intends to write the Federal Communications Commission about the matter. Sharpton said, "We cannot keep going through offending us and then apologizing and then acting like it never happened. Somewhere we've got to stop this.'' Sharpton told AP he would "picket Imus' New York radio home, WFAN-AM, unless the veteran of nearly 40 years of anything-goes broadcasting is gone within a week."

In addition, The Rev. Jesse Jackson said his RainbowPUSH Coalition plans to protest Monday in Chicago outside the offices of NBC, which owns MSNBC, over the remark Imus made last Wednesday during his show.

Taking Imus to Task

Phil Sheridan, a Philadelphia Inquirer sports writer, noted that Imus and his protectors are likely to trot out the notion of political correctness, "whose knees jerk in that direction when hate speech is called hate speech. The First Amendment protects every Americans right to freedom of speech. It doesn't protect racists high paying media jobs. ... It is one thing for Spike Lee to explore issues of racial identity in an edgy satire, it is another for two out-of -touch white imbeciles to express their Neanderthal reaction to a women's basketball team." Columnist Filip Bondy of the working class tabloid Daily News, in a column headlined "Imus spews hate, should be fired," wrote that shock jock "should be axed for one of the most despicable comments ever uttered on the air."

David Carr writing in the New York Times, wryly noted, that the "nappy headed ho's" comment was "even for Imus, a radio host who knows his way around an insult, a shocking remark, one that seemed to impugn both the physical and moral characteristics of a team composed mostly of black players. ... What followed was a familiar dance for Imus and the media companies who profit from his ability to shock his way to big audiences: outrage, indignation, and the expression of deep regret."

Imus wondered aloud on his show the following day what the big deal was. People should not be offended by 'some idiot comment meant to be amusing," Imus said. And quickly, after the media watchdog group Media Matters for America provided the details of the Imus content, the corporate sponsors offered their apologies. Allison Gollust, a spokeswoman for MSNBC, which simulcasts "Imus in the Morning,'' said the network considers Imus's comments "deplorable'' and is reviewing the matter.

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