Wednesday, May 09, 2007

Some People Refuse to be Cowed

Whether you agree with these guys or not, it is good too see that they are still free to speak and be heard (so far):

"Almost two weeks after CBS Radio fired Don Imus for his racially and sexually demeaning remarks about the Rutgers women's basketball team, Nick Di Paolo opened his talk show on another CBS station in New York by mocking a manual that, he said, one of his bosses had given him that morning.

The booklet was entitled "Words Hurt and Harm" and, as described by Mr. Di Paolo, it urged him and his brethren to avoid the sort of stereotypes that had not only upended Mr. Imus but had also just gotten two colleagues on WFNY (92.3 FM) suspended for broadcasting a six-minute prank call littered with slurs to a Chinese restaurant.

"Right away, we're starting with a false premise," Mr. Di Paolo told his listeners on April 25, just after noon. "Because words don't hurt."

He then proceeded to refer to someone in the studio who was apparently of Colombian descent as "a drug dealer," before using an exercise in the manual as a springboard to the following observations: that "enough" Native Americans drank to make them fair game for a joke; that waiters in Chinese restaurants were "efficient" and "better than most, you know, other ethnic groups as waiters and waitresses"; and that Jewish mothers were "bad cooks and a little hairy."

Source