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Relationships and the N-Word
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| Guest post by: Nelson Davis |
Article Overview: I’m feeling a bit sorry for Dr. Laura Schlessinger right now as I gaze at the wreckage left behind after an indulgent and misguided five minutes of spraying the N-Word across the airwaves.
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Relationships and the N-Word
I’m feeling a bit sorry for Dr. Laura
Schlessinger right now as I gaze at the wreckage left behind after an indulgent
and misguided five minutes of spraying the N-Word across the airwaves. She
obviously shattered some important relationships with her listeners,
advertisers and radio stations. Every small business owners knows that
relationships are the plasma in the lifeblood of business. No matter how smart,
educated or accomplished you may be, nothing trumps the quality of your
relationships with customers, vendors and employees. It is fascinating to think
that one event or even just one word can completely stop the machinery.
Dr. Laura has been more
successful than most of us, earning a place as a national media figure and
being rewarded with what I expect is several million dollars per year from her
widely syndicated radio program, books, lectures and other business ventures.
But, her professional life changed in just a few minutes in what I feel was a
relationship altering lapse in judgment. The relationship that was battered was
the one she had worked years to establish with sponsors, stations and
listeners. Successful on-air personalities have climbed that mountain by
building strong relationships over time with their listeners or viewers. As you
probably know, in the business of broadcasting the audience is counted by a
ratings service and the advertising time is sold accordingly. That is the
relationship chain that leads to electronic media prosperity.
I had a great lesson in
media world relationships while working as the Broadcast Standards person for
The Tonight Show with Johnny Carson in 1981-82. One day I was called over to
the Tonight Show offices because a young comedian named Eddie Murphy was making
his first appearance on the program and wanted to do a piece in his routine which
required the studio audience to collectively use the N-Word. I don’t even think
that we had begun calling the word by that euphemism then. I walked to the
studio from my office wondering what would I say to Murphy who was then a rising
star on Saturday Night Live? When he answered the dressing room door, I was a
bit nervous as a black person on a mission to tell the younger man why it would
be a bad idea to get that derogatory term involved in his first appearance on
The Tonight Show.
The point I made to
Eddie Murphy was one of how relationships were important even for a comedian.
Johnny Carson could do many things on the show that guests couldn’t get away
with because Mr. Carson had a multi-decade relationship with the viewers. Eddie
Murphy didn’t have years on the air or a strong bond with Carson’s audience to allow him a broad latitude of
behavior. To my surprise he listened politely and quickly decided to drop the
potentially offensive part of his monologue. I’m sure there was a bit of self
preservation involved; realizing that if he offended Carson there would not be an invitation to return.
Though I don’t know the
good doctor Laura, I have met her once in her early career and the exchange we
had was an interesting moment of character revelation. Our meeting was back in
1978 when I was working my first job as a producer on a series at a Los Angeles
PBS TV station. Ms. Schlessinger was on her way up as a local broadcast
personality and was interested in appearing on our program which dealt with
criminal behavior. I don’t remember the precise reason why, but I had to tell
her that we couldn’t work with her in that particular instance. The look she
gave me and the body language was pretty chilly and is memorable to me three
decades later! When her use of the N-Word hit the fan a few days ago, I called
a couple of radio people to inquire about her current reputation among
broadcast professionals and employees. Gracious and warm were not terms that I
heard. If she had to rely on the bank of warm fuzzy relationships, I have a
feeling that the account balances would be pretty thin.
So Eddie Murphy and Dr.
Laura Schlessinger have briefly touched my world and left me with relationship
lessons. Murphy got a career boost from wisely avoiding the N-Word in his
maiden appearance on The Tonight Show and was gracious to me in the process. Dr.
Laura took a bad turn from using it liberally in a listener call and gave me
the impression of being rather brittle in our one encounter. I see irony in the
fact that one of her points on the air had to do with African-American
comedians freely spraying the word around on a regular basis. These two well
known personalities have constructed major careers and businesses based on their
own standards of talent and relationship building. Knowing the ultimate limits
of our cherished relationships is what helps all of us stay in business. As
we’ve just seen, one careless day can give us the “Humpty Dumpty” experience
that changes everything.
Article Tags: dr laura, dr laura Schlessinger, eddie murphy, laura schlessinger, relationships, the tonight show
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About the Author: Nelson Davis RSS for Nelson's articles - Visit Nelson's website Nelson Davis is creator and executive producer of the multi-Emmy winnning small business TV show, "Making It!" During its 20 years on-air, Nelson Davis and his team have profiled over 1000 entrepreneur success stories on air! Nelson Davis now brings the inspiration and knowledge from your TV screen to your computer screen at makingittv.com. Features streaming video of entrepreneur success stories, national business events, professional advice and an abundance of other business resources. Click here to visit Nelson's website What Small Business Owners Really Want Freelancing as a Career Option Neha Kashyup Brotherhood of Entrepreneuers How to Obtain Business Success Over the Long Haul By Executive Producer Nelson Davis Kentucky Fried Wisdom |
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