Saturday 27th of April 2024

the grand prince of bogans .....

the grand prince of bogans .....

from Crikey …..

Does Alan Jones deserve a place in our licensed radio community?

Stephen Mayne writes:

Alan Jones once said of me, "People like Stephen Mayne don’t deserve a place in society".

The shock jock clearly didn’t enjoy the campaign I waged a few years back against his cash for comment deals with various listed companies such as Qantas, Commonwealth Bank, Optus and IAG. This included running for their boards and threatening to keep doing it every year if they didn’t drop their cash for comment deals. They all did.

Not one of the target companies ever agreed to use the phrase "cash for comment" in the notices of meeting explaining the board tilts. So while they paid for positive commentary from Jones, they were clearly sensitive about letting their shareholders know what was going on, but were still prepared to sign the cheques. The big question now is what 2GB advertisers make of the latest scandal.

The Parrot and his thuggish boss, John Singleton, have massively over-reacted to ACMA’s findings and provided an insight into how power is wielded in Sydney, by claiming chairman Chris Chapman owed them some sort of favour. Singleton said the following to The Australian:

I don't want to get personal with Chris (Chapman), I like Chris but he has called on Alan (Jones) and me for many favours over the years and we've both been forthcoming. So, I'm personally disappointed, but maybe he had no legal alternative.

Jones really went the knuckle by saying Chapman, "had more than jobs and I've had feeds. Mr Chapman has gone around this town on many occasions, to me and to others, seeking references to be written for his appointment to a stack of jobs."

The implication of these comments is that the regulator is in debt to the Parrot and should therefore let him break the rules with gay abandon. That’s an affront to basic ethics.

John Singleton’s interview with Alan Kohler on Inside Business in 2005 might explain why John Howard and Helen Coonan are so effusively backing James Packer’s close mate. Here are the edited highlights:

KOHLER: Do you think the cross-media rules and the foreign ownership rules will change?

SINGLETON: there's sure to be no decisions made that are going to in any way affect the chances of John Howard being re-elected as Prime Minister in the next term, so...

KOHLER: What does that mean?

JOHN SINGLETON: It means life's a rort and it's only a rort if you're not in it, that's what it means. And John Howard likes being Prime Minister so he's not going to set out to upset the existing media owners.

The moral bankruptcy of Howard’s position says a lot about his character.

partners in crime .....

from Crikey …..

Alan Jones, the Daily Telegraph and the hidden agenda

Sydney public sector lawyer Richard Hurford writes:

It is surprising that, given the mass of discussion surrounding the ACMA report on Alan Jones' Cronulla comments, more has not be made of his very recent conviction for breaching the Children's Criminal Proceeding Act by naming a child witness on air in a murder trial.

It might explain why Jones and his cohorts have been so aggressive in attacking the findings of the toothless tiger that is ACMA. Why bother otherwise?

Jones is due to be sentenced on Thursday. He faces up to 12 months' jail and/or a fine of up to $5500. The Daily Telegraph also was convicted in the same matter and faces sentence on Thursday.

Normally, it's at the sentencing hearing that the convicted defendant brings out all his "good character" evidence. Bit hard to say you are of good character if you have just been found guilty by an impartial government body of making statements "likely to encourage violence or brutality" and "likely to vilify people of Lebanese background and of Middle Eastern background on the basis of their ethnicity".

To keep himself out of the big house (or even home or weekend detention) and keep the fine low, Jones had to squash the view that this ACMA report was valid. The fact that Jones and the Telegraph are co-defendants in this might also explain the strong pro-Jones line run by that newspaper all last week. They are partners in crime - literally!

the sledge .....