Radio Free Bejing

Formaldehyde

Both Fair And Balanced
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FCC, Justice Department investigate covert Chinese radio network

The Federal Communications Commission and the Justice Department are investigating a California firm whose U.S. radio broadcasts are backed by a subsidiary of the Chinese government, officials said.

Both investigations come in response to a Reuters report published on Monday that revealed the existence of the covert radio network, which broadcasts in more than a dozen American cities, including Washington, Philadelphia, Boston, Houston and San Francisco. (reut.rs/1Wrflt4)

"Based on reports, the FCC will initiate an inquiry into the facts surrounding the foreign ownership issues raised in the stories, including whether the Commission’s statutory foreign ownership rules have been violated," FCC spokesman Neil Grace said.

The California firm is owned by James Su, a naturalized U.S. citizen born in Shanghai. Reuters reported Monday that Su’s company, G&E Studio Inc, is 60 percent owned by a subsidiary of Chinese state-run radio broadcaster China Radio International (CRI).

The FCC doesn't restrict content on U.S. radio stations, except for rules covering indecency, political advertising and children’s programming.

But under U.S. law, the FCC prohibits foreign governments or their representatives from holding a radio license for a U.S. broadcast station. Foreign individuals, governments and corporations are permitted to hold up to 20 percent ownership directly in a station and up to 25 percent in the U.S. parent corporation of a station.

G&E does not own any U.S. stations, but it leases two 50,000-watt stations: WCRW in Washington for more than $720,000 a year, and WNWR in Philadelphia for more than $600,000 a year.

Through a different set of limited liability companies, Su owns, co-owns or leases virtually all the air time on at least a dozen other U.S. stations. Those stations carry G&E content, which is produced largely by his West Covina, California studios or by state-run CRI in Beijing.

The news programming on these CRI-backed stations sticks closely to the Chinese government line on a host of issues, including the current military standoff in the South China Sea between China and the United States.

Su’s spokeswoman declined to comment Monday. In a Sept. 16 interview with Reuters, Su said his radio network abides by U.S. law because he leases air time from stations, rather than owning them outright.

U.S. law also requires anyone inside the United States seeking to influence American policy or public opinion on behalf of a foreign government or group to register with the Justice Department. Public records show that neither Su nor his companies are registered as foreign agents under the law, called the Foreign Agents Registration Act, or FARA.

A U.S. law enforcement official said the Justice Department probe began last month, after Reuters approached the FBI and prosecutors with questions about Su's California-based operation. Last month, after receiving inquiries from Reuters, Su’s companies deleted two web pages that showcased the relationship between his firms and CRI.

"We are aware of the media reports and can neither confirm nor deny an ongoing review or investigation into the matter," said Marc Raimondi, a Justice Department spokesman. "We are committed to continuing to use the full range of tools and authorities under the Foreign Agents Registration Act to ensure proper foreign registration and filings."

In the September interview, Su said that he and his companies comply with all U.S. laws, including FARA.

Su's network of CRI-backed stations in the United States is one of three international networks with hidden financial ties to the Chinese broadcaster. Reuters identified similar networks in Europe and in the Asia-Pacific region. Reporters found that there at least 33 radio stations in 14 countries in CRI's global network.
Ominous threat? Relatively harmless propaganda for the rest of us? Or who cares?
 
people still listen to the radio?

why wasn't this done in podcast format. moreover why does the FCC still regulate radio airwaves when the internet exists?
 
There are a lot of times when radios are on, like driving.

Plus the political right uses it's for propaganda, Rush Limbaugh plus others.

The Progressives/Left tried:
Air America (formerly Air America Radio and Air America Media) was an American radio network specializing in liberal talk radio. It was on the air from March 2004 to January 2010.

The network featured discussion and information programs and specialized in presentations and monologues by on-air personalities, guest interviews, calls by listeners, and news reports. Several shows had million plus audiences, and multiple weekday presenters continued on in radio, television, or politics after their time on Air America. For example, in 2008, The Thom Hartmann Program had 1.5–2 million unique listeners a week and The Lionel Show had 1.5–1.75 million unique listeners a week.[1][2] Hartmann, Randi Rhodes, and Mike Malloy still have shows on other networks. Marc Maron started his WTH podcast by trespassing in Air America's studios after the network's demise, before moving to Los Angeles. Al Franken went from his show to the United States Senate, and Rachel Maddow moved her show to television on the MSNBC network.

The network was financially troubled, however. A scandal involving nearly a million dollars in loans from a Boys and Girls Club in New York secretly transacted by Evan Cohen came out in 2005 and was a source of negative publicity. The loans were repaid, and in October 2006, mounting debts forced Air America Radio to file Chapter 11 bankruptcy. The company was bought by Green Family Media, made up of New York real estate investor Stephen L. Green and his brother Mark J. Green, who bought the network in March 2007 for US$4.25 million.[3][4]

The company eventually changed its name from Air America Radio to Air America Media and lastly to just Air America, an effort to establish itself as a broadcaster on multiple media sources including television and the Internet, and one not merely relegated to radio. Always primarily a radio network, on January 21, 2010, Air America went off the air citing difficulties with the current economic environment, and filed for Chapter 7 bankruptcy and liquidated itself. Bennett Zier was the company's last CEO including through the bankruptcy and liquidation.
(Continued)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Air_America_(radio_network)
So, a foreign government controlling a radio station can be unhealthy.

Lots of people listen to radio.
 
You make a strong case that reactionaries should be banned from the airwaves.
 
You make a strong case that reactionaries should be banned from the airwaves.
No, it's the people's choice, if they don't listen then the stations go broke like Air America.
 
people still listen to the radio?

why wasn't this done in podcast format. moreover why does the FCC still regulate radio airwaves when the internet exists?
Technically? Because broadcasted electromagnetic waves can cause serious interference issues in life-critical equipment and can also easily disrupt economic activity by overriding other broadcasts. Point being that it has to be regulated for entirely practical purposes and industry can't be trusted to do this itself.

From a cencorship perspective? No idea.



----> Now I'm waiting for the dogpile of 'but America does this to other countries'.
 
You make a strong case that reactionaries should be banned from the airwaves.

Who are these "reactionaries" that you refer to and can you provide the names of a few examples who you consider to be reactionary?

You say that they should be banned from the airwaves. Wouldn't that be an infringment on their First Amendment right to free speech?
 
My sarcasm apparently has great mojo.

---> Now I'm waiting for the dogpile of 'but America does this to other countries'.
That would ironically be in the subject bar. :lmao:
 
people still listen to the radio?


Radio Facts and Figures
Here are the Facts:

Radio today reaches more than 90 percent of people in the U.S. on a weekly basis;
Radio reaches more than 68% of U.S. consumers ages 12 and older on an average day;
236 million people listen to the radio each week;
There are more than 13,500 radio stations across the United States, covering more than 40 different formats;
Audio consumers are listening for more than 2 ½ hours every day; and
More than two-thirds of the weekly radio audience works full-time, tuning in during the working day, away from home.
http://www.newsgeneration.com/broadcast-resources/radio-facts-and-figures/

This was as of December 2013.
 
There's worse things on the radio than Chinese propaganda. And as A.O.K. John points out, the Constitution protects the speech and press rights even of people we disagree with.
 
No, it's the people's choice, if they don't listen then the stations go broke like Air America.

So evidence that market forces dictate what is on the airwaves, right? Then that must explain the so-called liberal media thriving elsewhere.
 
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