Search the web
Sign In
New User? Sign Up
NatNews · Native News: Up to the minute news and i
? Already a member? Sign in to Yahoo!

Yahoo! Groups Tips

Did you know...
Want to share photos of your group with the world? Add a group photo to Flickr.

Best of Y! Groups

   Check them out and nominate your group.
Having problems with message search? Fill out this form to ensure your group is one of the first to be migrated to the new message search system.

Messages

  Messages Help
Advanced
Public uproar leads to DJs' suspension   Message List  
Reply | Forward Message #47080 of 49680 |
http://www.adn.com/anchorage/story/377216.html

Public uproar leads to DJs' suspension

By JULIA O'MALLEY
jomalley@...

Published: April 16th, 2008 12:04 AM
Last Modified: April 16th, 2008 10:56 AM

Michelle Davis was surfing radio stations last Wednesday, stuck in traffic
in a spring snow storm. When the dial hit the "Woody and Wilcox" morning
show on KBFX 100.5-FM "The Fox," she couldn't believe what she heard.

The morning drive-time hosts were bantering with a caller about whether
getting into a fender-bender at Minnesota Drive and Raspberry Road made you
a "real" Alaskan. What else made you a real Alaskan?

"Have you made love to the Yukon River and peed in a Native woman?" one of
the men said, according to Davis, turning an off-color axiom inside out.
She said she was stunned and disgusted.

As soon as she got to a phone, Davis, who is part Tlingit, called the
station manager. Then she got on her computer and e-mailed a network of
friends in the Alaska Native community. She wrote to news media, Native
leaders and politicians. She complained to the FCC.

For a week, outrage built across the state. A state legislator spoke
against it on the floor of the House of Representatives in Juneau, and it
came up Tuesday night at the Anchorage Assembly meeting. School
Superintendent Carol Comeau and Mayor Mark Begich publicly condemned it.
The Alaska Federation of Natives issued a statement comparing the hosts to
embattled shock jock Don Imus. Several people called on advertisers to
cancel their contracts.

On Tuesday afternoon, KBFX owner Clear Channel Communications suspended
Woody and Wilcox "indefinitely' and ordered them to attend sensitivity
training.

"We are confident that what was said was an isolated incident, and it in no
way reflects the views of KBFX station personnel," read a statement posted
on the station's Web site.

Their salaries during the suspension will be donated to an "appropriate
charity," the station's statement said.

POPULAR STATION FOR MEN

The Fox is the third most-popular morning drive-time radio show in
Anchorage among men age 25-54, according to Arbitron ratings from fall
2007. The station plays metal-infused classic rock.

The station clearly targets men, though women call in on occasion.

The morning talk is laden with innuendo, crude humor and porn references.
The station's Web site features a "Babe page" with galleries of
scantily-clad models spraying each other with garden hoses and straddling
guitars. The site's motto is "Surfing the Web with one free hand."

Gary Donovan, a local market manager with Clear Channel, wouldn't give
Woody and Wilcox's first names, referring to them only by their radio
handles.

The pair -- whose real names, according to the Associated Press, are Greg
Wood and Chris Wilcox -- came to Alaska from San Diego, where they worked
for KPLN-FM. Howard Stern's national program replaced them in 2004,
according to a story in the Los Angeles Times.

Donovan said the station may be re-examining other things aside from the
show, like its Web site. However, he doesn't consider Woody and Wilcox
generally offensive.

"We've never viewed them as being shock jocks," he said. "This was out of
character for them, which is what makes it frustrating."

The on-air comment last week hit a raw nerve in the Alaska Native
community, which has lived for decades with high rates of abuse against
Native women. A recent study of rapes handled by Alaska State Troopers, for
example, said 61 percent were committed against Alaska Natives, the
majority of whom were women.

Natives make up 13 percent of Alaska's overall population, according to the
U.S. Census.

Many Native leaders said the comments were evidence of a racist attitude
that promotes violence and dehumanizes Native women.

"It really touched on something that has been under the surface," Davis
said.

When a version of this story was posted on the Daily News' Web site Tuesday
afternoon, it quickly drew dozens of comments from readers. Two camps
emerged: people criticizing the comments as offensive and racist, and those
saying critics were overreacting and suggesting listeners change the
channel if they're offended. By early evening, the story had drawn more
than 130 comments. Editors eventually disabled the reader comments because
of an increasing number of off-color posts.

VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

Rep. Mary Nelson of Bethel said the comments upset her because they were
part of a general lack of concern about the violence Alaska Native women
face. She mentioned a string of slayings of Native women in 2000, some of
which remain unsolved, that she felt the media ignored. Her fellow House
members condemned the comment.

Julie Kitka, president of AFN, called the comments "brutally offensive."

"Some listeners were shocked; but many Natives, while sickened, thought it
was all too typical of Alaska's race relations," Kitka said in a letter.

For Donovan, the uproar illuminates the fine line radio hosts must walk on
a station like The Fox, wanting to be funny and edgy without going too far.

"Trust me, I'm living that balance," he said.

Terry Shroyer, a regular listener to the morning show, didn't hear the
comment that caused the flap but he thought it was offensive. He said he
rarely hears the duo cross the line. Usually he appreciates their humorous
rundown of the morning news. Some of their "junior high bathroom humor"
cracks him up.

"I'm a 22-year-old immature male," he said. "Toilet-flushing samples and
stuff like that, it's right up my alley."

At least one of the station sponsors, Napa Auto Parts, is looking at its
relationship to the station, according to Mark Pascuzzo, district manager.
The automotive parts dealer's name is on the Web site as the sponsor of the
"Babe Galleries."

"I didn't realize they were putting that sponsorship on the babe page," he
said. "That's not our deal."

He said he planned to meet with the station.

Davis was pleased Tuesday when she heard the hosts had been suspended,
although she wasn't opposed to them returning to the air in the future.

"I guess that's up to their station to decide how well they do," she said.
"We can all do better and we can all learn."

Find Julia O'Malley online at adn.com/contact/jomalley or call 257-4591.



Wed Apr 16, 2008 9:58 pm

rvsjr
Offline Offline
Send Email Send Email

Forward
Message #47080 of 49680 |
Expand Messages Author Sort by Date

http://www.adn.com/anchorage/story/377216.html Public uproar leads to DJs' suspension By JULIA O'MALLEY jomalley@... Published: April 16th, 2008 12:04 AM ...
Robert Schmidt
rvsjr
Offline Send Email
Apr 16, 2008
10:01 pm
Advanced

Copyright © 2009 Yahoo! Inc. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy - Terms of Service - Guidelines - Help