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BEIJING, Jan. 27 -- A New York radio station apologized Monday for
repeatedly airing a song ridiculing victims of the recent tsunamis in South Asia
and using racial slurs, saying the piece was in poor taste.
New York FM radio station WQHT, or HOT 97, ran the segment on its Miss
Jones in the Morning show. The piece used racial slurs to describe people swept
away in the disaster, made jokes about child slavery and people watching their
mothers die.
The hip-hop and R&B station, known for its ¡°shock jocks,¡± apologized on
its Web site, saying it, ¡°regrets the airing of material that made light of a
serious and tragic event. We apologize to our listeners and anyone who was
offended.¡±
WQHT¡¯s program director and DJ Tarsha Nicole Jones, who uses the on-air
name Miss Jones, apologized on the program and said the segment should not have
been broadcast.
The piece drew wide criticism from Albany to New York¡¯s City Hall, with
many lawmakers calling on the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to
fine HOT 97.
¡°At a time when virtually the entire world has come together to help in the
tsunami tragedy relief, employees of HOT 97 have come up with this song,¡± said
New York State Assembly member Jimmy Meng, a Democrat from Queens. ¡°We are
disgusted and demand immediate action by the FCC.¡±
An FCC spokesman in Washington had no immediate comment.
The piece was also denounced by the Washington-based Council on
American-Islamic Relations, which said it had received calls from Muslims
offended by the piece.
Station-owner Emmis Communications Corp. issued an apology and said the
seven-person staff of the show had agreed to contribute one-week¡¯s pay each to
tsunami-relief efforts.
Four weeks after giant tidal waves killed as many as 234,000 people across
the Indian Ocean region, workers are still pulling hundreds of bodies from the
mud and rubble each day and aid groups say they are struggling to reach isolated
areas.
(Source: Shenzhen Daily/Agencies) |