Black Agenda Report
Black Agenda Report
News, commentary and analysis from the black left.

  • Home
  • Africa
  • African America
  • Education
  • Environment
  • International
  • Media and Culture
  • Political Economy
  • Radio
  • US Politics
  • War and Empire

What You Need To Know About Black Radio
Bruce A. Dixon, BAR managing editor
14 May 2009
🖨️ Print Article

What You Need To Know About Black Radio

In a schema unique to the United States, nearly all broadcast media are exclusively licensed to private owners, on the supposed condition that they serve the public interest.  In fact, broadcasters are utterly free to reap vast fortunes using the limited public resource of the broadcast spectrum.  Black commercial radio is no different, whether or not its nominal owners are African American.  

Glen Ford and Bruce Dixon have written extensively on media and on black radio in Black Agenda Report, and Ford before that in Black Commentator. 


who_killed_blkradio_news

 Who Killed Black Radio News? 

by BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford

This item was originally published in Black Commentator on May 29, 2003  

  There are more than one million Black radio listeners apiece in metro Detroit, Chicago, Atlanta, Baltimore-DC, Houston, Philadelphia, and twice that many in the tri-state metro area centered by New York.  But not one of these major markets has a single full time black news reporter reporting on and packaging news for a black audience.  Not one.  

It wasn't always this way.  What changed and why?  What does the absence of news reporting mean to our communities, our futures, to the public space for black on black dialog?

Read this item


 

 

radio

 

Black Radio and the "Performance Rights" Toll Booth

by BAR Managing Editor Bruce Dixon on May 20, 2009

The cynically misnamed "Performance Rights" legislation will not benefit performers.  It will extract a premium from radio broadcasters, killing some, and transforming others for the worse.  It will create another piece of "intellectual property" which the recording industry is poised to benefit from at the expense of artists, radio broadcasters and the public, and legaiize payola.  And once the performance rights toll booth is established in broadcast radio, it can and will be deployed elsewhere.  HR 848 is bad news for broadcasters, bad news for artists, and bad news for almost everybody.

Click here to read this item.


montage

Hip Hop Profanity, Misogyny and Violence: Blame the Manufacturer

by BAR executive editor Glen Ford on May 1, 2007

The often convoluted debate over hip-hop lyrics and images frequently misses the point: mass marketed rap recordings, videos and stage acts are corporate products, and the artists are virtual employees and subcontractors of huge multinationals. Corporate control of the cultural marketplace is the real villain in this story, not artists who did not pick themselves for stardom and cannot on their own alter boardroom business models. Corporations have been usurping and reshaping Black mass culture for decades - hip-hop is just the latest product line.

Read this item.


Treat Corporate Media Like the Enemy - Revoke the Free "Black Pass" for BET & Black Radio

by BAR Executive Editor Glen Ford

This item was originally published in Black Commentator on May 1, 2003.

In terms of effective Black access, the airwaves have long been a wasteland. In a fundamental political sense, all corporations resist popular power and speak a common language of profit - including Black-owned media corporations, once they have gained sufficient foothold in the marketplace. The corporatization of the media message has proceeded without interruption since well before the FCC's Fairness Doctrine was finally discarded, in 1987.  

Read this item.


 

all of themTom Joyner, Steve Harvey, Tavis Smiley, and the Impoverishment of Black Media

by BAR managing editor Bruce A. Dixon on April 15, 2009

When the Tom Joyner Morning Show was pulled first from Chicago, and then from other markets early this month, Joyner counseled listeners that "...black radio will never be what it once was, and there is absolutely nothing we can do about it."  This message of powerlessness and permanent defeat, of resignation to someone else owning and controlling the black conversation may be all we can expect from Joyner and the rest of the black elite.  But is it the real answer? Does it even address the crucial question of how we might have and own our own black civic conversation?
Read this item.

 


Black Radio Needs News, Not Michael Baisden’s Slanders

by BAR executive editor Glen Ford on November 13, 2007

057_montage

"How did Black-oriented radio devolve to such garbage?"

Syndicated hustler Michael Baisden, eager to become kingpin of Jena Six fundraising, launched a slanderous campaign against every Black group that doesn't have access to ABC radio's corporate reach. Baisden's principal target: Color of Change, the mass-based Internet organization that raised and distributed over $200,000 for Jena defendants' legal fees in record time. Baisden used his 50-station network to defame Color of Change, in "reckless disregard of the truth," and was soon forced to issue a fraction of an apology. But Baisden's crimes only serve to dramatize the fact that near-extinction of Black radio news - the mechanism that could have stopped the junkyard dog in his filthy tracks - has left African Americans at the mercy of "media leadership." We must reclaim the commercial airwaves that reach 80-90 percent of Blacks.

Read this item.


montage_090The Hidden History of US Broadcasting

 

by BAR managing editor Bruce Dixon on July 2, 2008

The US broadcast media regime, in which greedy, amoral corporations enjoy completely free monopoly licenses to run their highly profitable businesses upon the scarce public property that is the broadcast spectrum is usually presented to us as the only “natural” and sensible media order. It is, we've all been told, the benign and logical outcome of democratic give and take and rigorous competition in a free marketplace. In fact, nothing could be further from the truth.

Read this item.


James Brown: The Man Who Named a People

by BAR executive editor Glen Ford on January 3, 2007JB Memorial Poster 

 James Brown’s historic contribution to Black self-determination is incalculable, writes BAR’s Executive Editor. The ‘Godfather of Soul’ made it possible for the masses of people to affirm their own name.  
James Brown 1933 - 2005

 Click here to read this item.

Do you need and appreciate Black Agenda Report articles? Please click on the DONATE icon, and help us out, if you can.


More Stories


  • CUNY Encampment
    Black Agenda Radio with Margaret Kimberley
    The CUNY 8 Face Charges for Palestine Solidarity Protest
    20 Dec 2024
    Nora Fayad, one of the CUNY 8 arrested and charged with felony burglary and accused of attempting to enter a campus building without permission, joins us to discuss their court case.
  • Margaret Kimberley, BAR Executive Editor and Senior Columnist
    Eric Adams and Daniel Penny Make Black People the Face of Crime
    18 Dec 2024
    Daniel Penny’s acquittal was not surprising, and neither is Mayor Eric Adams' defense of Penny and law enforcement power being used against Black people.
  • Editors, The Black Agenda Review
    POEM: Reflections after the June 12th March of Disarmament, Sonia Sanchez, 1982
    18 Dec 2024
    “I have come to you tonite not just for the stoppage of nuclear proliferation, nuclear plants, nuclear bombs, nuclear waste, but to stop the proliferation  of nuclear minds….”
  • Jon Jeter
    From Bernhard Getz to George Zimmerman to Daniel Penny: Using Vigilantes to Police a Racist Social Order
    18 Dec 2024
    The state and vigilante lynchings of Black men and boys in the U.S. are not merely an aberration or a momentary relapse on the nation’s path to racial equality. They are part of the toolbox of…
  • Essam Elkorghli
    Syria’s Fall and Anti-Imperialist Lessons
    18 Dec 2024
    Similar to a predator realizing it is losing a fight and is reaching its end, the U.S. is lashing out and attempting to deepen its claws into subjugated nations like Syria, which just experienced a…
  • Load More
Subscribe
connect with us
about us
contact us