U.S. Headlines
- The U.S. Constitution: Too Old to be Attractive?
- Oklahoma Legislator Introduces NDAA Nullifying Resolution
- Bill Authorizes Use of Unmanned Drones in U.S. Airspace
- Reid Poised to Introduce Yet Another Internet Bill
- Regulatory Agencies Continue to Slow the Economy
- Federal Court Rules Against Traditional Marriage in California
Some ads are provided by Google
They are not endorsed by The New American
| The Demise of Air America | | Print | |
| Written by Dave Bohon | ||||||||
| Monday, 25 January 2010 12:00 | ||||||||
|
The fact that they were up against some formidable “conservative” competition didn’t help. Late last week the inevitable news came, as Air America, the radio network launched in 2004 in part as a platform for comedian and future U.S. Senator Al Franken, announced that it was filling for bankruptcy and would leave the airwaves. In a memo posted to its website, Air America’s chairman, Charlie Kireker, announced that the network would cease its live programming on January 21, and would leave the air for good at 9 p.m. (EST) on Monday, January 25. Photo of Al Franken: AP Images Trackback(0)
Comments (4)
![]()
Lee Gonzales
said:
|
|
liberal talk show hosts I tuned in today to AM 1350 here in Albuquerque to hear what Thom Hartmann had to say.http://www.thomhartmann.com/ A good portion of his show today (I listened for 10 minutes since he promised to quote from the US Constitution, article 3 section 0ne) was dedicated to the Supreme Courts' decision on corporations. After my return to my vehicle he was still talking about the recent Court case. His position was the typical liberal position that Liberals have to have concerning the giant corporations- liberals believe in FDR's commandment:" thou must regulate those evil corporations." Hartmann did quote the Constitution and that Congress could in fact rein in the Court if the judges misbehaved. Judicial misbehavior from a liberal's perspective is different than it would be from the eye of a Constitutionalist Conservative Congressman like Ron Paul! But, nonetheless. Hartmann brought that to the attention of his listeners- that the SP can be restrained by congress. |
Flu-Bird
said:
|
Too bad Well well liberals but it looks like AIRHEADSAMERIKA has shut off its micraphones now what will these disgruntled morlocks have to do besides wtiddling their thumbs? |
Opuntia
said:
|
The beat goes on I can still listen to voices of reason on XM America Left. All the important, intelligent people are all there of which Tom Hartman is the best. |
Fred Goodwin
said:
|
... So Air America failed because Rush and his fellow conservative talk show hosts were too popular? Balderdash! Rush & Co. are popular with conservatives, that's true, but (to state the obvious) conservatives weren't AA's audience. Liberals (again restating the obvious) probably didn't have Rush in their list of favorite shows to listen to. Liberals were AA's audience. So why didn't AA attract enough Liberals to bring in ad dollars? That's the reason AA failed -- it had NOTHING to do with Rush and other conservative talk shows! |





From the very beginning Air America's chances for success were dubious at best. The idea of a full-time radio network filled with personalities and callers spouting opinions and perspective that listeners could already get from NPR, the major news networks, daily newspapers, and weekly magazines simply did not seem like what a large enough demographic of listeners would tune to on a daily basis.

