Clear Channel Communications
is an American media conglomerate company headquartered at
200 East Basse Road in San Antonio
, Texas
. It
was founded in 1972 by
Lowry Mays and
Red McCombs, and specializes in radio
broadcasting, concert promotion and hosting, and fixed advertising
in the United States through its subsidiaries. As of 2009, the CEO
of the company is
Mark Mays.
Clear Channel is the largest owner of full-power
AM,
FM, and
shortwave radio
stations and twelve radio channels on
XM Satellite Radio, and is also the
largest pure-play radio station owner and operator. The group was
in the television business until it sold all of its
TV stations to
Newport Television in 2008.
The term "
clear channel" comes
from AM broadcasting, referring to a channel (frequency) on which
only one station transmits. In U.S. and Canadian broadcasting
history, "clear channel" (or
class I-A) stations had
exclusive rights to their frequencies throughout most of the
continent at night, when AM stations travel very far due to
skywave.
WOAI
in San
Antonio, Clear Channel's flagship station (despite San Antonio
being market #37), was such a station.
History
Clear Channel Communications purchased its first FM station in San
Antonio in 1972. The company purchased the second "clear channel"
AM station WOAI in 1975. In 1976, the company purchased its first
stations outside of San Antonio. KXXO AM and KMOD FM in Tulsa were
acquired under the name "San Antonio Broadcasting" (same as KEEZ).
Stations were also added in Port Arthur, TX (KPAC-AM-FM from Port
Arthur College) and El Paso, TX (KELP AM (now KQBU AM) from John
Walton, Jr.). In 1992, the
U.S. Congress relaxed radio ownership
rules slightly, allowing the company to acquire more than 2
stations per market. By 1995, Clear Channel owned 43 radio stations
and 16 television stations. In 1996, the
Telecommunications Act of
1996 became law. This act deregulated media ownership, allowing
a company to own more stations than previously. Clear Channel went
on a buying spree, purchasing more than 70 other media companies,
plus individual stations.
In a few cases, following purchase of a competitor, Clear Channel
was forced to divest some of its stations, as it was above the
legal thresholds in some cities.
In 2005, the courts ruled that Clear
Channel must also divest itself of some "border blaster" radio stations in
international border cities, such as the alternative rock radio station 91X in Tijuana, Baja California
/San
Diego
.
In 1997 Clear Channel moved out of pure broadcasting when it
purchased billboard firm Eller Media which was led by
Karl Eller.
In 1998 it made its first move outside of the United States when it
acquired the leading UK outdoor advertising company More Group plc
which was led by
Roger Parry; Clear
Channel went on to buy many other outdoor advertising, radio
broadcasting, and live events companies around the world, which
were then re-branded Clear Channel International. These included a
51% stake in
Clear Media Ltd. in
China.
In 1999,
the company acquired Jacor Communications, a
radio corporation based in Cincinnati, Ohio
.
In 2000, Clear Channel acquired AM-FM, Inc., which was created by
the merger of CapStar Broadcasting and Chancellor Media Corp a year
earlier, both controlled by Billionaire mogul Tom Hicks.
In 2005 Clear Channel Communications split into three separate
companies. Clear Channel Communications was a radio broadcaster;
Clear Channel Outdoor was out-of-home advertising; and
Live Nation was live events. The Mays family
remained in effective control of all three, and held key executive
roles in each (with
Mark Mays as CEO of
both radio and outdoor and Randall Mays as Chairman of Live
Nation).
On November 16, 2006, Clear Channel announced plans to go private,
being bought out by two
private-equity firms,
Thomas H. Lee Partners and
Bain Capital Partners for $18.7 billion, which
is just under a 10 percent premium above its closing price of
$35.36 a share on November 16 (the deal values Clear Channel at
$37.60 per share). The new ownership of Clear Channel has also
announced that all of its TV stations were for sale, as well as 448
radio stations that were outside of the top 100 markets. All of the
TV stations and 161 of the radio stations were sold to a
Providence Equity Partners, a
private-equity firm, on April 23,
2007, pending
FCC
approval.
On July 24, 2008, Clear Channel held a special shareholder meeting,
during which the majority of shareholders accepted a revised
$36-per-share offer from Bain Capital and Thomas H. Lee Partners.
The company announced on July 30 that it would offer shareholders
either $36 in cash or one share of CC Media Class A common stock
for each share of Clear Channel common stock held.
Businesses
Clear Channel has purchased interest in, or outright acquired,
companies in a number of media or advertising related industries.
This is not an exhaustive list.
Radio
With 900 stations, Clear Channel is the largest radio station group
owner in the United States, both by number of stations and by
revenue. According to BIA Financial Network, Clear Channel Radio
recorded more than $3.5 billion in revenues in , more than $1
billion more than the number-two group owner,
CBS Radio.
Clear Channel has purchased stations from or acquired the following
radio companies:
- The Ackerley Group
- AMFM
- Apex
- Capstar (also operating under Gulfstar, Southern Star, and
Atlantic Star)
- Chancellor
- Clark Broadcasting
- Dame Media
- Eastern Radio Assets
- Jacor
- Quad
City

- Roberts
- Paxson Communications
- Taylor Broadcasting
- Trumper Communications
- SFX Radio
- Mondosphere Broadcasting
Outdoor advertising
- Bought Eller Media, Universal Outdoor, and More Group Plc,
giving Clear Channel outdoor advertising space in 25
countries.
- Owns part of an Italian street furniture company, Jolly
Pubblicita S.p.A.
- Owns BBH Exhibits, Yellow Checker Star Cab Displays, Dauphin,
Taxi Tops, Donrey Media, and Ackerley Media. Also owns an outdoor
advertising company in Switzerland and Poland and a major outdoor
advertising firm in Chile.
- Has a partnership with APN Outdoor in Australia, which has
resulted in a 49% share in Adshel, a street furniture advertising
company. APN Outdoor is the majority shareholder (owning 51% of
Adshel).
Television
The first
television station Clear Channel purchased was WPMI
in Mobile, Alabama
in 1988. It owned more than 40 additional
stations, a few of which are independent (non-network affiliates).
In 2007, the company entered into an agreement to sell all its
television stations to
Providence Equity Partners for
$1.2 billion, a deal which eventually closed in March, 2008. All
former Clear Channel television stations are now owned by
Newport Television, except for six
stations then flipped to other buyers by Newport.
Live events
On December 21, 2005, Clear Channel completed the spin-off of
Live Nation, formerly known as Clear
Channel Entertainment. Live Nation is an independent company (NYSE:
LYV) and is no longer owned by Clear Channel.
Live Nation UK was also included in the spin
off.
Note that post-spinoff, there is overlap the board between Clear
Channel and Live Nation, specifically: L. Lowry Mays, Mark P. Mays
(Former Vice Chairman of Live Nation), and Randall T. Mays (Former
Chairman of Live Nation).
News and information
- Clear Channel News Network has grown a great deal in 2009
creating such brands as Inauguration Radio and the White House
Brief, hosted by Clear Channel National Correspondent Paul
Westcott. The White House Brief runs 24/7 on
www.iheartradio.com/whblive and on the blackberry and iPhone iheart
radio application.
- Operates Clear Channel News Network and local
news networks in Kentucky
, West
Virginia
, Virginia
, Ohio
, Oklahoma
, Alabama
, Tennessee
, Georgia
and Florida
- Premiere Radio
Networks
- FOX Sports Radio
Network
- Acquired and later sold the Agri Broadcast Network (ABN), a farm
programming provider in Ohio
- Publishes "Inside Radio" magazine - www.insideradio.com
- Clear
Channel Traffic reports on road and traffic conditions across the
United States, and in Mexico
City
, Mexico
; these are
used by many GPS navigation systems.
- Fan Radio Network a sports
radio network that serves Minnesota, South Dakota, and North
Dakota. Flagship station is KFAN in Minneapolis
, MN
- Your Smooth Jazz, 24-hour
smooth jazz network provided under the
company's "Broadcast Architecture" division
Worldwide
- Owns
part of radio groups in New Zealand
, Mexico
, Norway
, and
Australia
- Owns
outdoor advertising companies in Singapore
, South Africa, Sweden
, Switzerland
, Romania
, Poland
, Chile
, Brazil
, Finland
, Mauritius
and Italy
- Owns L & C Outdoor Comunicacao Visual Ltda., of Brazil
- Owns the only airport advertising contract in South
America
- United Kingdom
- Operates urban bike rental
services in several European cities:
Vertical Real Estate
In 2003, Clear Channel created the Vertical Real Estate division
and hired Scott Quitadamo to promote its tower portfolio. Clear
Channel owns and operates approximately 1,500 broadcast
transmission towers across the US. many of which are available for
co-location by third parties such as cellular and PCS companies,
wireless internet, fixed wireless, and other broadcasters.
Corporate governance
Current members of the
board of
directors of Clear Channel Communications are: Alan Feld, Perry
Lewis,
Lowry Mays,
B.J. McCombs, Phyllis
Riggins, Theodore Strauss,
J.C. Watts, and
John
H. Williams.
Tom Hicks and
Vernon Jordan were formerly members of Clear
Channel's board of directors. Jordan was a close friend and advisor
to President
Bill Clinton and was
accused of lying to investigators during the investigations into
perjury and obstruction of justice charges against Clinton. Hicks,
Clear Channel's former vice-chairman, is a past donor to
George W. Bush's political campaigns and a close
associate of the Bush family. Hicks is the founder of
Hicks, Muse, Tate & Furst,
the
private-equity firm which funded
many of Clear Channel's antecedent companies, including most
significantly CapStar, Chancellor Media and AM-FM, Inc..
Top executives
- Lowry Mays: company founder, chairman;
- Mark Mays: son of Lowry Mays, chief
executive officer, president and chief operating officer;
- Randall Mays: son of Lowry Mays, executive vice president and
chief financial
officer;
- John Hogan: chief
executive officer of Clear Channel radio
Sources:
Programming on Clear Channel radio stations
Clear Channel operates the country's largest syndication service,
Premiere Radio Networks. In
addition, Clear Channel syndicates a number of its homegrown talk
and music shows without the aid of Premiere. While Premiere
actively sells its shows to stations, the non-Premiere syndicated
shows are often used as a cost-cutting measure and do not have a
large sales staff. Those shows also do not carry network-wide
advertising (unless distributed by a third party), and allow the
affiliates to keep all local spots, which increases their appeal.
These networks carry many program hosts of various political
ideologies and distribute a variety of programs to both Clear
Channel-owned and non-Clear Channel-owned stations.
Not all programming heard on Clear Channel's radio stations are
produced in house; however, most of Clear Channel's stations share
many similarities to each other in branding and programming.
Format Lab and HD2 Formats
The
Format Lab is a think tank run by Clear
Channel that produces over eighty channels of programming, varying
from mainstream formats to the highly experimental. These channels
are heard on most of Clear Channel's
HD
Radio subchannels on its stations across the country in a
commercial-free format.
Only a few Clear Channel stations (such as
KGB-FM and
KLOU) produce locally
originated HD2 channels, usually tape loops of programming heard on
their regular channel.WHEN THE COW IS TAKEN INTO TOWN IT AFEECTS
THE DOGS BRAIN .
Urban stations
Stations that carry programming catering to black Americans are a
big part of many Clear Channel clusters, particularly Philadelphia,
Chicago, and Detroit. In many clusters Clear Channel has two or
more such stations. About half the Urban stations focus on Rap and
Hip Hop along with younger R & B sounds. The other half blend
some younger R & B along with some Soul from the 70's 80's, and
90's along with some current product. Some of the Hip Hop based
Urban stations report as Rhythmic Top 40 stations rather than Urban
stations because these stations also have some appeal to white and
Hispanic listeners. In a cluster with multiple urban stations owned
by Clear Channel, one is focused on Rap while the other is focused
on Soul. Examples include Philadelphia, with
WUSL's focus on hip hop while
WDAS-FM focuses on Soul, and Chicago, where
WGCI-FM focuses on rap while
WVAZ is focused on Soul.
News talk stations
News talk stations owned by Clear Channel usually have a standard
slate of hosts. The morning show is usually local, with other
timeslots filled by local and syndicated hosts. Programs that
appear on many Clear Channel talk stations include
Glenn Beck Program -- getting his talk
show start at Clear Channel owned
WFLA in
Tampa,
The Rush Limbaugh
Show,
The Sean Hannity
Show, and
Coast to Coast AM,
all of which are affiliated with
Premiere Radio Networks in some
fashion.
The Savage
Nation (who was until September 2009 flagshipped at Clear
Channel's KNEW-910
), The Mark Levin Show and
Dave Ramsey are non-Premiere shows that
air on many (if not most) Clear Channel stations. Limbaugh
is almost universally carried on Clear Channel stations in markets
where the company has a news talk station, with the exception of
markets such as Washington, DC and San Francisco, CA, where
ABC Radio (which previously was Limbaugh's
home network) has a news talk station in the market.
While most of Clear Channel's news/talk stations carry some
combination of Beck, Limbaugh, Hannity, Savage and Noory (of
Coast to Coast AM), this is not
always the case.
Many stations (particularly in the larger
markets) like KFI
, KFYI
, KOA
and WLW
broadcast
a lineup with significant local programming.
Clear Channel owns only one
all-news
radio station,
KFXR in Dallas; it runs
a direct feed of
HLN. Almost all of
Clear Channel's primary talk stations are affiliated with
Fox News Radio for national news.
Liberal talk radio is heard on a
few of Clear Channel's stations, primarily secondary to its main
news talk stations, and usually feature at least one local host
with a combination of
Air America
Radio and
Dial Global programming.
Clear
Channel has shown a tendency to drop liberal talk affiliations
whenever possible and replace it with satellite Fox Sports talk
(see, for instance, WCKY, WARF, KLSD, WXKS {which instead switched to a Spanish language
format}, and WINZ); this has, in a few rare
circumstances, caused protests, such as those involved when Clear
Channel wanted to make the same move with WXXM
in Madison,
Wisconsin
. (WXXM was eventually allowed to keep its
liberal format.)
Sports talk stations
Most sports talk stations owned by Clear Channel are affiliated
with
Fox Sports Radio and carry
The Jim Rome Show; several have
recently picked up
The Dan Patrick
Show. They are usually branded either
Fox Sports or
The Sports Animal.
Adult Standards
Most of Clear Channel's adult standards stations are turnkey
operations, running a direct feed of the
Music of Your Life network. Most of these
stations have no local jocks or Web sites.
Adult Contemporary
Clear Channel's soft adult contemporary stations are usually
branded as either "Lite FM" or "Sunny." Evenings are usually filled
with
Delilah, unless that show is
already aired by another station, in which case the
John Tesh Radio Show is often
substituted.
Your Weekend with Jim
Brickman and the in-house
American Top 10 with
Casey Kasem are popular weekend
syndicated programs on Clear Channel stations.
Hot adult contemporary stations are usually branded as "Mix." Some
Hot AC stations lean modern rock while others lean toward adult
rock.
Rhythmic adult
contemporary stations are often branded as "The Party."
Contemporary hit radio
Clear
Channel's CHR stations are usually branded as KISS FM (e.g., KIIS
Los
Angeles, KBKS
Seattle,
WKFS Jacksonville), Z (e.g., WHTZ
New York,
KKRZ Portland), Wild (e.g., WLDI West Palm Beach, KYLD
San
Francisco), or Hot (e.g., WIHT in Washington,
DC, and KIKI-FM in Honolulu, which is
Rhythmic). Some have other branding, however, if the name to
the format is owned by another company.
Many run in-house
syndicated morning shows (such as Florida's MJ Morning Show), especially in smaller
markets, Elvis Duran Morning Show based out of WHTZ's New
Jersey/New York's Z100, JohnJay & Rich based out of KZZP
Phoenix, AZ, or Matty In The Morning based out of WXKS-FM Boston,
Kidd Kraddick In The Morning based out of KHKS
in
Dallas/Fort Worth. Middays (on the East Coast) on CHR
stations have been adding
On
Air with Ryan Seacrest.
On weekends, syndicated programming airs on the format such as FOX
All-Access,
Open House Party,
American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest,
Backtrax USA: the 90s with
Kidd Kelly,
Dawson McAllister Live, and
(aired on a few stations in small markets)
Rick Dees' Weekly Top 40.
Country music
Country music stations owned by Clear Channel usually carry
Blair Garner in overnights (and
occasionally evenings), and many (although not all) carry
Big D and Bubba in morning drive. There is
no unified branding of Clear Channel's country stations.
Oldies and Classic Hits
Clear Channel's Oldies station consists largely of FM stations with
some AM stations. Nearly all of the FM stations play oldies
spanning from 1964 to 1975, with a 500 song active playlist split
nearly half 1960's and half 1970's. The playlist also includes
approximately a dozen pre 1964 tracks and around 50 songs from the
late 70's and early 80's. These stations generally have a few local
live announcers; much of the time these stations are voicetracked
either locally or from another market. Most run syndicated
programming on weekends, such as
Dick
Bartley or
Mike Harvey on Saturday
nights,
Steve Goddard's programs
(
Goddard's Gold and/or
The 70s), and recently,
Casey Kasem's
American Top 40: The 70s. A handful of Clear
Channel's outlets have picked up syndicated weeknight fare, such as
Mike Harvey,
Marty Thompson or
Tom Kent.
The AM oldies stations' playlists skew somewhat older and span from
1955 to about 1975. About 60 percent of the time they play 1964 to
1969 oldies, 20 percent pre 1964 oldies, and 20 percent music from
the 1970s. Some of these also run Dick Bartley or Mike Harvey on
Saturday nights. Some of the AM stations also run adult standards
several hours on the weekend as well as limited specialized
programming focusing on the pre 1964 era. Most of the AM stations
are in smaller markets.
Rock
These stations tend to play a blend of new rock and harder classic
rock. Some carry
Nights with
Alice Cooper in the evenings. These stations tend to be live
during the day and voicetracked at night. Some stations run
Rockline with
Bob
Coburn and/or
Little Steven's Underground
Garage as well.
Clear Channel classic rock stations are usually branded as
"
The Fox." Often, they will carry
Bob and Tom in morning drive.
Spanish
In a few markets Clear Channel has an FM station carrying Hispanic
programming full-time. In some markets the format is a Contemporary
Tropical format while in others the format carried is more of a
Mexican format. In a few markets a Clear Channel FM station carries
a rap based Spanish format known as
Hurban,
which blends Spanish dance music with R & B hits as well as
some Hip Hop. The division is run by Spanish radio executive
Alfredo Alonso, who joined Clear
Channel in September 2004 as Senior Vice President Hispanic
Radio.
Religious
In a few markets, Clear Channel has a religious station on the AM
band. Some of these sell blocks of time to outside organizations
and have no local shows at all except where local churches buy
time. These are formatted similarly to
Salem
Media stations.
The other type of religious format Clear Channel uses on AM in a
few markets is a Gospel music based format. On these stations
Gospel Music appealing to black Americans airs most of the time
along with some block programming sold to religious groups. These
stations are often programmed as urban stations that happen to be
religious.
Clear Channel syndicated programs
- See List of shows
syndicated by Clear Channel
Clear Channel Sale
On Friday, November 17, 2006, Clear Channel announced that it was
going
private and selling off almost
one-third of its radio assets, according to
The Washington Post and DHM. The buyers,
led by
Bain Capital Partners
and
Thomas H. Lee Partners, agreed to pay $26.7
billion for the company. In a separate transaction also announced
on November 16, 2006, Clear Channel said it would seek buyers for
all of its television stations and 539 of its smaller radio
stations, presumably because the private-equity buyers are not
interested in owning television or small-market radio. Over a
hundred stations have already been assigned to
Aloha Station Trust, LLC upon the
consummation of the merger. The television stations were ultimately
sold to
Newport Television.
On September 25, 2007, the shareholders approved of the buyout,
allowing Clear Channel to proceed with being taken private.
Setbacks and cost-cutting
Due to the recent credit market crunch of 2007, Clear Channel has
ended up with rejected sales of its radio stations. Clear Channel's
attempt to sell off over 100 stations to
GoodRadio.TV, LLC was rejected by the
equity firm backing the deal. The deal has since shifted to
Frequency License LLC, but has yet to resolve itself as the two
parties are engaged in lawsuits. On top of that, the sale of Clear
Channel's television portfolio to
Newport Television had also turned
uncertain, as parent company
Providence Equity Partners
considered other options, although this transaction was ultimately
completed.
On December 4, 2007, Clear Channel announced that they had extended
the termination date of the merger from December 12, 2007, to June
12, 2008. The buyout finally closed in July 2008. The company,
which has laid off thousands of employees in recent years,
announced that it would move to more centralized programming and
lay off 1,500 employees, or approximately 7% of its workforce, on
January 20, 2009. The reasoning was bleak economic conditions and
debt from its transition to a private company. Later on January 20,
the company said that the total count of employees to be terminated
would be 1,850, or 9%.
Between January and May 2009 Clear Channel eliminated 2,440
positions. On May 20 2009, Clear Channel announced an initiative to
help its radio station listeners who are seeking employment to
market their skills and unique features on the air to attract the
attention of employers with available positions.
Criticism of Clear Channel
Market share
In the late 1990s and early 2000s, the company became an object of
persistent criticism. Critics claim that it has abused its market
position and has operated in an unethical manner. FCC regulations
were relaxed following the
Telecommunications Act of
1996, allowing companies to own far more radio signals than
before. After spending about $30 billion, Clear Channel owned over
1,200 stations nationwide, including as many as seven stations in
certain markets. Competitors and listeners complained, but so far
the company has been able to hold on to all of its stations after
divesting a few following the acquisition of AMFM, although over
500 stations have since been sold or are in the process of being
sold since the company announced plans to become privately
held.
Other controversies have included changing many syndicated shows,
most notably
The Rush
Limbaugh Show, from syndication to "network" status by
flipping from well-known stronger news-talk stations to much weaker
stations which are owned by Clear Channel, thereby making the show
a "network" show instead of being syndicated.
Repeat songs and commercials
The company has been criticized for the multiple commercial breaks
on its stations, and in response, it began its "Less Is More"
campaign in November 2004. In contrast, however, the company
recently won in an arbitration dispute with
XM Satellite Radio over the right to air
commercials on its XM music channels.
September 11, 2001
Following
the September 11 attacks on
New
York
and The
Pentagon
, radio
stations circulated a list of songs that were deemed inappropriate
for broadcast during the time of national mourning following the
attacks. A small list was initially generated by the Clear
Channel office on Thursday, September 13, 2001, though individual
program directors added many of
their own songs. A list containing about 150 songs was soon
published on the
Internet. Some critics
suggested that Clear Channel's political preferences played a part
in the list. A number of songs were apparently placed on the list
because they had specific words such as "plane", "fly", "burn," and
"falling" in their titles. Clear Channel denies that this was a
list of banned songs, claiming it was a list of titles that should
be played only after great thought. Also WOFX, Cincinnati, owned by
Clear Channel at the time continued to play songs that were on the
alleged list, even though radio headquarters was in Cincinnati at
the time. Songs on the list included
Tom
Petty's "
Free Fallin',"
Louis Armstrong's "
What a Wonderful World" and the
entire
Rage Against
the Machine discography.
Live music recordings
In 2004, Clear Channel acquired a key patent in the process of
producing
Instant Live recordings, in
which a live performance is recorded directly from the sound
engineer's console during the show, and then rapidly burned on
CD so that audience members can buy copies of the
show as they are leaving the venue. This had been intended to
provide additional revenue to the artist, venue, and promoter, as
well as stifle the demand for unauthorized
bootleg concert recordings made by
audience members. However, some media critics, as well as smaller
business rivals, believed that Clear Channel is using the patent
(on the process of adding cues to the beginning and ending of
tracks
during recording, so that the concert is not burned
as a single enormous track) to drive competitors out of business or
force them to pay licensing fees, even if they do not use precisely
the same process. The patent was transferred to
Live Nation when
Clear Channel Entertainment was
spun off, but the patent was revoked on March 13, 2007, after it
was found that this patent infringed on a prior patent granted for
Telex.
Indecency zero tolerance
During the nationwide crackdown on indecent material following the
2004 Super
Bowl, Clear Channel launched a "self-policing" effort, and
declared that there would be no "indecent" material allowed on the
air. This led to the company's dismissal of several of their own
employees, including popular and high-profile hosts in a number of
cities. Free-speech advocates cried foul. During this same period,
Howard Stern was dropped from six Clear
Channel owned stations in Florida, California, Pennsylvania, New
York and Kentucky. By mid-year, rival
Viacom
(through radio division
Infinity
Broadcasting) brought Stern's show back to those six markets.
In June, 2004, Viacom/Infinity Broadcasting Inc./One Twelve Inc.
filed a $10 million lawsuit against Clear Channel for breaking of
contracts and non-payment of licensing fees due to the dropping of
Stern's show. (Viacom was Howard Stern's employer at the time,
though he has since moved to
Sirius Satellite Radio). The following July, Clear
Channel filed a countersuit of $3 million.
Every Programming employee is required to take online training and
testing to ensure they understand the difference between indecency
and obscenity.
Clear
Channel recently agreed to lease space in the United
Kingdom
to the British
National Party. This was the cause of some
controversy.
Concerts
During the time that Clear Channel owned a live music division
(then called SFX and later Clear Channel Entertainment, spun off in
2005 into a completely independent company,
Live Nation), Clear Channel was involved in
numerous controversies in live entertainment and promotions.
In the
early 2000s, Clear Channel settled a lawsuit with a Denver,
Colorado
concert promoter, Nobody In Particular Presents
(NIPP). In the lawsuit, NIPP alleged that Clear Channel
halted airplay on its local stations for (NIPP) clients, and that
Clear Channel would not allow NIPP to publicize its concerts on the
air. The lawsuit was settled in 2004 with no monetary
consideration, but Clear Channel has new rules regarding local
concert promotion in Denver.
In 2002,
Clear Channel was sued by the US Justice
Department
for not allowing people with diabetes to bring medically necessary supplies,
including syringes used for insulin, into concert venues. Clear Channel
changed their policy shortly afterward.
In 2004,
Clear Channel was sued by a San Francisco, California
man for charging a mandatory parking fee on
every ticket sold for a venue, whether the person purchasing the
ticket was driving alone, car-pooling, or using public
transportation. This has not been resolved by Clear Channel
or Live Nation, its successor.
Promotions
Women's health advocates heavily criticized a contest ("Breast
Christmas Ever") conducted by
The MJ
Morning Show that went to air on Clear Channel's stations in
Tampa, Jacksonville, St. Louis, and Detroit during late 2004.
Contest prizes included
breast
enlargement surgery but provided for no legal recourse in the
event of malpractice. The contest, now known as "Jingle Jugs,"
continues on the program to this day.
Clear Channel distanced itself from the contest, with spokesperson
Jennifer Gery stating, "It's not a Clear Channel-sponsored contest;
we empower our local manager to make programming decisions." This
statement was met with some skepticism. Editor of 'The Radio Wave',
Ian MacRae's responded, "Sure, but the concept was obviously
floated to stations by the network [Clear Channel] in the first
place. Either that or it's a hell of a coincidence that four Clear
Channels thought of it at the same time."
Reluctance to produce local programing
Clear Channel utilizes technology (known as
Prophet) that allows a DJ from
anywhere in the country to sound as if he or she is broadcasting
from anywhere else in the country, on any other station. A
technological outgrowth of earlier, tape-based automation systems
dating back to the 1960s, this is called
voice-tracking, and some smaller market
stations are partially or completely staffed by these "cyber-jocks"
who may have never visited the town they are broadcasting in. In
some instances this allows the corporation to eliminate or reduce
on-air staff positions. It's been stated that Clear Channel
maintains a majority of its staff in hourly-paid, part-time
positions. They may also voice track several other cities. Not all
radio stations use Prophet; there are other systems available for
broadcasters, especially when satellite-based programming is
used.
Clear Channel was criticized for an incident that occurred in
Minot, North Dakota, when a Canadian Pacific Railway train filled
with toxic anhydrous ammonia derailed early on the morning of
January 18, 2002. At that time, Clear Channel owned six of the nine
radio stations in the Minot area. City officials attempted without
success to reach the local Clear Channel office by telephone to
spread the warning; it was several critical hours before the
station manager was finally reached at his home. Clear Channel
claimed no responsibility, and maintained the city should have used
the Emergency Alert System to trigger the automatic equipment at
the station. In this instance, however, the emergency alert system
failed, leaving city officials with no recourse.
Ed McMann is among Clear Channel's most
prolific voice-track announcers and can be heard on six Clear
Channel stations.
Rejection of anti-war billboard
In 2004,
Project Billboard, a
non-profit
Democratic political
advocacy group, filed a breach of contract suit against Clear
Channel for the rejection by its outdoor advertising division of a
billboard ad against the
war in
Iraq. The ad, intended for a 40-foot billboard in
Times Square managed by Clear Channel, was to
have the slogan, "Democracy is best taught by example, not by war,"
along with a red, white, and blue cartoon image of a bomb.
Clear
Channel's contract with Project Billboard only allowed the company
to reject ads that were illegal or contrary to public morals; Clear
Channel claimed that the image of the bomb was insensitive in
New York
City
, the site of the most devastating of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Project Billboard claimed that Clear Channel's rejection was
instead for purely political reasons. Clear Channel settled the
suit by agreeing to an alternative featuring an image of a peace
dove instead of a bomb.
Censorship
Clear Channel has been criticized for censoring opinions critical
of
George W. Bush and other
Republicans. After the
singer of the
Dixie Chicks told a
London audience "we're ashamed the president of the United States
is from Texas," the band's radio airplay dropped precipitously. At
the time Clear Channel was accused of orchestrating the radio
blacklist by such critics as Paul Krugman, however review of radio
airplay logs shows that although many Clear Channel stations did
stop playing the Dixie Chicks, as a whole the company's stations
continued to play the band longer than stations owned by other
companies.
Clear Channel-owned KTVX
was the
only local television station which refused to air the paid
political message of Cindy Sheehan
against the war in Iraq
.
Many consider this to be another act of censorship of grass-roots
free speech, a charge which appears to be countered by the fact
that Clear Channel changed many of its AM talk/music stations to
the
progressive talk format
(featuring the
Air America Radio
network) which was highly critical of
former
President Bush. However, Clear
Channel has begun flipping some of their progressive stations to
other formats. Additionally, Clear Channel has been a media sponsor
of
Frameline, the San
Francisco International LGBT Film Festival, which is much more
aligned with liberal causes than conservative ones.
Clear Channel is also the subject of a punk/ska song by Leftover
Crack called "Clear Channel (Fuck Off)" that accuses the company of
immoral and unfair practices.
Foreign Subsidiaries
Australia
New Zealand
See also
References
- " Contact Us." Clear Channel
Communications. Retrieved on April 24, 2009.
- http://www.eller.org/karl-eller-media.htm
-
http://www.clearchanneloutdoor.com/corporate/hist_1990-1999.htm
- Clear Channel shareholders OK $17.9 billion
buyout - (retrieved July 14, 2008)
- GPS For Avoiding Traffic Jams - Reviews by PC
Magazine
- Official Your Smooth Jazz Web site
-
www.bizjournals.com/seattle/stories/2004/09/13/daily25.html?jst=s_cn_hl
- 100k -
- The Florida Times-Union, Sale of Clear Channel TV stations
uncertain. 2007-11-09
- Radio-Info.com. Clear Channel now says it won't close the going-private
deal this year, 2007-12-04
- Clear Channel to cut U.S. Workforce by 7%,
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123214134302591501.html
- All Access (4/28/2009) Clear Channel Radio Completes Staff Reduction
Connected To Restructuring
- Business Wire (5/20/2009) Clear Channel Radio Kicks Off Initiative to Assist
Unemployed Listeners
- In 2001, Jack Evans, regional senior VP of programming at Clear
Channel, attributed the creation of the list to individual program
directors rather than management, however the completed list was
distributed to the program directors by management at Clear
Channel. See also:
- LiP | Music Review | Bad Transmission: Clear Channel's Hit
List
- http://www.slate.com/id/2157395/
- Gabriel Rossman, "Elites, Masses, and Media Blacklists: The
Dixie Chicks Controversy," Social Forces: 83 (2004): 61-78.
- Media Sponsors for Frameline33
Further reading
- Eric Boehlert, Radio's big bully, salon.com, April
30, 2001
- Eric Boehlert, Tough company, salon.com, May 30,
2001
- Group sues over anti-war billboard, CNN,
July 12, 2004
- Salon.com article on Clear Channel
External links