On April 12, following MSNBC's announcement the
previous day that it would no longer air simulcasts of the Imus in the Morning radio show, CBS -- which owns both the
show's home radio station and the show's syndicator, Westwood One -- announced
it would cease broadcasting Imus in the
Morning due to host Don Imus's description of the members of the Rutgers
University women's basketball team as "nappy-headed hos." In announcing the decision
to fire Imus, CBS president
and CEO Leslie Moonves,
stated: "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." Moonves added: "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."
Media Matters for America has
prepared the following timeline documenting events from Imus' slur of the Rutgers team on April 4 to MSNBC's announcement on April
11:
Wednesday, April 4
- On Imus in the
Morning, host Don Imus referred to the Scarlet Knights, the Rutgers
University women's basketball team -- which is made up of eight African-American and
two white players -- as "nappy-headed
hos" after executive producer Bernard McGuirk called the team "hard-core hos." Media Matters for America noted Imus' comments at the
time.
- The New York
Times later noted that
"Imus's remarks were picked up ... by the Media Matters for America site," and Salon.com's
Jonathan Miller similarly credited Media Matters for posting video of
Imus' comments. In an article about MSNBC's decision to drop the
show, the Los Angeles Times identified Media Matters as "the liberal media
watchdog group that first spotlighted Imus' remark last week." USA
Today also reported
that Media Matters "originally
called attention to Imus' remarks."
Thursday, April 5
- Addressing his "nappy-headed hos" comment, Imus
asserted, "I don't
understand what the problem is, really," and referred to the remark as
"some idiot comment meant to be amusing," as noted in Miller's
April 10 Salon article.
- WNBC.com, the NBC affiliate in New York, reported Imus' April 5
comments in an article the same day, which quoted a Rutgers
spokesperson saying, "We agree with Mr. Imus that this was, in his own
words, an 'idiot comment.' We are very proud of the success of the Rutgers
women's basketball team. Coach [C.
Vivian] Stringer and the Rutgers players are outstanding
ambassadors for this great institution."
- MSNBC released a statement that asserted,
"While simulcast by MSNBC, 'Imus in the Morning' is not a production of
the cable network and is produced by WFAN Radio." It added, "As Imus
makes clear every day, his views are not those of MSNBC. We regret that his
remarks were aired on MSNBC and apologize for these offensive comments."
The statement was noted in
an article published at 3:26 p.m. ET on
NBC10.com, the website
for the NBC affiliate that serves the Philadelphia area.
Friday, April 6
- Imus apologized on Imus
in the Morning, asserting, "Want to take a moment to apologize
for an insensitive and ill-conceived remark we made the other morning referring
to the Rutgers women's basketball team," and adding, "It was
completely inappropriate, and we can understand why people were offended. Our
characterization was thoughtless and stupid, so, and we're sorry." Media Matters noted Imus' apology at the
time.
- The National Association of Black Journalists (NABJ) released a statement
calling Imus apology "too
little too late." NABJ
"appreciates the swift action from NBC and its cable channel MSNBC in condemning
his remarks, and now hopes the network will continue to do the right thing and
separate itself permanently from the incendiary host."
- According to an Associated Press report, "NABJ President Bryan
Monroe asked Thursday if Imus had 'lost his mind' and called for
the veteran radio host's dismissal." In an
additional statement on the
NABJ website, Monroe expanded on his call for Imus' dismissal: "Those comments were
beyond offensive. Imus needs to be fired. Today." In the statement, the NABJ also called on "journalists
of all colors to boycott his show until he acknowledges and apologizes for his
damaging remarks." The AP report also noted several other statements
condemning Imus:
- WFAN: "We are
disappointed by Imus' actions earlier this week which we find completely
inappropriate. We fully agree that a sincere apology was called for and will
continue to monitor the program's content going forward."
- Statement of NCAA president Myles Brand and
Rutgers president
Richard McCormick: "The NCAA and Rutgers University are offended by the
insults on MSNBC's Don Imus program toward the 10 young women on the
Rutgers basketball team. ... It
is unconscionable that anyone would use the airways to utter such disregard for
the dignity of human beings who have accomplished much and deserve great
credit."
- Statement by Stringer: "To serve
as a joke of Mr. Imus in such an insensitive manner creates a wedge and makes
light of the efforts of these classy individuals, both as women and as women of
color. It is
unfortunate Mr. Imus sought to tarnish Rutgers' spirit and success. Should we
not, as adults, send a message of encouragement to young people to aspire to
the highest levels as my team did this season?"
- Philadelphia Inquirer columnist Phil Sheridan and
New York Daily News columnist Filip Bondy wrote
columns condemning Imus' remarks. Bondy stated: "Imus should be
fired for it today --
actually, yesterday --
just as the National Association of Black Journalists demands." The Web entries of those columns are dated April
7, but the Nexis database shows their publication dates as April 6.
Saturday,
April 7
- In a rally
at the National Action Network (NAN) headquarters in New York City, Rev. Al Sharpton called for Imus to be fired.
- In a column
titled "Sorry Excuses: MSNBC's Form Apology," Washington Post columnist Lisa de Moraes
wrote: "MSNBC, meanwhile, continued to say in a statement it wanted folks
to know that 'while simulcast by MSNBC, "Imus in the Morning"
is not a production of the cable network and is produced by WFAN Radio.'
MSNBC also wanted to make sure you know that 'as Imus makes clear every
day, his views are not those of MSNBC,' adding, finally: 'We regret
that his remarks were aired on MSNBC and apologize for these offensive
comments.' " De Moraes added: "This is not the first time
MSNBC has had to apologize for comments made by Imus on its air, not by a mile.
Which explains why various organizations were pretty dismissive of yesterday's
apologies. Media watchdog group Media Matters of [sic] America noted the
comments are 'just the latest in a long history of racial slurs made on
the show by Imus, his guests, and regular contributors.' "
- New York Times
reporter David Carr noted,
"Imus's remarks were picked up on the Web, in this case by the
Media Matters for America site (mediamatters.org).
And by Friday, both his radio and television outlets were getting out 10-foot
poles."
Sunday, April 8
- In another Daily
News column, "CBS' call
on Don hinges on dollars not sense," sports columnist Bob Raissman argued
that "Imus' fate will be based on one, and only one, issue -- money." Noting that
CBS Radio syndicates Imus in the Morning
to stations across the United States, Raissman claimed
"there is no way [Leslie]
Moonves [president and CEO of the CBS Corp.] will cut off the flow of Imus cash -- even if he is repulsed by
his radio star's warped comments." But, Raissman added, "They will dump Imus in a second if this
episode leads to companies --
en masse -- deciding to
to [sic] stop
advertising on the 'Imus
in the Morning'
show."
- The National Organization for Women (NOW) sent out an "Action Alert"
that originally asked readers to send a letter
to WFAN, CBS, and MSBC. After MSNBC and CBS Radio announced a two-week suspension
for Imus, the "Action Alert" stated: "Two Weeks
is Not Enough."
NOW promoted the alert with a link saying "It's
Time to Dump Don."
Monday, April 9
- New York Times
reporter David Carr previewed Imus' April 9
show, and said that Imus "fills a demand for serious discussion on
contemporary radio so that the journalists and politicians pushing an agenda or
a book don't have to get in line behind the strippers at Howard
Stern's show. So who is left to hold Mr. Imus accountable?"
- Imus said
that he "learned" from this incident that "you can't make fun of
everybody because some people don't deserve it."
- Newsweek
editor Howard Fineman told
Imus: "[I]t's a different time, Imus ... it's
different than it was even a few years ago, politically," and added that
"some of the stuff that you used to do, you probably can't do
anymore." Fineman continued, "I mean, just looking specifically at the
African-American situation. I mean, hello, [Sen.] Barack Obama's [D-IL] got
twice the number of contributors as anybody else in the race," and added,
"[T]hings have changed. And the kind of -- some of the kind of humor that
you used to do you can't do anymore. And that's just the way it is." Fineman also said, "[A]s David
Carr said in The New York Times
this morning, sometimes you go over the line so far you can't even see the
line. And that's what happened in this case."
- Former Boston
Globe columnist Tom Oliphant introduced
himself to Imus by stating:
"Good morning, Mr. Imus, and solidarity forever, by the way."
- On the radio show Democracy
Now! Rev. Al Sharpton said, "I'm calling for
Imus to be fired." On the
same program, NOW-New Jersey President Maretta Short said NOW
was "asking for people to go to our website and take action by sending
messages to" WFAN, CBS Radio, and MSNBC, adding: "I think that it's
important to say, about these apologies that Imus is supposed to make, there's
certain things you can't apologize for."
- Rev. Jesse Jackson led a march of "about 50 protesters
Monday outside NBC offices in Chicago," according to the Associated Press.
- Media Matters called on members of the media
to question MSNBC's apparent double standard -- quickly firing host Michael
Savage for anti-gay hate speech in 2003 while failing to punish Imus for years
of inflammatory commentary.
- On Fox News' The
Live Desk, Marvin Kalb, lecturer in public policy at Harvard
University's Kennedy School of Government and a senior fellow at the school's
Joan Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy, noted Imus'
charity work and said
Imus could make "an even larger statement about himself, his own value
system, if he simply resigned."
- Imus appeared on the Rev. Al Sharpton Show with NABJ president
Bryan Monroe.
- Rutgers University President Richard L. McCormick
wrote that Imus' "shocking comments last week were despicable and deeply
hurtful to our students, our coach, and their families. ... We will
continue to speak out and to make clear that the university will not tolerate
such uncivil, irresponsible, and offensive behavior."
- NAACP chairman Julian Bond said in a statement,
"It is past time [Imus'] employers took him off the air."
- The Washington Times reported that "Hall
of Famer Cal Ripken [ Jr.] canceled an
appearance on Don Imus' radio and television
program scheduled for later this week because of comments the talk show host
made about Rutgers' women's basketball team."
- On CNN's The
Situation Room, Sharpton said
about Imus: "[W]e want him fired."
- NBC News and CBS Radio both announced
they would suspend Imus for two
weeks, beginning April 16.
- Reporting on Imus' suspension, the CBS Evening News and ABC's World News described Imus as
"outrageous," "provocative," and "inflammatory,"
but did not note that Imus in the Morning
has a history
of racial slurs.
- In response to the announcement of Imus'
suspension, Media Matters released
a statement in which Media Matters spokesman Karl Frisch said: "This appears to be
nothing more than an effort by NBC News and CBS Radio to make the controversy
go away. They must take responsibility for continuing to air Don Imus after
years of similarly bigoted language."
- Media Matters
senior fellow Paul Waldman appeared
on MSNBC's Scarborough Country
to discuss Imus' comments.
Tuesday, April 10
- NABJ's Monroe goes to New York to meet with
executives of CBS and NBC.
- At a press conference, members of the
Rutgers women's basketball team criticized Imus, but said they
would meet with him and hear his apology. Later that evening, on Fox
News' Special Report with Brit Hume,
Weekly Standard executive editor
Fred Barnes said
that agreeing to do so had been "one huge mistake," and that the
team had "acted like victims."
- Imus, discussing the two-week suspension on his
radio show, said
that "there's a lot of stuff that we can do, but at some point, I stop
playing." Imus added that he doesn't "deserve to be fired" but
that he "should be punished." He ended the segment by saying,
"I'm not whining, because I don't feel as bad as those kids feel, and I've
said that several times. But, I'm not going to play forever."
- In contrast with the contrition he purported to
express the day before, Imus asserted
on his own show and on NBC's Today
that the phrase "nappy-headed hos" "originated in the black
community." Specifically, he stated, during a discussion -- simulcast on MSNBC
-- with Today co-host Matt Lauer
and Rev. Al Sharpton that "I may be a white man, but I know that ... young
black women all through that society are demeaned and disparaged and
disrespected ... by their own black men and that they are called that
name." Sharpton objected to Imus' point regarding the origin of the
phrase, saying, "We have said that we are against the degrading that is
done even by blacks. ... Wherever he says this originated from does not give
him the right to use it." After the discussion concluded, Imus claimed on
his program that Sharpton had misrepresented his remarks. Imus asserted that he
did not say that he "should be cut slack because these young women are
disparaged and demeaned and disrespected by young black men and others in their
own community," but he also did not explain the significance of his
repeated assertion that "nappy-headed hos" "originated in the
black community."
- USA Today
ran two articles on the controversy. The first, on page 1D, summarized the
previous days' developments. The article also reported several opinions
on the controversy's future direction, including that of Media Matters:
Critics also are targeting Imus' high-profile guests, including
presidential candidates and network anchors. "To the extent that Imus' pattern of offensive speech is
being discussed in the media now, it could put pressure on the authors,
pundits, politicians and journalists who go on his show regularly to either
publicly distance themselves from his behavior or risk being seen as having
legitimized it," says Karl Frisch of Media Matters for America, which first publicized Imus' remarks last week.
The second USA Today article, on page 3D, reported that
Imus "finds himself on a new playing field" in the controversy,
because of "watchdogs, aided by the Internet, [who] are shifting the
boundaries for radio and television personalities." The article cited
Boston University journalism professor Tobe Berkovitz, who was quoted as saying
that "'Before the Internet and the blogs, if the mainstream media
didn't call you accountable, the tree fell in the forest and no one heard
it." Media Matters was also
quoted in the piece.
- In a New York
Times op-ed, PBS host Gwen Ifill wrote
how, in 1993, when she was covering the White House for the Times, Imus
reportedly said, "Isn't The Times wonderful ... It lets the
cleaning lady cover the White House." Ifill wrote that she didn't find out what Imus had said until a New
York Daily News columnist
reported it five years later, when she was working for NBC News as a Capitol
Hill correspondent. She
also wrote: "Why do my journalistic colleagues appear on Mr. Imus's
program? That's for them to defend, and others to argue about. I
certainly don't know any black journalists who will."
- Congressional Black Caucus (CBC) chairwoman Rep.
Carolyn Cheeks Kilpatrick (D-MI) issued a statement: "Mr. Imus' public apology is
not enough. I am calling for the immediate termination of Mr. Imus and his
executive producer Bernard McGuirk. Additionally, I urge the Federal
Communications Commission (FCC) to mandate sensitivity training and a zero
tolerance towards racist, sexist, anti-religious, and other discriminatory
commentaries."
- Staples and Bigelow Tea announced that they would no
longer advertise on Imus' program.
- On MSNBC's Countdown,
host Keith Olbermann reported
that Procter &
Gamble had "suspended its advertising commitments" for MSNBC's
Imus simulcast. Olbermann also reported that "the media buying agency
Carrot USA says some of its clients have asked for their commercials to be
pulled from the Imus program, though it would not identify those
clients." Bloomberg reported that "Procter &
Gamble Co. ... pulled its ads from MSNBC's entire daytime rotation last week to
prevent spots from rotating onto Imus's show."
- On April 10, following the Rutgers women's
basketball team's press conference, the Feminist Majority Foundation sent
an email to its members, asking them to "join feminists everywhere by expressing
your outrage to CBS radio and MSNBC television over Imus's comments, and demanding that he be fired." The letter from
Feminist Majority president Eleanor Smeal declared: "As we celebrate the
35th anniversary of Title IX this year, such behavior against women athletes
and their accomplishments cannot be tolerated. As women's sports continue to
grow in popularity, and young women enjoy opportunities that the women's
movement fought so hard to win, this kind of backlash is threatening to our
rights as well as hurtful."*
Wednesday, April 11
- The New York Times reported that General Motors had
"stopped its [Imus] radio ads (though it still broadcasts TV commercials
with the simulcast)" before Imus' remarks about the Rutgers
basketball team. But The Wall Street Journal reported on April 11 that General
Motors, "which has historically advertised on both the Imus radio show
and MSNBC broadcast, has 'no plans to make any changes at this
point,' according to a spokeswoman."
- Later in
the day, another New York
Times article reported that "General
Motors and American Express said today that they, too, will pull their
advertisements from his program."
- Reuters reported that GlaxoSmithKline and
Ditech.com would also pull their advertising. Ditech.com is owned
by GMAC, in which General Motors holds a minority stake.
- Reuters also reported that Sprint Nextel Corp. said on April
11 that it was pulling its ads from the show.
- Advertising Age reported that PetMed Express had
dropped its Imus in the Morning advertising.
- CBC member Rep. Stephanie Tubbs-Jones (D-OH) said,
"I feel the apology and subsequent suspension of Mr. Imus is insufficient
in resolving this matter. Mr. Imus has a history of making offensive remarks on
the air and I am calling for the immediate termination of Mr. Imus and his
executive producer Bernard McGuirk."
- The AP reported that "Bruce Gordon,
former head of the NAACP and a director of CBS Corp., said Wednesday he hoped
the broadcasting company would ... fir[e] radio talk-show host Don Imus."
- In an April 11 posting on Time
magazine's Swampland weblog, Time.com Washington editor Ana Marie Cox announced
she wouldn't "be going on Imus anymore." In a subsequent posting
on April 12, Cox further explained her position, stating that she "did
the show almost solely to earn my media-elite merit badge." Cox explained that
initially, after having been "invited inside the circle," she
"was thrilled to be there," but soon "found" herself
"succumbing to the clubhouse mentality that Imus both inspires and
cultivates." She
added: "I'm embarrassed to admit that it took Imus' saying something so
devastatingly crass to make me realize that there just was no reason beyond ego
to play along." Cox
concluded: "My giving up the show, I acknowledge, is too little and too
late. I doubt that I'll be missed. It's depressingly easy to find female
journalists who will tolerate or ignore bigotry if it means getting into the
boys' club someday." *
- MSNBC announced
its cancellation of Imus in the Morning simulcast. CBS officials stated that CBS Radio "will
continue to speak with all concerned parties and monitor the situation
closely."
* This entry was added as part of an
update, after the item's original posting.
&mdash R.C., K.H., B.J.L., J.S., & R.S.K.
Copyright © 2009 Media Matters for America. All rights reserved.