drinky wrote:
My point is valid because you admit to not listening. There's no need to debate something with you when you have your mind made up nor do you listen. It's very simple to understand.
Can you honestly give an accurate opinion of say a vacation spot that you have never visited or a restaurant that you have never eaten at?
I get it, you don't like my show. You don't like North's show. You don't like B&B. That's fine. You are just way off on your opinion of how I deal with callers.
Again, I have listened to you for many hours on the radio. In fact, when you first started hosting, I was one of your biggest supporters on the board.
While I think you are undeniably talented--moreso than Murph, Paruch, Holmes, Fred, Boers and Hanley (the last of whom I like a lot)--I became disenchanted with your shows when your "fun-loving" radio "populism" gradually transmogrified into an elitist anti-populism that specialized in ridiculing "ignorant" positions championed by the "unthinking" masses. I take this transformation to be typical of the evolution the station itself has undergone over the past decade: A radio station that once could legitimately be called "the voice of the fan"--especially in its cultivation of "celebrity" callers who made massive contributions to the Score's early years--long ago became the chief antagonist of the fan. The B&B show has functioned as the avante garde of this descent into a kind of neoliberal cultural forum devoted to the degradation and humiliation of the masses--operating as the sports talk equivalent of reality TV shows like "Fear Factor" and "American Idol"--and many of your own shows have replicated this aesthetic.
In the early days of its existence, the Score established its cultural relevance by challenging the accepted sports narratives fed to us by disingenuous team executives and their lackeys in the print media. Having instrumentalized this "anti-establishment" attitude to capture a listening audience, Score hosts today frequently signify their alignment with the values and attitudes of the sports, media and corporate elite by focusing their critical faculties on fan behavior and thinking as much as they discuss the teams that the fans are interested in. Your shows, drinky, are both a symptom of and a contributor to this phenomenon.
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Antonio Gramsci wrote:
The crisis consists precisely in the fact that the old is dying and the new cannot be born; in this interregnum a great variety of morbid symptoms appear.