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Air America (radio network)

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File:Air America Radio.jpg
Logo of Air America Radio, a U.S. radio network and program syndication sevice with a liberal point of view.

Air America Radio is a full-service progressive talk radio network and program syndication service in the United States. The network debuted on March 31, 2004, and features discussion and information programs reflecting a liberal, left-wing, or progressive point of view. The network specializes in presentations and monologues by on-air personalities, guest interviews, calls by listeners, and news reports.

The network's flagship station is New York City's WLIB AM 1190, which it currently leases time on. When the lease expires on August 31, 2006, the network will move to WWRL (1600 AM), a station with a somewhat weaker signal.[1]

Programming overview

Like most talk radio outlets, Air America Radio's programming includes news, talk, comedy, interviews, guest editorials, and listeners' telephone calls. In various markets, there are traffic and weather reports throughout the broadcast day generated by local affiliates. The talk portions feature some extended host monologues in the classic talk radio format. Live and pre-recorded comedy routines, featuring various comedians, are also aired.

News

Air America has a brief summary of current news at the top of each hour from standard wire service sources such as AP and UPI. However this news report differs from those on other talk radio stations in that it places more emphasis on labor news, and less on financial news. Many affiliates choose to use other news services or run their own newscasts during the six minute "news hole" at the top of the hour. Current newscasters include Bill Crowley and Wayne Gillman. Felipe Luciano, who was formerly Vice President for News for Air America Radio, is no longer with the network.

Public affairs and editorials

The public affairs shows tend to closely follow the news of the day with monologues and reflections offered by the hosts. Listener calls are worked into these sections along with guest interviews. Air America Radio has a definite political orientation, and many broadcasts could be described as advocacy journalism or editorial and opinion pieces. In general, the hosts, guests and viewpoints of Air America represent the left and center wings of the Democratic Party, or, in the case of Mike Malloy, the Green Party.

Music

In addition to parody songs, Air America Radio uses music in a variety of ways. Most of the talk shows use music as a transition between commercials and each segment. Most shows have a theme song, and some use music during other segments. Most music is commercially released rock music. The internet feed features a limited selection of non-vocal, non-commercial rock-like music during time reserved for local affiliates' commercials. Although better known for its political shows, Air America also features some music-oriented shows. Currently these are The Revolution Starts Now and On The Real. The cancelled program entitled The Kyle Jason Show also focused on music and music history.

Weekday programs

Air America produces twenty hours of weekday network programming, including news summaries at the top of each hour. All of the programs below air on stations under full control of the network, along with rebroadcasts of some of the day's shows from 1AM - 5AM ET.

The Air America Radio lineup as of March 15, 2006:

Cancelled Programming:

Weekend programs

On many Air America affiliates, weekends feature repeats and highlights from the network's weekday shows, combined with new original programming and some syndicated shows produced independently.

New network programming for weekends includes:

Cancelled Weekend Programming:

Syndication

On September 8, 2005 Air America Radio announced that the Network has formed Air America Syndication, a separate division designed to offer additional programming and services to both Progressive Talk and other talk/music formats.

History

Air America was conceived as a for-profit operation in response to the perception by many liberals that conservative dominance of talk radio--particularly Rush Limbaugh's popularity--gave the Republicans an electoral advantage over the Democrats because it helped the Republicans turn out their political base. Some argued conservative dominance of talk radio might have played an important role in winning a shift in the balance of the United States House of Representatives in the 1994 midterm elections.

Similarly, critics argued that conservative talk radio hampered Clinton's second term by keeping alive stories of scandal in the White House, and contributing to the victory of George W. Bush in the 2000 presidential election.

Many, including British journalists Jonathan Freedland, John Micklethwait, and Adrian Wooldridge, have credited conservative talk radio with helping to shift the tone of American public debate. By creating an electoral environment where Republican candidates are more able to succeed, Democratic candidates are forced further to the right in order to be "electable". Micklethwait and Wooldridge wrote about this in The Right Nation, and David Brock wrote about it in The Republican Noise Machine.

The growing belief that liberal groups were ineffective in getting their viewpoint across in the media was the reason the concept of creating a liberal talk radio network emerged.

A number of conservative commentators countered that the reason conservative shows did well on radio was because of the lack of a conservative voice from more prominent news sources. They asserted that a liberal network would not do well, because those view points are already well represented by other news sources.

Beginnings

Air America was the initial idea of Sheldon Drobny and Anita Drobny, who wanted to start a progressive radio talk network to compete with conservative talk radio. The first liberal network, the UAW's i.e. America Network, which was home to current Air America host Mike Malloy, never gained national attention. Its last day on the air was February 27, 2004, only days before Air America took to the airwaves. Air America was started as part of Progress Media, which said it had amassed $30 million in venture capital prior to its debut, a claim which later turned out to be untrue (only $6 million was initially collected). Two individuals from Guam, Rex Sorensen and Evan Montvel Cohen, were involved in raising the capital but denied any wrongdoing.[2] Cohen had an unusual background for someone in his position within a progressive radio network since he was a Republican political operative in Guam and former chief of staff for Republican Governor Tommy Tanaka. [1] Cohen dismissed concerns by saying he was a committed "progressive" and that Republicans in Guam "are left of Paul Wellstone."

Difficulties

Two weeks after its debut, Air America Radio was pulled off the air in two key markets due to a contract dispute. Multicultural Radio owned two stations contracted to carry the AAR signal, in Chicago and Santa Monica, California. Air America alleged that Multicultural Radio had sold time on their Los Angeles station to both AAR and another party, and claimed that that was why they stopped payment on checks due to Multicultural while AAR investigated.

Multicultural Radio noted that Air America bounced a check and claimed they were owed in excess of $1 million. Air America Radio filed a complaint in New York Supreme Court, charging breach of contract and was briefly granted an injunction to restore the network on WNTD-AM in Chicago. On April 20, the network announced the dispute had been settled, and Air America's last day of broadcast on WNTD was April 30. The New York Supreme Court ultimately concluded that the injunction was improvidently entered and that Air America Radio's court action was without merit, dismissing Air America's complaint and awarding over $250,000 in damages and attorneys' fees to Multicultural. [2] According to a subsequent lawsuit filed by Multicultural, Air America Radio never paid the sums ordered by the court. [3]

Four weeks after Air America's debut, its CEO, Mark Walsh, and executive vice president for programming, Dave Logan, left the network. One week after those departures, its chairman and vice chairman, Evan Cohen and his investment partner Rex Sorensen, also left. Some attributed Cohen's departure to investor unhappiness with how he handled the dispute with Multicultural Radio Broadcasting.

Columnist Michael Goodwin of the New York Daily News quoted a marketing communications manager from General Motors, declaring "GM will not advertise on any Air America affiliates." However, GM OnStar commercials have appeared on the Internet stream starting in the fall of 2004.

In April of 2005, Gary Krantz was named President of the network. Krantz, a veteran of Clear Channel, AMFM, and MJI Broadcasting was brought in to oversee Sales, Programming, Affiliate Relations, New York's Flagship station, AM 1190 WLIB, and Air America' s Interactive division. Together with Goldberg, and the existing executive team of Carl Ginsburg (COO), and Jon Sinton (President/Programming), and new CFO Robert, the newly established management team has gotten the company on track to consistent growth in 2006.

A documentary on the network's rocky start and ultimate resurgence, Left of the Dial, premiered March 31, 2005 on HBO.

In April 2005, the studio of an AAR affiliate in Warren, Ohio, WANR-AM, was briefly occupied by a group that changed the locks and began broadcasting Christian programming until the police forced them to leave. [4] A few weeks later, the group seeking to switch the station's format to Christian programming was able to purchase the station, and the Air America programming was discontinued. [5]

On July 28th 2005, Sinohe Terrero, AAR's VP of Finance, issued a memo to employees advising that payroll direct deposits would be delayed by one working day and not post on Friday July 29th as expected. The memo stated "We have been advised by ADP that Direct Deposit will probably not post until Monday. [August 1st]"

On April 6, 2006, AAR CEO Danny Goldberg announced he was leaving his post after a little more than a year.

On April 28, 2006, The New York Daily News reported that AAR would lose its flagship station, WLIB in New York City, when their lease expires on August 31st. According to Mediaweek, the new company holding the lease, ICBC, will be programmed by former Clear Channel executive Randy Michaels and AAR programming would keep a "progressive-talk format," but with more local personalities. An AAR spokesperson dismissed the report, stating that the company does not respond to "hypothetical speculation." [6]

On June 11, 2006, AAR's Atlanta area affiliate dropped all but Al Franken's show after the station was sold [7] to JW Broadcasting. On June 23, 2006 AAR announced network president Gary Krantz was leaving the company after a little more than year on the job.

Ratings

Al Franken, host of Air America Radio's flagship program, The Al Franken Show.

In Arbitron's Winter 2006 ratings book, the most recent available as of May 2006, ratings at Air America stations nationwide average about a 1.2 share in markets for which Arbitron reports results four times a year (although this reflects the ratings received by each station as a whole, including any non-AAR programming stations carry between 6 a.m. and midnight as well). Some of the network's highest ratings coming from stations in Portland, Oregon (where station KPOJ ranks second among AM stations and sixth overall); Seattle, Washington; and Madison, Wisconsin. Markets where AAR stations have performed poorly relative to the competition include New York City, Boston, Massachusetts; Atlanta, Georgia; and Washington, DC. The Air America stations with the highest ratings tend to be in college towns and large cities with culturally liberal reputations, particularly on or near the West Coast.

Nationwide, however, conservatives continue to dominate political talk radio, benefiting from greater name recognition and much larger radio exposure. For example, Rush Limbaugh, the most popular talk radio host in the United States, averages a cumulative weekly audience ("cume") of about 13.75 million listeners on more than 500 stations nationwide, [8] whereas the Air America network as a whole reported a cume of 3.1 million listeners over 67 stations for the spring 2005 ratings period. [9]

For more ratings information, see the listings at Radio and Records, and search by call letter within the specific markets. Alternatively, go directly to the Arbitron website for this data: [10]

Affiliates

As of June 2006, Air America programming was carried on 87 terrestrial broadcast stations, as well as XM Satellite radio channel 167. [11]. AAR counts any station that carries their programming as an affiliate, similar to syndicates like ESPN Radio.

The New York Post reported a rumor in March of 2006 that AAR's lease with WLIB, their flagship station, would not be renewed. [12] This was confirmed in April of 2006[13], when it was reported that the WLIB lease would expire at the end of August of 2006, following the expiration of a four month extension of the lease. On August 2, 2006, Air America announced that they will be moving their flagship station in New York City from WLIB to WWRL.

Controversies

"Shooting spoiled child" skit

File:RandiRhodesMid.jpg
Randi Rhodes

On April 24, 2005, a pre-recorded comedy routine broadcast during The Randi Rhodes Show sparked a minor controversy. The United States Secret Service reviewed the broadcast and did not pursue further investigation or action. Rhodes broadcasted that day from a Florida studio instead of her home studio in New York City.

The broadcast's opening skit was a monologue featuring an old man, saying: "We saw America through the Great Depression and hot and cold wars. Our muscles boosted this nations' economic superiority to dizzying heights. And then our time came to enjoy just a little of the comfort and security we brought to the U.S. of A. So we joined with others of our era to protect what's rightfully ours. But now we've learned the AARP isn't enough. Our pensions have been stolen our health benefits cut and those of us with homes too often have to choose between heat and food. A spoiled child is telling us our Social Security isn't safe anymore, so he is going to fix it for us. Well, here's your answer, you ungrateful whelp: [Sound effect of 3 gunshots.] The AAARP: the American Association of Armed Retired People. Just try it, you little bastard. [Sound effect of gun being cocked.]"

The implication, according to Matt Drudge, is that the spoiled child is George W. Bush. Randi Rhodes apologized for that skit on Wednesday, April 27, 2005, saying: "It was a bit. It was bad. I apologize a thousand times." She claimed that neither she nor her producer, both of who were on the road that week, were involved in writing or producing the bit, nor had they reviewed the bit prior to its broadcast. However, she said that since the segment aired on her show, she accepted full responsibility for any wrongdoing and promised full cooperation with any subsequent investigation.

Jon Sinton, Air America's president of programming said "We are not under investigation from the Secret Service. We regret that a produced comedy bit that was in bad taste slipped through our normal vetting process. We do acknowledge that it was an internal error and internal discipline will be enforced."


References:

Lizz Winstead contract

A former on-air personality and executive with Air America, Lizz Winstead, is suing Air America for breach of contract and unjust enrichment. [14]

Boys and Girls Club Scandal

In July and August 2005, a funding scandal came to light. This is detailed more completely in the article Air America-Gloria Wise loan controversy. Evan Cohen, previously Chairmen of Progress Media, the then-owners of AAR, had arranged to obtain $875,000 from a largely state-funded charitable organization, the Gloria Wise Boys and Girls Club. Apparently much of this money, described as a "loan", then went to fund AAR operations. AAR characterized the situation as "absolutely disgraceful". Al Franken, who stated he had no knowledge of the details of the transaction, characterized Cohen as "a crook" and surmised, "I think he was robbing Peter to pay Paul". AAR's new parent company agreed to repay the money, and after some dispute as to how rapidly it would be repaid, placed the entire amount in escrow in September 2005.

It has not been announced when the charity will have its funding returned as it is still in escrow. The Gloria Wise Boys and Girls Club has been disbanded and is no longer in service.

Notes

  1. ^ Mainelli, John (2006-08-03). "Lefty Net Off WLIB". New York Post. Retrieved 2006-08-03. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  2. ^ Wetmore, Ken (2004-06-24). "Nobody was duped: Sorensen denies allegations surrounding Air America". KUAM News. Retrieved 2006-08-03. {{cite news}}: Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)

Other Air America related articles

External links and references

Official Sites

Air America fan sites

Air America Critics

Articles on Air America Radio