Dead Air (America)
By Pat Sajak
HUMAN EVENTS
Posted Apr 25, 2005
Air America, the much-ballyhooed Liberal radio alternative
to Rush and Sean and all the other Righties who are successfully dominating our
airwaves, doesn't appear to be gaining much traction. It's on the air in only
about 50 markets and, even in the "blue" states, its ratings are
generally paltry despite reams of free publicity and plenty of financial
backers who want this enterprise to succeed. Meantime, Bill Bennett, former
Drug Czar and Education Secretary, can be heard in over 100 markets, with a
show that launched about the same time as Air America with virtually no
mainstream press notice.
How do these things happen? Isn't AA's Al Franken at least as funny as Bill
Bennett? (Although, to tell you the truth, when Al was part of the team of
Franken & Davis on Saturday Night Live, I wondered how a comedy duo could
survive with two straight men.) Don't Liberals listen to the radio? Why isn't
anybody out there?
As someone who has been involved in a TV project or two which went largely
unnoticed, I think I can answer the question. Conservative radio succeeds, in
great measure, because a major segment of the population perceives a need for
it. There is no need for mass media with a Liberal slant, because it is already
all around us. When I did a late-night talk show on CBS more than 15 years ago,
we modeled it after Johnny Carson's show on the supposition that he was about
to retire. He didn't, and people went right on watching him. Heck, I watched
him. Putting aside any talent deficiencies I might have had, there was no need
for Pat Sajak when Johnny Carson was there.
If history had been different and the media centers of the country had been
located in Nebraska and Georgia instead of New York and California, they would
likely have taken on a more Conservative look over the years. Liberals would
have been screaming about the lack of balance when it came to coverage of news,
politics and social issues. In that atmosphere, a dozen Air America-type
programs would have sprung up by now, and Conservatives would be bemoaning
their success and looking for alternatives. If Rush Limbaugh went on the air in
that "alternate universe," he might very well have failed. Who would
have needed him? Conservative thought would have already controlled most of
what we were watching, reading and hearing.
In short, what Air America is selling is available in too many other places.
It's the same dynamic that made a success of Fox News Channel and a failure of
Phil Donahue's attempted comeback on cable TV a few years ago.
What will eventually kill Air America is its redundancy.
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