Filipino group demands apology from racist radio host
By
Bernadette Ellorin
Published Apr 8, 2010 10:26 PM
April 3 — BAYAN USA joins the millions of Filipinos in the United States
and around the world in taking collective offense to the tasteless remarks
recently made by radio personality Adam Carolla regarding Manny Pacquiao, the
Philippines and the Filipino people on his nationally syndicated show,
“The Adam Carolla Podcast.” We also agree with the demand that
Carolla issue an official apology for his insensitive and vulgar insinuations
about [world boxing welterweight champion] Manny Pacquiao, Filipinos, and most
especially Filipina women and children in the sex trade industry.
It’s sad that in 2010 it must still be pointed out that the two
unfortunate realities of the Filipino people that Carolla despicably chose to
goad with ridicule — the Filipino people’s overwhelming pride in
Manny Pacquiao’s success and the existence of the sex trade industry that
consumes mainly young Filipina women and children — stem from the most
unfortunate reality of all, widespread poverty and joblessness in the
country.
Only in a very poor country such as the Philippines, where people are afforded
very few economic opportunities to rise from impoverishment, can the sex trade
or any black market industry proliferate into a cultural norm.
Carolla’s tirade against Manny Pacquiao being “illiterate”
and “praying to chicken bones” is no different than mocking
Filipinos for being poor. Carolla mocks further by stating that all that
Filipinos have going for them is “Manny Pacquiao and sex tours.”
Clearly, poverty and the choices it leads people to make in the so-called Third
World are game material for comedy and cheap laughs from the likes of Adam
Carolla.
Perhaps the even bigger offense beyond Carolla’s words that should not go
unchecked is the mainstream corporate media’s tolerance and allowance of
such derogatory and racist comments to even air. That a white radio personality
such as Adam Carolla can boldly make those remarks against a racial minority
with seemingly no air of reservation for the social ramifications ultimately
reveals that corporate media here in the U.S. have barely progressed from the
turn of the 20th century when, during the long-forgotten Philippine-American
War, mainstream U.S. newspapers blatantly depicted caricatures of Filipinos as
“n — — rs”, monkeys and dog-eating savages, all in the
effort to justify what was to be the U.S.’s first colonial project
abroad.
CBS Radio Inc., which broadcasts “The Adam Carolla Podcast,” is one
of the largest owners and operators of radio stations in the U.S., with more
than 140 radio stations across the country, reaching millions of listeners
everyday. In 2007, CBS Radio fired radio host Don Imus for racial slurs made
against African Americans on his now-cancelled show, “Imus in the
Morning.” Incidentally, CBS Radio was also the former home of notorious
radio personality Howard Stern, who in 1992 used his nationally syndicated
radio show to issue a warning that the Philippines “is a country where
fathers sell their own daughters for sex” and that he wouldn’t
recommend anyone go to the Philippines “unless you want to get
laid.”
Despite making contributions to the U.S. for more than 100 years, Filipinos
— one of the largest Asian groups in the country, numbering at nearly 4
million — are still painfully absent from mainstream media. With the
likes of Adam Carolla, Howard Stern, Alec Baldwin, David Letterman and even the
writing team of ABC’s Desperate Housewives each taking very public jabs
against Filipinos and Filipino culture, it is no wonder why Filipinos would
welcome and rally in support when one of their own rises from underdog
obscurity to become perhaps the most successful boxing champion in recent
history and deservedly earning worldwide respect and admiration.
Corporate media outlets such as CBS Radio Inc., Clear Channel Communications,
Citadel Broadcasting and the media oligarchs such as Viacom that own them,
literally profit in the billions annually off one task — disseminating
information to the public and shaping public opinion. When left in the hands
and interests of multinational corporations, we see how racists such as Adam
Carolla, Don Imus and Howard Stern are offered lucrative deals and the power of
their own nationally syndicated shows. While it remains to be seen how CBS
Radio Inc. will respond to Carolla’s remarks now that the Filipino
community is rightfully taking issue with it, clearly the bigger fight remains
in the struggle against systemic institutional racism and for responsible media
messaging that entails inclusion and representation of all racial minorities
that suffer from marginalization.
The writer is the chairperson of BAYAN USA.
E-mail: [email protected]
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