Ehrlich Radio: We listen so you don't have to.

This week on Ehrlich Radio, Bob Ehrlich took on a new opponent for his grudge match — voters. David Zurawik’s column in the Baltimore Sun sums it up pretty well, so rather than trying to pick out the best parts, I thought I’d just share the whole column.

June 19, 2010

Attack ad, callers upset Ehrlichs’ WBAL show

qqqAn O’Malley campaign attack ad and a series of negative callers did an effective job of upsetting the usual tone and rhythm of “The Kendel and Bob Ehrlich Show” Saturday on WBAL radio.

Maryland Democrats failed in their efforts to get WBAL and election officials to take Ehrlich off the weekly airwaves once he started running in earnest for governor. But by buying airtime for attack ads like the “Big Oil Bob” radio spot that aired Saturday during the show, they have found a highly effective way to influence what is discussed on the program.

And while I have no evidence that the negative callers Saturday were in any way part of an organized partisan effort, they certainly were effective in getting under Ehrlich’s skin and seriously disrupting the usual pro-Ehrlich, propagandist flow of the program. In fact, a clearly agitated Ehrlich ordered the show’s producer at one point Saturday to cut one of the callers off altogether — a no-no in the world of responsible talk radio.

Ehlich suggested on-air that he ordered the caller cut off because of “inappropriate” language, but the only language that approached that realm came when the caller suggested that since he was a “voter,” the candidate should be “kissing his butt” rather than arguing with him — presumably to get his vote.

I don’t think saying the word “butt” on talk radio at 10 a.m. is exactly beyond the pale — and I am someone who seriously questioned the propriety of the president of the United States using a cruder term for the same part of the anatomy at 7 a.m. on the “Today” show last week. That is a time of day when children are surely in the same room as the TV. I doubt there were many little kids on a Saturday morning sitting around with their ears glued to “The Kendel and Bob Ehrlich” show to hear what the former governor had to say about how Gov. O’Malley is allegedly driving business out of Maryland.

Callers challenged Ehrlich almost point by point on-air Saturday — as if doing a media fact check, which made me think if it wasn’t organized, it was some very interesting timing.

When Ehrlich essentially said to one caller that unions were not the enemy, the next caller challenged him on his record in office on the issues of unions and big business.

Another caller challenged him on what he meant when he talked about the need for “new leadership.” The caller said Ehrlich was “old leadership.” That sure sounded like a Democratic talking point to me.

I lost track of the references made to the “Big Oil Bob” attack ads as one of the guests, Towson University professor Richard Vatz, explained how the radio spot should effectively be dealt with. As sound and astute as the advice offered by Vatz might be, the ad was still setting the agenda on “The Kendel and Bob Ehrlich Show” Saturday. The simple fact that it was being discussed meant less time for the usual propaganda of ringer Republican guests brought on to sound the same narrative of how fabulous things were in Annapolis when Ehrlich was governor, and how wretched things are now with O’Malley. Once there was a Camelot, but now darkness has settled upon the land … blah, blah, blah. (I heard the ad at 9:59 a.m. Saturday)

It looks to me like this fierce campaign for votes might finally be starting to turn into savvy media warfare. And why shouldn’t it as we get closer to the election and the serious media spending begins?

Some of the best and brightest — and nastiest — political operatives in the world are living 40 miles south of here and looking for new business. Why wouldn’t O’Malley and Ehrlich try to tap into that in their win at all costs battle?

I have to tell you that I think the Democrats are doing better at this game right now, and being on WBAL radio on Saturdays is Little League stuff compared to the level at which such battles are now being waged elsewhere in New Media America.

If the negative calls to the Ehrlichs’ Saturday morning show aren’t part of an organized effort, I’d get them organized by next Saturday if I was running O’Malley’s campaign. Even if WBAL and the Ehrlichs put a team of producers in the studio or control room screening their brains out trying to keep the negative calls off the air, it unsettles even the best professional hosts to know it is going on.

I’m not a professional radio host, but I have been there, and it makes you ask whether the part-time radio show is really worth the grief. Kendel and Bob Ehrlich are not professional hosts either — not by a long shot given Ehrlich’s order to the producer to get rid of the caller he didn’t like Saturday. Irritated, tense and out of synch do not make for a winning radio sound.

I can’t wait to see where this goes. If it goes where I think it is, I will be writing about it in terms of what it says about our ability as a community to have a constructive media conversation about where we want this state to go in the coming months and years.

It’s clear that Bob Ehrlich can’t handle dissent.  Whenever anyone disagrees with him he automatically dismisses them as a “plant.” The fact is that Bob Ehrlich is a pawn for Big Oil and when confronted with the truth, as people often do, he shows his true colors and loses his temper.

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Light for All:

This morning’s Baltimore Sun article had a number of factual errors.   We wanted to set the record straight and keep them honest.

If the General Assembly wants to reduce spending and protect the priorities of Maryland’s families, they should vote for Governor O’Malley’s proposed budget.

According to the Baltimore Sun, “the governor’s $13 billion operating budget avoids major spending cuts to state services, instead relying on one-time accounting maneuvers and hundreds of millions in federal stimulus dollars to balance revenue shortfalls.

This is just plain wrong…

Fact:   The Governor’s proposed FY11 budget reflects more than $2 Billion in actions to control spending since the General Assembly passed last year’s budget, and

Fact:  The Governor’s proposed FY11budget includes $1.014 Billion in budget reductions; and

Fact:  Prior to submitting the budget this year, Governor O’Malley brought over $1 Billion to in cuts to the Board of Public Works that are reflected in the FY11 budget for the General Assembly to vote on, and

Fact:  Governor O’Malley and the General Assembly have cut state spending by $4.7 billion; the Governor’s FY11 proposal will bring our four year totals to $5.6 billion in spending reductions.   With the proposed FY11 budget the size of state government has been reduced by a four year total of 3,500 positions.

Fact:  Today in Maryland General Fund spending IS LOWER than it was four years ago.

Fact:  Today, Maryland is one of only seven states in America to earn a Triple A bond rating – a seal of fiscal responsibility certified by all three major bond rating agencies.

Light for All.

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