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L.A. city officials wade into media diversity

Photo by Ben McLeod/Flickr (Creative Commons)

It’s not every day that city elected officials make a case for diversifying the staff of media outlets. Which makes a resolution passed yesterday by the Los Angeles City Council, meant to address a recent on-air controversy over racially charged language, worth noticing.

The background: In a segment last month a few days after singer Whitney Houston’s untimely death in Beverly Hills, radio hosts John Kobylt and Ken Chiampou of KFI 640 AM’s “The John and Ken Show” referred to the late star as a “crack ho.”

The duo was suspended for two weeks, but complaints continued, as the Houston flap was the most recent in a string of incidents that insulted minorities. In recent months, both Latino and Asian American groups had sought to have the show taken off the air. Asian American civil rights groups in Los Angeles protested earlier this year after the hosts made disparaging comments about Koreans; last fall, several Latino groups picketed Clear Channel’s offices in Burbank, demanding the show be canceled after the hosts gave out the phone number of an immigrant advocacy group’s spokesman on air. Their fans deluged the man with hate calls.

The Los Angeles City Council resolution, sponsored by council member Jan Perry, takes aim mostly at content, criticizing KFI AM talk show hosts for “a long history of racially offensive comments as well as deplorable sexist remarks. It then urges “that all management of radio and television stations in Los Angeles to do everything in their power to ensure that their on-air hosts do not use and promote racist and sexist slurs over public airwaves in the City of Los Angeles.”

It charges that “Clear Channel Media Holding’s commitment to diversity is not being realized at its flagship station KFI 640 AM,” but it then extends the call for “a truly diverse work environment” to other media outlets. Here’s a chunk of the resolution:

WHEREAS, when you have an absence of Asian Americans, Blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans in the workplace, it is easy to become desensitized to what other groups find intolerable which ultimately fosters an environment where negative comments can go unchecked and corporate guidelines and policies are no longer being enforced; and

WHEREAS, a truly diverse work environment includes the continuous hiring of women and Asian Americans, Blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED, that by adoption of this Resolution, that all management of radio and television stations in Los Angeles to do everything in their power to ensure that their on-air hosts do not use and promote racist and sexist slurs over public airwaves in the City of Los Angeles; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, the derogatory language used by some radio personnel has no place on public airwaves in the Great City of Los Angeles or anywhere in America; and

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED, that a truly diverse work environment must include the hiring of women, Asian Americans, Blacks, Latinos, and Native Americans not only as on-air talent, but as fill-in talent, paid contributors, producers, engineers, news reporters and online Web site owners.

The National Hispanic Media Coalition, a Pasadena-based media watchdog group that’s been calling for “The John and Ken Show” to be taken off the air, has posted the resolution on its website. The show isn’t likely to be taken off-air soon, though. The Los Angeles Times reported this week that the Clear Channel-owned KFI continues to lead in local ratings, and that in spite of the hosts’ suspension last month, “John and Ken” placed third in the 3-7 p.m. weekday slot.

It’s not surprising that the move comes during what’s become a sensitive time for conservative talk radio, with the problems that have been plaguing host Rush Limbaugh (whose syndicated show on KFI also received a mention in the resolution). Still, the diversity discussion among L.A. city leaders is an interesting one, echoing what professional minority journalists’ organizations have long held to: That a lack of diversity in the newsroom can lead to a lack of cultural sensitivity in the content produced, not only in overt ways but in subtle ones, most often inadvertently.

Some examples can be found in a news management diversity census report from the National Association of Black Journalists, issued last year.

Reactions to Limbaugh’s ‘ching chong’ mockery

Photo by Gage Skidmore/Flickr (Creative Commons)

Rush Limbaugh

In the 24 hours or so since radio host Rush Limbaugh mocked Chinese president Hu Jintao’s speech yesterday, making a series of “ching chong, ching chow” sounds as his, er, approximation of Chinese language, the reaction has come swiftly, angrily, and on the late-night circuit, comically.

For the record, a bit of what was uttered, as posted on ColorLines:

They normally — you have some translator every couple of words. But Hu Jintao was just going CHING CHONG, CHING CHOW CHONG CHA, CHONG CHANG, CHING CHONG CHIBABABA, OH CHONGHING CHI CHIGARAI, CHENG CHI CHI. CHING ZHA BABA CHENGA CHENG CHI CHI CHI. CHANGI. OOOOOO. CHING CHOLABA BABA. GE CHOW CHOW BA.

The Atlantic Wire has compiled a list of reactions from media pundits and bloggers, among them Mediaite’s Jon Bershad, who asks if Limbaugh will be subject to the same amount of backlash as comic Rosie O’Donnell was when she uttered similarly offensive sounds in 2006.

Last night, comic Stephen Colbert “translated” the meaning of Limbaugh’s gibberish on The Colbert Report. From Talking Points Memo:

“My favorite doughnut is every doughnut,” Colbert’s translation read. “When I stand up, my chair smells like a cat shelter.”

Several Asian American political leaders, among them Democratic California Assembly member Paul Fong of Cupertino, have demanded an apology. From AsianWeek:

“His remarks are, frankly, ignorant,” said Assemblymember Fong. “It makes him sound racist when he degrades people of other cultures.”

Lastly, Radio-Info.com reports that the video of Limbaugh mocking Hintao’s speech has “gone viral” in China, featured on the English-language website Shanghaiist.