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Jim Neusom

Jim Neusom


Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Divorced
Age: 55
Sign: Cancer

City: LOS ANGELES
State: California
Country: US
Signup Date: 2/21/2006

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Tuesday, April 28, 2009 

Category: Blogging
Greetings Family,
(Contact Information At The Bottom Of The Page)

It's your friendly neighborhood "Digital Drummer" again...smile

The Black Agenda Report (www.blackagendareport.com) has a good article on the decline of Black radio. Managing editor, Bruce Dixon points out how the corporatization of Black radio has silenced the voice of the Black community.

When the Tom Joyner Morning Show was pulled first from Chicago, and then from other markets early this month, Joyner counseled listeners that "...black radio will never be what it once was, and there is absolutely nothing we can do about it."

This message of powerlessness and permanent defeat, of resignation to someone else, owning and controlling the black conversation, may be all we can expect from Joyner and the rest of the black elite.

But is it the real answer? Does it even address the crucial question of how we might have and own, our own black civic conversation? Dixon goes on to say; Community and democracy demand a steady diet of news to fuel civic engagement and public conversation in the public interest.

As the Black Agenda Report, pointed out all of six years ago in 'Who Killed Black Radio News,” the owners of commercial black media have for a generation enforced a no-news policy, justifying it with the unsupportable claim that all black people want is to be entertained. "

The fact is that news is less profitable than 100% entertainment. PR firms and the celebrity industries provide their own “news” releases complete with commercial tie-ins, and already segmented to the age and income divided groups that marketers love. Black radio owners decided not to do news because corporate media has consciously decided not to recognize African Americans as a people or a polity with our own set of collective experience and political will.

In a media regime that lives and dies by advertising alone, black commercial radio will only recognize black communities as marketing contraptions, as audience segments whose ears and eyeballs it can deliver to sponsors. The owners and managers of commercial black radio and TV are not the least concerned about our past or future, our housing or health care crises, the black imprisonment rate or the digital divide or the education of our young or the dignified security of our elderly.

To them we are just a market, passive consumers to be sliced and diced according to marketing industry guidelines. A hip hop station, an oldies station, an easy listening urban station, a gospel station, all under the same ownership with no news on any of them, forever and ever, amen.

If this is what Joyner meant, and we think it was, when he described the current state of black commercial radio, he was right. Except the “forever' part. Except when he told fans '...there's absolutely nothing we can do about it.”

I recommend that anyone interested, or involved in, Black media read the full story to digest Bruce Dixon’s solutions and suggestions for the survival of Black radio (see http://www.blackagendareport.com/?q=content/tom-joyner-steve-harvey-tavis-smiley-and-impoverishme nt-black-media)

Remember, We Must Share The Knowledge (Network)….To Share The Dollars!

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Brian Mora

 
You know, Jim, that depends on the type of news (and for that matter talk) you are talking about. The big growth vehicle at present is talk radio, admittedly mostly conservative, and yes there is at least one Black voice that has stood out in that field --- Larry Elder --- and a popular substitute host for the Neal Boortz radio programme is veteran businessman Herman Cain.

Tom Joyner may well have a strong audience with urban listeners but we should understand that his POV may not carry too far outside his audience.

The reality is we are a diverse audience. White, Black, Latino, Asian, and Native American listeners consume the entertainment product of Black musicians, actors, singers, comedians, and rappers, as well as the news and information product of Black commentators and journalists.

The problem is that broadcasters are not disinterested in news events affecting Black people, it is that no one has really tried getting in depth into understanding the Black community's issues. If some wise editor or producer or commentator would begin to do that and report on that effectively, irrespective of skin colour, that person would gain greater respect from ALL Americans and certainly we would begin to address those particular series of issues more effectively.

I myself include periodic articles about Black Americans in my own blogs, and not just the ones where I express criticism for Mr Obama's policies, there is much more to Black America than politicians and entertainers, they are the cashiers at the supermarket in suburban St Louis, they are the line cooks at the steakhouse in Texas, they are the carpenters building houses in southern California, they are the electricians wiring new office buildings in Ohio...they are not commonly exhibited enough because of salacious reportage techniques mostly by the Establishment Media, though sometimes Independent Media outlets do cover Black issues on occasion but could still do far better with that regard.

Black news radio is not dead - it just needs direction and some serious horsepower. Time to pull that weak fourpot out from under the bonnet and find at least a turbocharged V6 --- and then give it some serious commitment to serious issues affecting the Black community. And they should not necessarily feel like they should have to shut out the rest of America, they should simply stick to quality --- and quality reportage will draw some of the rest of us to listen as well.

 
 
Posted by Brian Mora on Tuesday, April 28, 2009 - 9:17 PM
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