Anti-war activists are asking San Francisco radio station KMEL-FM to
remove the U.S. Navy as a sponsor of the annual Summer Jam concert in Mountain
View, saying the station is "using hip-hop to promote the military to young
people of color."
The high-profile event, set for Aug. 21, usually sells out the 20,000-
capacity Shoreline Amphitheatre.
San Francisco's Global Exchange, the group Code Pink: Women for Peace and
two dozen other organizations are leading a protest at noon today in front of
the San Francisco offices of Clear Channel, which owns KMEL and nine other Bay
Area stations.
In the weeks before the U.S. invasion of Iraq in 2003, Clear Channel --
the nation's largest owner of radio stations -- sponsored "Rallies for
America" in several U.S. cities. The conglomerate's officials defended the
events as supporting the military. Anti-war activists called them "pro-war"
rallies.
The protesters allege in a letter they sent Clear Channel and KMEL last
week that the Navy's sponsorship of the concert was an attempt to "promote the
Bush administration's pro-war agenda."
Clear Channel spokeswoman Gabby Medecki downplayed the sponsorship.
"The decisions made for Summer Jam have all been made locally," she said,
"including the decision to include the military, which has been a longtime
sponsor."
In the Bay Area, Clear Channel also owns KQKE-AM, which carries the
liberal Air America network's talk shows, and KNEW-AM, home to conservative
Michael Savage.
"I think the diversity of our stations here speaks for itself," Medecki
said.
KMEL and Navy officials did not return calls and e-mails Monday.
Clear Channel officials said the Navy and other military recruiters had
sponsored the Summer Jam concert for at least 10 of its 19 years. But
activists are particularly concerned this year. Only one Bay Area music
station has more listeners than KMEL-FM, according to the most recent Arbitron
ratings. A Clear Channel official confirmed that roughly 40 percent of the
station's audience are people of color.
"For many people in these communities (of color), the military is an
escape from the violence they see in their neighborhoods," said Jen Low, an
organizer for the protesters. With several branches of the military not
reaching recruiting goals and with public opinion polls turning against
President Bush's handling of the war, activists see an opportunity to show
"the Navy is attempting to use any and all means to meet its goals," according
to the activists' letter.
They want KMEL to sever its "ties" with the Navy or grant "counter-
recruitment groups equal access to the 2005 KMEL Summer Jam as that granted to
the U.S Navy."
Medecki said counter-recruiters were welcome to have a booth at the event
at Shoreline Amphitheatre for the same price other sponsors paid -- $5,000
to $10,000.
Low said the organization didn't have enough money to sponsor a booth,
but it does plan to buy tickets to the show and do counter-recruiting inside.
© 2005 San Francisco Chronicle
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