CBS Fires Don Imus
A day after MSNBC dumped its simultaneous cable television broadcast of his "Imus in the Morning" radio show April 11, and several major advertisers backed out, Don Imus was fired by CBS for calling the mostly black Rutgers University team "nappy-headed hos."
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(CBS/AP) CBS announced Thursday its decision to cease broadcasting the Imus in the Morning radio program, effective immediately, on a permanent basis.
Imus initially was suspended for two weeks for calling the Rutgers women's basketball team "nappy-headed hos" on the air last week, but outrage continued to grow and advertisers bolted from his programs.
"From the outset, I believe all of us have been deeply upset and revulsed by the statements that were made on our air about the young women who represented Rutgers University in the NCAA Women's Basketball Championship with such class, energy and talent," said CBS President and Chief Executive Officer Leslie Moonves, in announcing the decision.
"Those who have spoken with us the last few days represent people of goodwill from all segments of our society – all races, economic groups, men and women alike," added Moonves.
"This may be our last Radiothon, so we need to raise about $100 million," Imus said at the start of the event, which has raised more than $40 million since 1990.
Imus acknowledged again that his remarks a week ago about the Rutgers women's basketball team had been "really stupid."
"There's a difference between premeditated murder and the gun going off," but the end result is the same, he said: "Somebody's still dead."
Several major advertisers had dropped the show, and pressure from politicians and the public had mounted since the radio host referred to the Rutgers basketball players as "nappy-headed hos" shortly after they lost the NCAA women's national championship game.
MSNBC dropped its simulcast of the "Imus in the Morning" radio program and aired news instead on Thursday, though Imus still broadcast the show from an MSNBC studio.
On Imus
bettyjoan47 said:
“ ... we must ask ourselves, when do we as a race take down the numerous black men that disrespect us in their movies and recordings? Again, Imus was wrong, but where is the outrage when we hear the same words, the same demeaning characterizations of black women? Where are the Sharptons and Jacksons? ”
mmgflow said:
“ What rappers was calling the Rugters team nappy-headed ho's? ”
tiffaneyjoy said:
“ ... why is it that we allow our black men (especially rappers) to make these comments about our black women and it's ok? We only get upset when it comes from a white person. ”
hehateme said:
“ I think both Sharpton and Jackson are self-serving opportunists always looking for the most sensationalized stories to get them on the 5 o'clock news. They know where the battle needs to be fought and it's not on some picket line when the cameras are on. ”
cvdunbar said:
“ You better be ready for backlash from whites. You know they are going to watch and listen to all black tv and radio shows to look for a slip up ... I'm sure they'll find something. ”
charles775 said:
“ Don Imus is grabbing for straws when he blames black men for the derogatory names that he called the black women basketball players. ”
boyddeen said:
“ I was absolutely floored when [Imus] stated that he knows black men talk to black women like this. What? That comment is just as bad as that deplorable comment he and his sidekick made about the women on the team. ”
naimi2004 said:
“ I don't think Sharpton or Jesse had a lot to do with the Imus thing. They kind of lay in wait for the opportunity to jump on the bandwagon as it's speeding. ”
ty70037 said:
“ After listening to Imus and the producer's entire comments I think it was just an attempt at humour that didn't come across well ... he did say all the other girls on the other team where cute. ”
The 18th annual Radiothon began Thursday and runs through Friday. It was one of the reasons the start of his suspension from CBS was delayed.
Tony Gonzalez, supervisor of the Radiothon phone bank, said volunteers were getting about 200 more pledges per hour than they did last year, and most callers were expressing support for Imus.
By midday, $967,793 had been pledged, according to a display board at the Hard Rock Cafe, where the Radiothon was moved Thursday morning. Last year's Radiothon raised a total of $2.9 million for three charities: Tomorrows Children's Fund, CJ Foundation for SIDS and the Imus Ranch.
"We haven't had much of a negative at all," Gonzalez said. "Most of them are very, very supportive, think it's a terrible situation."
Imus had apologized repeatedly for his comments. He also has said that those who called for his firing without knowing him, his philanthropic work or what his show was about would be making an "ill-informed" choice.
Imus said Thursday said he had apologized enough and plans to meet with members of the Rutgers team. "At some point, I'm not sure when, I'm going to talk to the team. That's all I'm interested in doing."
It emerged Wednesday that a key to pulling the plug on his MSNBC simulcast was an internal mutiny within NBC. About 30 angry NBC News employees, many of them black, met with news division President Steve Capus and said they'd had it with Imus' brand of coarse ethnic humor.
"Within this organization, this had touched a nerve," Capus said Wednesday. "The comment that came through to us, time and time again, was 'when is enough going to be enough?' This was the only action we could take."
Bruce Gordon, former head of the NAACP and a director of CBS Corp., told The Associated Press on Wednesday that he hoped the company would "make the smart decision" by firing Imus.
"He's crossed the line, he's violated our community," Gordon said in a telephone interview. "He needs to face the consequence of that violation."
The Rev. Al Sharpton, who has sought Imus' firing, said he will meet Thursday with CBS officials. The Rev. Jesse Jackson said he planned to meet with both CBS and NBC executives on Thursday with a delegation of civil rights activists and lawmakers to discuss the Imus situation and diversity in broadcasting.
The Rutgers' women's basketball team, meanwhile, appeared Thursday on "The Oprah Winfrey Show" with their coach, C. Vivian Stringer.
At the end of their appearance, Winfrey said: " ... I want to borrow a line from Maya Angelou, who is a personal mentor of mine and I know you all also feel the same way about her. And she has said this many times, and I say this to you, on behalf of myself and every woman that I know, you make me proud to spell my name W-O-M-A-N. You've really handled this beautifully."
A growing list of sponsors — including American Express Co., Sprint Nextel Corp., Staples Inc., Procter & Gamble Co., and General Motors Corp. — had said they were pulling ads from Imus' show indefinitely.
Imus' program is worth a total of about $15 million in annual revenue to CBS Corp., through advertising on WFAN and syndication fees received from MSNBC and Westwood One. It wasn't clear how much of that total came from MSNBC.
Two black on-air personalities at NBC News, reporter Ron Allen and the "Today" show's Al Roker, had already publicly urged Imus' firing on Web log entries.
Allen said he didn't buy the argument that Imus was "edgy" and had hurled slurs at many others. "Personally, I don't think being an `equal opportunity' insulter makes this OK," he said.
Roker said he was tired of cruelty that passes for funny, humor at other people's expense.
"He has to take his punishment and start over," Roker said. "Guess what? He'll get re-hired and will go on like nothing happened. CBS Radio and NBC News need to remove Don Imus from the airwaves. That is what needs to happen. Otherwise, it just looks like profits and ratings rule over decency and justice."
Democrat Barack Obama on Wednesday became the first presidential candidate to call for Imus to be fired. "He didn't just cross the line, he fed into some of the worst stereotypes that my two young daughters are having to deal with today in America," said Obama, the only black candidate in the race.
Imus' program has been the only thing MSNBC has aired on weekday mornings for the 11 years of the network's existence.
The network loses a morning show personality at a time when his show has been doing very well. Almost as many people had been watching the telecast of his radio show as the highly-produced newscast on CNN, leading CNN to dump its two morning anchors just last week.
Producing its own morning show will also cost MSNBC money at a time it has been cutting costs, but it doesn't have the threat of an advertiser boycott.



