Tuesday, July 2nd could be interesting.
The so-called JUCs are having a "community" (i.e.
"black and brown") meeting
in a Harlem church from 6 to 9 PM. This
group comprises mostly people of color who have splashed,
and now wish to
immerse WBAI into an artificial solution of Africana, hip-hop, and
street-corner rhetoric. Their heroes include some of the most notorious
front-office
failures in recent years, some of whom are scheduled to speak.
That same night, and almost at the same time (6:30 to 9:30) another
WBAI faction will
meet at a downtown location. These people seem
content to
continue floating in a lighter, albeit equally toxic vintage solution, but
they
also number among them some who simply have been caught in the middle.
The purpose of both meetings is to “solve” the current crisis.
The JUC (Justice and Unity Coalition) has a political agenda that it strongly
feels ought to be WBAI’s mission. The other group is meeting (informally, they
say) to comply with a demand from Pacifica’s National Board that the station’s
Local Station Board and staff present them with “a written plan for the
survival of WBAI for the next two or three years.” The meeting announcement points out that “it’s time to get
cracking.” Actually, it was high
time for that several years ago.
Neither faction is to be commended by anyone whose concern for
WBAI and Pacifica's
welfare is genuine. Although some individuals are
well-intentioned, both groups are by their very existence detrimental to WBAI
and, remarkably, just now waking up to reality. Their decades-long soporific
experiences at WBAI did not blind them to the decay that surrounded them,
but
guilt was not a factor, for each side had tons of blame to heap upon the
other. And then there was Mother
Pacifica, where slightly different but
equally ignoble motives brought out the worst
in people. Everybody had a
personal agenda, fueled by ego, greed and the kind of
desperation that sets in
when the end of the road is in sight and there are no other paths to take.
Most simply closed their eyes and ears, stuck their head in the
sand, and hoped it
would all go away. Somehow, it always had, and when yet
another clerk was sent
in to untangle the twisted remnants of past
mismanagement, a sigh of relief was
heard and Morpheus beckoned again, successfully.
To wonder what kind of super
naiveté has overcome all these people, one has but
to tune in 99.5, listen to the shallow program offerings, and consider the huge
and ongoing debt WBAI finds itself in today. Few outsiders listen to the
station anymore, and
those who do are not likely to sense the severity of the
current financial crisis. It's
mostly blather as usual, and one might even
catch a commercial plug for events
and products that bear as little relevance
to WBAI as a numerology scam, homeless
guardian angels, and drops of
"cancer curing" tap water. There was a flurry of fundraising activity
a couple of months back, but as soon as the immediate needs were met or
temporarily warded off, WBAI’s management and staff went back to sleep.
So what will they talk about at these concurrent Tuesday night
meetings? Who will go
uptown? Who will go downtown? Will there be a
reoccurrence of Hitler salutes? Will those baseball bats
come out again? Will
Frank LeFever distribute fliers promoting programs that stagnated
years ago?
And where, one wonders, will Berthold Reimers' spirit flit about? Which movie
will a demoralized WBAI crew take in on Tuesday night? How will they handle the
dichotomy?
The reality is, of course, that they are all losers. The fall of
WBAI is the result of joint
efforts that go back many years. At WBAI, the
contaminated seeds were sown in the late Sixties, but I think the most serious
blow, the point of no return, was reached
with the emergence of the so-called
"new" Pacifica. It was, indeed, new, diluted and rudderless—a vacuum
into which scheming incompetents were sucked like dirt. We
owe our thanks to a
few good people who were slow to lose hope, but one has to wonder if the end
should not have come sooner—before Pacifica and its satellites
became a
shattered dream and models of mismanagement and hypocrisy.
Some of the good people have already fled—the rest would do well
to skip these
useless meetings and stay on the side of WBAI. Lift a glass to
the memory of Lew
Hill and the pioneer broadcasters and listeners who helped
him realize a dream.
When the book is written, as it surely will be, the closing
chapter will lend to this
amazing story a Rip Van Winkle wrinkle Washington
Irving could not have imagined.
To be sure, this is a tragedy, but an oddly
farcical one—the stuff low-budget summer movies
are made of. —Chris
Albertson
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