Liberal demographic: Clear Channel turns left.

AuthorWalker, Jesse
PositionCitings

AS WE GO to press, there are 36 radio stations that broadcast talk shows from the liberal network Air America. Over a third of them are owned by Clear Channel, the nation's largest radio chain. Take out the stations that air only one or two programs from the networks lineup, and Clear Channel's share gets even bigger.

It's an alliance that flies in the face of the conventional wisdom about Clear Channel: that as a Texas corporation that has benefited tremendously from the Republicans' regulatory policies--and is owned by Lowry Mays, a friend and financier of President Bush--it would always use its market power to boost the GOP's agenda. Turns out that profits trump politics after all.

The first Clear Channel outfit to make the switch was KPOJ-AM, in Portland, Oregon, which joined Air America in March. Portland is a famously left-leaning town, and the experiment was a success: Among listeners aged 25 to 64, the station's ratings jumped from No. 26 to No. 3. Managers of other outlets around the country noticed this success and decided to imitate it. Soon such lefty strongholds as Ann Arbor, Michigan, and Madison, Wisconsin, were hearing Al Franken and company on Clear Channel-owned affiliates, too. The format caught on in less obviously leftish places as well, such as San Diego and Miami.

Does that mean Clear Channel's critics are wrong? It depends on which critics you're...

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