Monday, December 3, 2018

Mimi's Metathesiophobia



With all the bogus remedies and "cures" WBAI tries to sell its handful of listeners during Reimers' endless beg-a-thons, one wonders why they haven't come up with a cure for  Metathesiophobia, a mental malady from which opportunistic WBAI inmates commonly suffer: Fear of change.  

In this case, it is not so much change per se that has the JUCs and JUCettes scrambling—it is the fear of their own downgrading coming undone. A fear of change to their own change, as it were. I think most of you know what I am talking about. 

In recent months, Linda Perry has worked hard to pull the station out of a morass of lies, misinformation and, by default, criminality. It is probably an impossible mission, but there is nothing more to lose, so any positive attempt to restore significance to WBAI should be encouraged and supported—even against the odds. The overwhelming majority of dedicated, thinking listener-supporters have already shown their dissatisfaction with what WBAI offers on the air these years. Unlike station management and the individuals behind this insurrection invitation, listeners once admired the principles upon which Lewis Hill and  a few friends created Pacifica almost 70 years ago.

Remarkably, many of WBAI's current voices fail to distinguish between fact and fiction. In its early years, the station functioned in great part as an antidote to bland, misinformed blather and corporate/government spin. It  offered honest assessments of current events and re-examined a past that continued to be distorted.

There continues to linger a splash of virtue at WBAI, but it is too sporadic to draw or maintain a dedicated audience, which is why upgrading the program content is an absolute necessity. Most of us recognize this fact, as does Linda, which is why she has begun the laborious process of wiping the slate where needed and bringing in listenable, intelligent programs. This, of course, means that the dross has to be flushed out and changes made. 

Berthold Reimers, the figurative "General Manager" should never have been hired—it took him less than a month to demonstrate his uselessness, but that decision is solely up to the equally inept and miscast PNB. They must like the way he juggles the books.

So here we are, the bizarre effort to downgrade and sink WBAI while professing dedication continues. Instead of trying to give their shameful shows substance and ceasing to deceive whoever might tune in, the group that posted the letter below has opted for self-righteous, doomed rebellion. However, having told the erstwhile listener-supporters to go to hell, they obviously never stopped to consider why there is no longer sufficient interest in WBAI to keep it afloat—what matters mostly to these audio albatrosses is feeding their inflated egos and making a little money on the side.

They never ask themselves why the station's programming is being "dismantled" or they themselves "discarded." The answer is simple: they can or will not grasp the original concept of Pacifica. They have narrowed the station's "community" down to one that comprises a small fraction of a fraction—alienating thinking people of all races. Now they realize that the fire curtain, too, is finally coming down.

Let us hope that Linda Perry can cure their metathesiophobia.

The following note was submitted as a comment Sunday, December 2, 2018. Neither unexpected nor well written, but rather desperate and pathetic.
Click on Mimi's note to enlarge.
By the way, the last beg-a-thon ended in November and despite the current on-air promo where a poor misled lady falsely claims it was a success, the next one starts tomorrow (December 4)!

13 comments:

  1. The Mimi/Riley duo seems loath to use the designation, "volunteer", so it is "unpaid staff."

    Of course Mimi is in fact a volunteer As such, she is free to go back to her make-believe plantation at any time.

    What a splendid idea that would be.

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  2. Been down this road already.....

    https://corporate.findlaw.com/litigation-disputes/unpaid-staff-are-not-employees-under-the-nlra.html

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    1. The first discussion and debate as to forming a union took place at Margot's in early 1977. Percy Sutton's people from Inner City Broadcasting had attended a year-end holiday celebration, also at Margot's, in December, Anna Kosof having already been made general manager of WBAI. Margot had hoped to bridge some of the divides and tensions at that December gathering.

      By the first months of 1977 it became clear to all concerned that a radical change in programming would occur, under the direction of Anna Kosof and Pablo 'Yoruba' Guzman, shifting WBAI to a sort of quasi-commercial air quality focusing on the black and puerto-rican communities of New York.

      The position of Kosof and of Guzman was that existing staff and volunteers had no say as to programming decisions, which were solely within their authority.

      In February 1977 there were large meetings at Margot's, of just shy of 200 people. The meetings were in many ways nonproductive, consisting of lengthy discussions of any and everything, eg, Paul Gorman's personal angst over his divorce, and Fass rambling about nothing with any focus whatsoever, really.

      As the date announced for the change in programming approached, someone, I don't remember who, initially, suggested staff would have more creditability with media and therefore more power if they were a union.

      This idea was eagerly and enthusiastically seized upon by majority sentiment of the room.

      The one experienced professional union organizer present pointed out the practical realities, including the notion of 'unpaid staff', particularly pointing out that 'union' was not a magical word as the group seemed to feel.

      There was no interest in his perspective or thoughts.

      On 11 February 1977 at the point the announced shift in station direction, focus, audience, and programming were to take effect, staff seized the studios at 'The Church' on 62nd Street, and the battle spiraled outward from that point as Ralph Engelman, board chair, and a supporter of Sutton's/Inner City Broadcasting's changes, ordered WBAI off the air.

      This is of course the short version.

      The notion of 'unpaid staff' as part of negotiations stems from this point in time.

      ~ 'indigopirate'

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    2. Thank you, Indigopirate, for the clarification. Apropos labor unions, AFTRA (I believe) had made a contraact with one or both of our West Coast stations and approached me about WBAI signing up, so I called a staff meeting (we had a paid staff of 25) and asked for a yes or no vote. They unanimously turned down the possibility.

      BTW, the Margot indigo speaks of is the late Margot Adler, who was one of WBAI’s assets.

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    3. She was indeed :)

      ~ 'indigo'

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  3. What was that Chris? Management accountable to staff? Really? Really? Mimi has 12 listeners and somehow they are accountable to her? What kind of Bizarro world is this?

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  4. I know this is off topic but will you mention Thursday's PNB meeting because I listened to it and it was pretty hilarious

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  5. The station is proverbially drowning and Null and Davis are advertising expensive "Water Filters" a day before the latest, never ending fundraiser.

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    1. I, too, am struck by that nonense, but thats WBAI, isn’t it?

      They abruptly left the overrpriced Null water filter to foist con artist Ron “I’m the professor” on what’s left of victims.

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  6. Ron Daniels’ ego is far too inflated for him to ever understand that.

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  7. Bob Law a racist?
    No , why would anybody think that ? lol

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  8. As it happens, the New Yorker dated the 42nd anniversary of the WBAI shutdown published https://www.NewYorker.com/magazine/2019/02/11/the-machine-stops.

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