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Politics : PRESIDENT GEORGE W. BUSH -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (424142)7/8/2003 10:49:26 AM
From: Johannes Pilch  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
The question is flawed. Life is not a choice, only continued life is. PROLIFE need not choose to be what nature has made him. He only needs to choose to live contrary to what nature has made him.



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (424142)7/8/2003 10:49:38 AM
From: PROLIFE  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 769670
 
If you look at my original remarks,,, I told Kennyboy to find one homo gene...he never answered. choice was not in the post.

are you male or female?



To: J_F_Shepard who wrote (424142)7/8/2003 11:08:37 AM
From: Skywatcher  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 769670
 
For PROLIFE...here's yet another great example of Christian Compassion....
figgers this is a CHRISTIAN RADIO SHOW.....owned by SALEM COMMUNICATIONS!!!!!!!
That says it all eh??????


July 8, 2003

E-mail story


Print

TELEVISION & RADIO
Savage gets the boot after on-air anti-gay
outburst
MSNBC cancels 'Savage Nation' after host's comments. The channel's decision was "not
difficult."

By Brian Lowry, Times Staff Writer

Michael Savage's MSNBC talk show was abruptly
canceled Monday, following an on-air outburst during
Saturday's telecast in which the host asked a caller if
he was "a sodomite" before telling him to "get AIDS
and die."


Savage's weekly MSNBC show, which premiered in
March, marked an attempt by the low-rated cable
channel to generate attention that appears to have
backfired, with his dismissal representing another
setback for the network, a partnership of Microsoft
and NBC parent General Electric. His nationally
syndicated radio program, "Savage Nation," continues
on more than 300 stations.

The San Francisco-based Savage has long been a
target of gay and lesbian activists, who had succeeded in dissuading many major
advertisers from sponsoring the TV program. By contrast, most radio ads are
sold on a local basis and are less susceptible to such protests.

During Saturday's program, which ostensibly dealt with airline security, a caller
apparently deviated from the topic to unleash an expletive-laced attack against
Savage. Those comments were bleeped out, but Savage's response wasn't.

After telling the caller: "You should only get AIDS and die, you pig" — which
prompted audible "whoas" from the crew — Savage continued with more insults,
concluding with, "Put another sodomite on — I don't care about these bums,
they mean nothing to me."


Representatives for the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation
immediately contacted MSNBC, which acted quickly to drop Savage's show.

An MSNBC spokesman noted that the channel stated from the outset that it
wouldn't tolerate extreme comments on the program, which, given its
Saturday-afternoon time slot, was drawing respectable ratings by the channel's
standards. According to Nielsen Media Research estimates, Savage was
attracting nearly 350,000 viewers each week, less than the 400,000 viewers
MSNBC averaged during any given moment for the second quarter, when
viewing for all news channels rose due to the Iraqi war. That's just over half of
CNN's average audience during that period and less than a third of tune-in for
Fox News Channel.

Savage's remarks were "extremely inappropriate," said Jeremy Gaines,
MSNBC's vice president of communications. "The decision to cancel the show
was not difficult."

Before the program's premiere, Savage had warned gay rights activists that
economic pressure tactics wouldn't silence him as they did Dr. Laura
Schlessinger, another lightning-rod radio host whose low-rated daytime TV
show drew protests and lasted only a short time.

Still, the relative lack of advertising and the modest viewership made dropping
the show a simple choice for MSNBC, which is focusing its attention on
becoming more competitive with Fox News and CNN through a lineup of
prime-time talk shows.

The station failed with the return of talk-TV pioneer Phil Donahue, whose
MSNBC show was canceled in February after only seven months on the air.

"It's about time," said Scott Seomin, entertainment media director for the Gay
and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation. "These kind of comments have no
place on any news network."

The Family Research Council, a Washington lobbying group that promotes
family values and opposes GLAAD on issues such as gay marriage, also
expressed support for MSNBC's action. Savage's comments were clearly
inappropriate and "don't add to the public debate," said Genevieve Wood, the
group's vice president of communications.

A call to Savage's radio program, which reaches an estimated 6 million listeners,
was not returned by press time. The radio show is heard locally on KRLA-AM
(870), which is owned by Christian broadcaster Salem Communications Corp.
and features a lineup of conservative commentators. "Savage Nation," also the
title of the host's bestselling book, is distributed by Central Point, Ore.-based
Talk Radio Network, whose lineup of hosts includes former Congressman Bob
Dornan.

CC