Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts
Showing posts with label radio. Show all posts

Sunday, March 09, 2008

Con-con pro and cons on tonight's Peoria Pundit Radio

peoriapunditradio.jpgI'm sure Rich will forgive me for using Illinoize to plug my BlogtalkRadio show, set to begin tonight at 6 p.m. John Bambenek of the Illinois Citizen's Coalition, a proponent of a Con-Con, will be my first guest on the hour-long show. I'll interview him, then open the phones up for questions. I'm hoping to get a ton of callers telling me what they would like to see in the state's Constitution. It's a long-distance call from Illinois, so use cell phones or VoiP if you've got it.

If there IS a con-con, I'd like to see this change: Term limits for Illinois House and Senate leadership positions. If voters in a district want to keep sending the same hack to Springfield, that's their business. But I don't think the whole state should suffer because some corrupt b*stard managed to to get and hold onto power until he dies.

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Tuesday, February 05, 2008

Hillary snubs Eric & Kathy radio show


Hat tip to Mrs. Marathon Pundit for this one.

The Eric & Kathy Show is a popular morning radio talk show in Chicago, broadcasting on WTMX-FM. Earlier today, a Hillary Rodham Clinton campaign representative called the show's producer and asked if they'd like to have the former Chicago area resident appear on the show for a telephone interview at 9:00am. The show accepted the offer, they called the magic telephone number at the agreed upon time, but the hosts were put on hold for 15 minutes, after which the pair was told that the senator would not be available.

I'm listening to the Eric and Kathy now, they're still talking about the snub.

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Saturday, November 17, 2007

This American Life: Remembering Harold Washington

The 13th Floor Blog at Governing.com discusses a program that aired November 9th of last week on NPR . It was called This American Life and this episode was about the first black Mayor of Chicago, the late Harold Washington. This program actually aired back on November 21, 1997.

Wow, it'll be a decade next Wednesday that this program aired. Also it'll be 20 years since his death on November 25, 1987. Mayor Washington was re-elected earlier that year and was only 7 months into his second term as mayor. He had been Mayor of Chicago since 1983 and that election will be covered in this program.

I heard this program a while back and I'm so glad that I can hear this once again. And an addition that they talk about the presidential candidacy of US Senator Barack Obama. A famous black lawyer and judge, Eugene Pincham, mentioned that Dr. Martin Luther King was not a well liked man when he was alive but when he was murdered and couldn't lead anyone anymore, he got a holiday. Then Pincham says that Mayor Washington on the other hand is not going to get those same accolades because Washington is likely to inspire people from beyond the grave.

Roughly 25 years have passed since Harold Washington was elected Mayor of Chicago and the question could be begged that this program seemed to address in 1997 & 2007. Would a black candidate have a fair chance to be elected Mayor today? Would that candidate have suffered the same resistance that Harold Washington had in 1983?

The pic at the top is of a Harold Washington memorial courtesy of YoChicago's Chatham neighborhood Flickr set. This memorial sitting on South Vernon Avenue was sponsored by the people of Vernon Avenue, from 83rd to 87th Streets. To YoChicago, it was more memorable of a tribute to Mayor Washington than the library named for him in downtown Chicago.

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Saturday, July 07, 2007

An argument against the "Fairness Doctrine," Lar Daly


A liberal blogger, Rob of Illinois Reason, is having fun at my expense because I'm against the renewal of the so-called "Fairness Doctrine." The misnamed broadcast requirement became part of the regulatory swagger of the Federal Communications Commission in 1949 stating that broadcasters "afford reasonable opportunity for the discussion of conflicting views of public importance."

The broadcast airwaves were viewed as a scarce resource then. Since 1949, the number of television stations and radio outlets has grown dramatically, shooting the scarcity argument in favor of the "Fairness Doctrine" down.

In the 1980s the Reagan administration, no fan of government regulation, steadily chipped away at the "Fairness Doctrine" until 1987, when the FCC, stocked with Reagan appointees, abolished it altogether.

Well done, Gipper.

And shortly thereafter, conservative talkers such as Rush Limbaugh and a whole bunch of others put down stakes in the dying AM band of the radio dial, and helped engineer the 1994 Republican takeover of Congress.

The Democrats, whose supporters dominate the other media, plotted almost immediately after the it long overdue cancellation to put the "Fairness Doctrine" into law. But Republican Congresses and presidents have stood in the way since then.

The "Fairness Doctrine" is anything but fair. Pundits have rightfully remarked that re-instituting such constraints on freedom of speech is analogous to Hugo Chavez shutting down opposition television stations in Venezuela.

But the libs claim all they want are "equal voices" on the airwaves.

Be careful what you wish for.

Chicagoans my age and older may remember Lar "America First" Daly. Sometimes he ran as a Democrat, sometimes as a Republican, other times for his "America First" party.

For many years Daly campaigned in an Uncle Sam suit, until a tragedy of sorts struck--someone stole the costume and Daly never bothered to replace it.

Daly was opposed to public schools, supported casino gambling (he was ahead of this time on that one), and he was supporter capital punishment for members of the Communist Party, along with a whole bunch of other extreme causes.

In 1975, while my brothers and tuned in to WGN-TV early for a Saturday night Chicago Black Hawks hockey game, we caught in-progess Lar Daly instead. Daly, we learned at the end of the broadcast, had commandeered airtime from WGN as a result of the "equal time" provision of the "Fairness Doctrine."

This was not the first time Daly knocked the puck at the back of the net, so to speak, as Time Magazine described in 1959 and 1964.

After several presidential runs and attempts to win the office of Mayor of Chicago from the incumbent Richard J. Daley, the legendary "Boss of Chicago," "No 'E'" Daly threw his hat in the mayoral ring once again. And he forced WGN to air a half hour of his mindless ramblings before the Black Hawks hit the ice.

I can't remember his precise political positions for that campaign, but it was standard, for him that is, whack job stuff.

But what stands out to me 32 years later was the "Lar Daly Curse." During on Channel 9 rant, Daly explained in his resonant baritone that he had placed a curse on the Kennedy brothers, John and Robert of course, for knocking him off of the Democratic ballot in the 1960 New Hampshire primary.

I can't remember his precise words, but he said something along the lines of "Both of them are now dead."

Both men of course were assassinated, and the Kennedy killings in 1975 were still fairly recent events. To put it into perspective, 9/11 happened six years ago--seven years to prior '75, Bobby Kennedy was shot to death.

Daly then went on to place a new curse: This time on Mayor Richard J. Daley.

Read closely now supporters of the "Fairness Doctrine": Because of that ditched regulation you want put into law, it's by no means a stretch of the imagination that you'll have a crackpot like Lar Daly on television implying a death curse on a leading public official. Or worse, a Jihadist nut.

Is that your idea of "fairness?"

Be careful of what you wish for.

Mayor Daley did die, of natural causes, a year later. Not to be outdone, Lar Daly followed him to the next world in 1979. History has not recorded if he had been cursed beforehand.

Of course Richard J. Daley's son now rules Chicago, the Daley family, with an "E" that is, one-upped Lar Daly.

And if Lar Daly was around today, he probably wouldn't think that was fair.

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