CENSORSHIP BY FIRST
AMENDMENT “CHAMPIONS”
SF Bay Area Stations Refuse to Run Pro-Gun
Ads
The non-profit organization
Citizens Of America has encountered the only opposition to broadcasting its
pro-firearm, pro-self defense one-minute radio ads in its home state of
California, which is arguably one of the worst abusers of gun owners and the
Second Amendment.
The four station groups that
refused to run the ads are: KEZR 106.5 FM, KISQ “KISS-FM” 98.1, KRTY/KLIV/KARA,
and KSJO/KFOX . These stations are located in the San Francisco Bay area. COA
coordinator Michael Pelletier encountered the rejections while looking for
stations to broadcast a second $4,000 round of COA ads in the Bay Area.
The KRTY/KLIV/KARA rejection
did not come directly from the owner or management, Pelletier noted. Instead, he
gave up trying to buy airtime from them at his initial contact last December
because he was told by the advertising sales rep that the station owner was
"pro gun-control." Reports Pelletier, "my conversation with the
sales rep went on for some time, with her regaling me with the the benefits of
advertising with their station group. But when she realized, after an initial
misunderstanding, that I was planning to place ANTI gun-control ads, not
pro-gun-control ads, the conversation came to a swift conclusion."
The representative for KSJO
(rock/metal) and KFOX (classic rock) stations
said "the money's really rolling in" and that the ads weren’t
"worth the hassle for the $4,000 you have”, according to Pelletier, who
interpreted this to mean “In other words, ‘we don't need your money’
".
KEZR “Mix 106.5” did run
COA ads several weeks ago but refused to do so again. KEZR program director Jim
Murphy said that after receiving complaints the station decided the tone of the
ads did not fit in with their "listening environment". Pelletier
followed up with a phone call to Murphy. “He got a total of 1 complaint via
e-mail,” Pelletier said.
But this reason was ignored
completely when Pelletier subsequently received an email from KEZR station
employee Lyn Johnson, who stated: “Apparently all the commercials on the CD
are too controversial to run on Mix 106.5.”
Pelletier wrote back to the station, stating, “If even the
"Senator" ad, an even-toned, non-confrontational, ironically humorous
piece of work, can be considered "too controversial" then I submit
that it's not the copy that's the problem, it's the ideas being expressed.”
According to Pelletier this station is owned by CBS, who also own KCBS news
radio.
KISS FM station manager Steve
Watkins also gave the “clashing format” reason to Pelletier. But when COA
President Brian Puckett asked Watkins in a phone conversation if KISS FM would
run comparatively low-key ads that simply feature women speaking (“I'm No
Slave” and “Get Smart Sisters”), or two other low-key ads with men
speaking (“Senator’s Speech” and “Multi-message”) Watkins still
refused, Puckett said, repeating his complaint that COA’s “creative
approach” to the ads was unacceptable. “Then he said the station was afraid
the public would assume they endorsed COA’s message,” Puckett reports. “I
pointed out that the station ran ads for everything from bed mattresses to
opposing political candidates, and I asked him, ‘Do you think your listeners
think the station endorses the mattresses or both candidates? He just changed
the subject.”
Puckett said, “After more
talk, in which I pointed out that our message was basically an attempt to save
the lives of citizens, especially women, by warning them of the dangers of being
disarmed by the government, I said that it was clear that the station was
basically engaging in censorship, that it was blindly obeying the ‘politically
correct’ government line, that the station was assuming its listeners agreed
that there was no right to self-defense or to keep and bear arms, and that it
assumed its listeners were fools.” Puckett continued, “I suppose I was less
than friendly at that point but I don’t like being lied to. These stations
have no problem running mindless movie ads containing noise, screaming, or
violence. But when it comes to the issue of real citizens dying they claim the
ads "ruin the 'mood' of the program."
According to Puckett, this
de-facto censorship is a perfect example of why corporate ownership of several
stations in a particular broadcast area should be restricted and why newspaper
ownership of radio stations in a particular area – which limits non-internet
news sources – should be forbidden or severely restricted. “If there were an
infinite number of radio frequencies available I wouldn’t feel this way, but
there aren’t.” Puckett said. “And in theory the public owns the radio
bandwidth and leases the right to use it to stations. In any case, this does
show that COA’s pro-gun ads are feared by the opposition, and that’s as good
an endorsement as any.”
Click HERE
to listen to COA’s ads. If you want to help COA, scroll to the bottom of their
homepage at http://www.citizensofamerica.org.