
Too Tough On Shock Radio? By Frank Saxe Wednesday, November 06, 2002
There
are bars in Boston where you still cannot be served a Sam Adams
Beer, following the brewery’s sponsorship of a controversial radio
contest last August that led to a couple having sex inside New
York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral. That stunt, on Viacom/Infinity’s
Opie and Anthony show, brought the issues of radio content to the
forefront. Advertisers have long been sensitive to the environment
their spots air in, yet a new survey finds that they may be taking
too tough a stand when trying to reach young listeners.
Following the Opie and Anthony dust-up, Jacobs Media and Edison
Media Research conducted an online poll on 20 rock radio websites
across the country. More than 7,300 people responded, and the
results were surprising. Rock listeners say radio is no more “dirty
or explicit” than TV or cable. Less than one-third feel “shock jock
radio personalities have gone too far.” 71% agreed radio
personalities “should be able to say whatever they please,” and only
56% said Opie & Anthony deserved to be fired for their
sex-in-St. Pat’s stunt, and perhaps most interesting for ad buyers:
respondents were more than twice as likely to tune-in to hear a
personality that pushes the limits.
“Perhaps the way advertisers might view these issues is often
times considerably different from the way the audience views them,”
says consultant Fred Jacobs. “A couple of letters or emails can go a
long way in getting an advertiser from using a station, but
listeners of rock radio have a high amount of tolerance to this
content.”
The decision about whether or not to buy is quite complicated,
explains Hill, Holliday SVP/director of local broadcast Karen
Agresti. “We walk a fine line between giving the value to the
client, and what is perceived as an appropriate program.” She says
there have been a number of cases where complaints to advertisers,
largely from religious-based organizations, have led to spots being
pulled.
Yet Jacobs, who admittedly works for the broadcasters and not the
advertisers, says those marketing to 18 to 34 year olds must
remember that a young person’s tolerance is very different. “For
advertisers that are going after a rock audience to stay away from
radio stations that have morning shows with explicit content just
misses a big part of the audience. For an advertiser going after
this audience, they have to understand who they are talking to in
order to communicate to them.”
Adam & Eve, the nation’s largest adult catalog and website,
this week announced it entered into a one-month agreement with the
Howard Stern Show program. During the month of November, Stern will
tout the sex-positive message of Adam & Eve and its products.
“We’re an adult product so the adult audience that Howard Stern has
is the audience that we’re going after,” says spokeswoman Katy
Zvolerin.
Similar to broadcast television, there is a limited amount of
government regulation of radio content, and Federal Communications
Commission is still trying to determine whether to fine Infinity for
the Opie and Anthony broadcast. But the government’s fines seem to
have not much of an impact on the market. Several years ago,
Infinity’s Howard Stern was most famously fined $1 million, while
Emmis’ Chicago-based Mancow program was hit with another $21,000
fine only last week – but both men keep at it.
Since the Opie and Anthony scandal, it appears broadcasters may
be more cautious about the content they air. A Sacramento DJ was
fired in September after he aired a spoof song about sex with young
girls, and in Phoenix a morning man was fired after he made a crass
phone call to the widow of baseball player Darryl Kile. Advertisers
have also been even more nervous about on-the-edge programming, says
Agresti. “Clients have been nervous. It’s been very hard to get them
to buy ads.”
But for all the cleansing that is supposed occurring, Adam &
Eve’s Zvolerin feels that whatever conservatism was out there is
quickly fading. “It caused a little fear when it happened, but
things are back the way they were before."
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