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CURRENTS: RADIO
Static
from Clear Channel
BY
CHRIS NOLTER
Clear
Channel Communications, the nation's largest radio company (1,200
stations, more than $3.5 billion a year in advertising revenues)
has adopted an unorthodox p.r. strategy in a dispute with the
small but influential trade publication Inside Radio. Clear Channel,
based in San Antonio, operates a parody Web site that makes scathing
personal allegations about Inside Radio's owner and publisher,
Jerry Del Colliano.
At first glance, the site, insideinsideradio.com, could be mistaken
for Inside Radio's own home page, insideradio.com -- except, that
is, for a doctored photograph of a man with his head buried in
his own posterior, captioned "Jerry checks with an inside
source."
Del Colliano filed suit in New York federal court in July seeking
$115 million in damages. "They've made a mockery of me,"
he says. His "couple-of-million-dollar company," he
contends, has never "spent a dime" on legal defense
in twenty-seven years.
The earliest version of Inside Inside Radio was distributed to
the radio industry via fax in 1998, and the parody soon moved
online. Articles on the site cast Del Colliano as a "shakedown
artist," and a "malicious terrorist." Another story
urges readers to switch to other publications, including Clear
Channel's own M Street Radio. A highlighted blurb offers $100
for "dirt on Del Corleone."
More seriously, the site alleges that Del Colliano has used the
threat of unfavorable press coverage to "extort" advertising
or $425-per-year subscriptions from radio executives.
And in Clear Channel's case, the site claims that Del Colliano
used such threats to try to pressure Clear Channel into buying
his company for a vastly inflated, eight-figure sum. (Both sides
agree there were buyout talks at some point, but disagree about
who ultimately rejected whom.)
A spokesperson for Clear Channel declined to comment on the dispute,
saying the company does not discuss pending litigation. Court
filings show that the mock Web site is largely the work of Randy
Michaels, a former shock jock who is c.e.o. of Clear Channel's
radio group. Michaels's on- and off-air antics (pretending to
liquefy a frog in a blender on air; dropping his pants at a convention)
are the stuff of legend -- and the occasional lawsuit -- in the
radio industry. He once told a Wall Street Journal reporter, "I've
never grown up. It gets me in trouble, but it's the key to my
success."
Michaels has taken his complaints beyond the Web site. Back in
November 2000, Clear Channel filed a $10 million suit in federal
court in New York against Del Colliano. Before the trial could
begin, however, Clear Channel terminated the case and re-filed
in a state court in Texas for, as the Web site explains, "strategic
reasons." Del Colliano's attorneys then got it moved into
federal court and are petitioning to bring it back to New York.
Clear Channel's new suit makes the same basic arguments as before,
but omits several earlier charges, including libel.
Del Colliano contends that the real reason for Clear Channel's
lawsuit is to litigate him out of business, and thus suppress
critical coverage of the company.
"What radio people want from their trades is for everything
to be sweet and nice," says Del Colliano. "That's not
what Inside Radio is."
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