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WSWS : News
& Analysis : North
America
Right-wing campaign against US country music group
By David Walsh
22 March 2003
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An anti-Bush comment by a member of the three-woman Dixie Chicks
has spurred ultra-right elements in the US to launch a witch-hunting
campaign against the popular country music group.
Natalie Maines, a member of the group and a native of Texas,
told the audience at a recent concert in London, Just so
you know, were ashamed the president of the United States
is from Texas. Within days a drive was under way to demand
that country music radio stations no longer play the Dixie Chicks
music. Numerous stations immediately caved in to the pressure.
The music director of WBBN-FM in Hattiesburg, Mississippi, for
example, told the press, Weve put them to rest for
now. I dont really want to call it a ban. Were choosing
not to play them.
Kix 96 (WXFL-FM) in Savannah, Georgia followed suit. Disc jockey
Bill West told a reporter that the station took the group off
the playlist because Mainess comments were unpatriotic.
A local television station cited the comments of one enraged
fan, the owner of a golf course, who was organizing a bonfire
to burn the Chicks music.
A few hundred protesters near Bossier City, Louisiana, used
a 33,000-pound tractor March 17 to crush Dixie Chicks CDs and
other items. The protesters referred to themselves as backers
of President Bush and Barksdale Air Force Base. One of the demonstrators,
cited by the press, was a retired chief master sergeant who served
30 years in the Air Force.
No doubt there are politically backward elements genuinely
aroused by Mainess comments, but the entire affair has the
smell of a right-wing provocation. Indeed, when a reporter in
Hattiesburg, Kevin Walters, went out and interviewed people on
the street he found a different story. Walters noted, Around
Hattiesburg the mood of listeners and music buffs seemed to favor,
if not exactly Maines, then her right to voice her opinion.
A Rock Hill, South Carolina station, 107 FM, joined the boycott
as well. However, a local newspaper reported, The controversy
is having little impact at area stores, managers say. I
havent heard one customer mention it, said Mark Hamlin,
assistant store manager at Wal-Mart. Its just like
normal.
Some country music stations managed to resist the pressure.
The management of KNCI in Sacramento, California called the demand
for a total ban of the Dixie Chicks un-American....
She, as an American, certainly has the right to express her opinion.
Simon Renshaw, the Dixie Chicks manager, charged in an
email to radio stations distributed by Sony Music that the group
was the victim of a political witch-hunt, organized by the extreme
right FreeRepublic.com. He wrote to the stations, Your company
is being targeted by a radical right-wing online forum. You are
being Freeped, which is the codeword for an organized
e-mail/telephone effort attempting to solicit a desired response.
The Cincinnati Enquirer was the only major newspaper
to carry Renshaws comments, in which he charged that the
protest over Mainess comments was being manipulated. He
told the radio stations, This is an extremely active and
well-organized group. As always the squeaky wheel gets the
grease and these weasels know how to squeak.
Confirming the stage-managed character of the protest, the
Enquirer noted that Complaints didnt arrive
at WUBE (105.1) until Monday [after the right-wing campaign began].
Only one person called Thursday when the B105 morning show read
the story, says Tim Closson, operations manager. We broke
the story on Thursday, and got very little reaction to it. We
mentioned it again on Friday, and only got a few calls,
he says. The Chicks remain on B105. Closson says he seriously
considered indefinitely pulling all Dixie Chicks music ... (but)
our decision came down to one thing. We believe in the Constitution.
We believe in the freedom of speech.
To the role of the extreme right one must add the part played
by the corporate giants, whose owners either agree with the neo-fascist
elements or cave in to them. Rolling Stone magazines
web site carried a story March 19 noting that the so-called boycott
of the Dixie Chicks was overblown. The piece cited the comments
of radio consultant Jaye Albright, who called the controversy
a tempest in a teapot, adding, Out of some 2,100
country stations in America, maybe five or six boycotted the Chicks,
and most of them only for a day or two as a publicity stunt....
It was very underwhelming, almost laughable.
In a telephone conversation Albright elaborated, indicating
that call-out research (random telephone surveys used
to gauge listener reaction to particular songs) in the very
markets in which stations are backing off from playing the Dixie
Chicks music, shows that the group is number one and number
two in popularity. Albright reported that 15-20 percent
of those surveyed were upset about Mainess comments
and supported the boycott of the groups music, nearly 10
percent agreed outright with her comments and another 60-70 percent
can separate her music from her politics, in other
words, opposed a ban. The consultant opposed the boycott as an
infringement of free speech, calling it un-American and
stupid and ironic, considering that the action in
Iraq is called Operation Iraqi Freedom.
Albright added, however, that the controversy was no longer
a tempest in a teapot, now that Cox Radio and Cumulus
Broadcasting, two large owners of country music stations, had
instructed their outlets to drop the Dixie Chicks music.
As many as 30 percent or more of country stations might now ban
the groups music. Cumulus, which owns 50 such stations,
issued a statement: Cumulus Broadcasting has decided to
temporarily pull all music by the Dixie Chicks on all of its stations
across the country until deemed proper by upper management. This
decision was made in respect to The President of the United States,
Country Music and Country Radio, Country Music Fans and the State
of Texas.
There is virtually no protest heard anywhere in the media or
the recording industry against this blatant act of corporate censorship.
See Also:
Blacklist excludes antiwar celebrities
from Oscar Awards broadcast
[22 March 2003]
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