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Don Imus has a cockroach’s knack for survival. Over four decades on and off the air, the down-and-out uranium-mine worker turned multimillionaire thinking-man’s shock jock has made an art form out of bouncing back. He’s had drug problems, alcohol problems, health scares, and career crises, but somehow, Imus has always managed to step back from the brink. In 1977, for instance, he was famously fired from his job at WNBC radio for his dissipated ways and did a stint at Hazelden, only to resurface at a new station, more popular than ever. But this time, it seemed, he was cooked.
It was Thursday, April 12, and Imus had been slow-roasting for a week, ever since he called the young women of the Rutgers University basketball team a bunch of “nappy-headed hos.” Imus had insisted he’d meant it as a joke. But pretty much everyone else, from Al Sharpton down, took it as a bald-faced racial slur, made all the worse for having been directed at a group of plucky young women who had done nothing to provoke Imus but play their way into the NCAA women’s-basketball-tournament finals. The predictable media frenzy ensued, followed by Imus’s suspension from his WFAN-radio and MSNBC-TV gigs and his shaky self-justifications and mea culpas.
Now Les Moonves was set to fire the I-man, but he didn’t have his home-phone number. The polished, poised CBS president and the scraggly, cantankerous radio icon had never spent much time together. WFAN, which is owned by CBS, had made millions from Imus’s show during his twenty years on the program. And Imus had just signed a new five-year, $40 million deal with the network. But Moonves, a TV executive throughout his career, rarely ventured into the radio division. And Imus, whose signature cowboy hat and craggy face cast the original shock-jock mold back in the Transistor Age, had always operated in another universe, far away from the suits, playing by his own rules. The “hos” remark, of course, had changed all that.
Moonves had his assistant call WFAN to find Imus’s number, and Moonves reached Imus at his Central Park West penthouse at about 4:30 that afternoon. The conversation is said to have been brief and to the point. Minutes later, CBS issued a statement saying it was letting Imus go, with Moonves citing “the effect language like this has on our young people, particularly young women of color trying to make their way in this society.”
Imus wasn’t exactly surprised to get the call, but once it happened, he was shaken. He’d been counting on staying on the air at least for one more day. He was in the middle of his two-day radiothon to raise money for children’s charities, and the kids, in his mind, were depending on him. That night, he was going to meet personally with the Rutgers basketball team. After seeing them face-to-face, and asking for forgiveness, he thought perhaps he’d be able to turn things around. “Part of him said, ‘I can fix this,’ ” says Imus’s friend Bob Sherman. “You have to remember, he’s been a very powerful person. Mostly, he’s been able to control a lot about his life, even under some very self-imposed adverse conditions. The guy put himself in rehab and came back and went on the air—more than once. He thought an apology could take care of things.” But once he was actually let go, the enormity of all that had happened set in. “He felt less potent,” Sherman says. “He was amazed. It was shock and awe.”
A hermit even in the best of times, Imus mainly stayed home in the days after he was fired, playing chess with his 8-year-old son, Wyatt, and surfing the Internet. He planned to decamp to his ranch in New Mexico at the end of the month, the way he did every summer; everything else, he decided, could wait.
His close friends, meanwhile, kept wondering when Don would get mad. Privately, they say, Imus had taken a shot or two at Moonves. (“Imus knew Moonves was a weasel,” says one friend. The firing only proved it to him, the friend says.) But the chastened, repentant Imus that those close to him had seen emerge recently seemed like a stranger to them. When would he stop retreating and start fighting back?
Then, about a week after the firing, Imus called a friend on the phone, chuckling. The devilish rattle in his voice was back.
“Hey, I just hired the guy that defended Lenny Bruce,” he said. “Good luck, CBS!”
Don Imus, it turns out, isn’t cooked. Far from it. Hiring Lenny Bruce’s lawyer—the veteran First Amendment attorney Martin Garbus—was the first step in what appears to be an increasingly likely if improbable comeback. Officially, Imus is still laying low in New Mexico, overseeing his camp for kids with cancer and getting back to the land. But behind the scenes, Imus has been methodically engineering the resumption of his career.
Now, just four months after he spoke the fateful words that all but buried him, Imus is said to be on the verge of announcing that he will be back on the air, perhaps as soon as January. People with knowledge of Imus’s situation say he’s been approached by as many as three major media companies. There’s a chance that the Garbus lawsuit, among other factors, could even bring Imus back to his old broadcast studio at WFAN, working for his old boss, Moonves. So how did a man who said something deemed so awful by so many find a way to come back so quickly?
The floor of Martin Garbus’s office is covered with piles of hardcover books—most of them thick tomes of history, journalism, and law. There are a handful of titles by Garbus himself, whose first star client, Lenny Bruce, branded both men as noble defenders of free speech. But on the stack closest to his desk, toward the top, is something Garbus picked up and read only recently: God’s Other Son, a comic novel published in 1994 by Don Imus.
Imus met Garbus for the first time when he walked into the lawyer’s office in late April. “He seemed very, very bright,” Garbus says. “Happy, satisfied with his life, good marriage, respects his wife. He’s very funny.” (According to one friend of Imus’s, it was Imus who approached Garbus.) Days later, Garbus went on a media tour announcing he was planning to file a $120 million wrongful-termination lawsuit on behalf of Imus against CBS.
Garbus announced that Imus’s contract not only allowed the shock jock to be risqué but demanded it, that his bosses at WFAN and CBS Radio were required to warn him at least once about his behavior before firing him, and that nothing Imus said on the air—not the hos quote or anything else—even came close to violating the standards of legal speech set by the FCC. The draft of the $120 million lawsuit demands that CBS honor Imus’s contract and pay him the $40 million owed to him under his brand-new five-year deal. The other $80 million in the proposed lawsuit is to pay for lost income for the charities Imus endorsed on the program.
Even without actually filing the suit (a step he still hasn’t taken), Garbus scored several points. First, he repositioned Imus as a victim, not a villain (Imus wasn’t the bad guy here; the suits who fired him without cause were). He also staked out the legal high ground in the CBS contract dispute, should the matter ever come before a court. The nappy-headed-hos comment, Garbus says, was clearly a joke, not a slur, and in no way falls into the category of prohibited speech. Firing Imus for the remark, he argues, didn’t just violate the terms of his contract—it was unconstitutional. Essentially, Garbus is deploying the Lenny Bruce defense. “Bruce had a joke where a couple of guys are sitting around playing poker,” Garbus remembers. “One guy said, ‘What do you have?’ and the other says, ‘I got two kikes, a wop, and a chink,’ and the other guy says, ‘Oh, I have three niggers, a dago, and a so-and-so.’ And he kept throwing out the words. He said, ‘If I use it in this context, you understand it’s a joke.’ He said that words don’t have any meaning. It’s the meanings that you impart to them.”
And what was the meaning of Imus’s comments? Before he was fired, Garbus says, Imus was saying ho on the air a lot, actually; not just about the Rutgers women but about his wife, Deirdre, a committed environmentalist he dubbed “the Green Ho.” It was like Lenny saying nigger, Garbus argues, because he was making it clear that there are people out there who use that word all the time, unironically—in Lenny’s case white racists, and in Imus’s case the hip-hop crowd. According to Garbus, when Imus said “nappy-headed hos,” he was being ironic—goofing on the pleasure white society gets from co-opting the lexicon of the black world. It’s a highbrow variation of how Imus’s producer-sidekick, Bernie McGuirk, who said hos right before Imus did on the air that April morning, explained the whole thing on Hannity & Colmes: “You know, we’re trying to be—or I was trying to be—cool.”
That argument, of course, doesn’t wash with everyone. In our discussion, Garbus brings up the book Nigger, by Randall Kennedy, the Harvard law professor, that explicates the different connotations of the word, depending on the context. He calls it a wonderful book. Unfortunately for Garbus, during the Imus controversy in April, Kennedy told Reuters that he found Imus’s comments “terrible and reprehensible … ‘Nappy-headed’ could be used in a variety of ways, it can be said lovingly or in a complimentary way, but Don Imus said it to express casual contempt.”
Garbus clearly doesn’t see it that way. “Nappy-headed hos is not nigger,” he says. “As I said, it depends on the context in which you say it. And that was Bruce’s point: It depends on how you say it and when you say it.”
And that’s your point in this lawsuit, I ask—context is everything?
“Context is a great deal of it,” he says. “I don’t know if it’s everything.”
Les Moonves is known to be highly committed to the success of CBS and equally concerned about his own image. Moonves fired Imus, his critics say, not out of any sense of social justice but only after it became clear that Imus was becoming a liability to the network and a personal embarrassment to Moonves (Moonves’s detractors note that he only cut Imus loose after seeing his rival Jeff Zucker, the president of NBC Universal, release Imus from his MSNBC simulcast). Firing Imus was supposed to be an unqualified win for Moonves and the network. Yes, there would be a short-term revenue hit, but top advertisers were already dropping out, and others were threatening to follow suit. By firing Imus, Moonves could prevent further damage to the network and come out looking like a man of principle.
Only it hasn’t quite worked out that way. After Imus was fired, the ground under Moonves began shifting. WFAN started losing money. A lot of it. “Imus used to sell spots for $1,500 that are now going for, like, $200,” one source says. While in the months before Imus’s firing his ratings weren’t where they used to be, the elite demographics of his audience meant he was still printing money for his bosses. “He was like a golf tournament toward the end,” says John Mainelli, a radio-industry consultant who until recently was the program director for a CBS-owned radio station. “He didn’t have big numbers, but he had so-called ‘quality’ numbers, politicians and high-income people.”
The station tried replacements for months, but none seemed to work. There were conspiracy theories that some of the folks at WFAN who had always disagreed with the decision to can Imus weren’t trying very hard to replace him. Fill-ins like Geraldo Rivera and John McEnroe didn’t generate much by way of excitement or ratings. In July, WFAN celebrated the station’s twentieth anniversary by running a “Best of Imus” clip show, during which Mike Francesa, the popular co-host of “Mike and the Mad Dog,” thanked Imus and said twice that he hoped that, come September, they will “be a complete team” again. In a Daily News online poll conducted in late June, 94 percent of respondents supported Imus’s reinstatement.
Perhaps more than anything, it was the lawsuit that changed things. No one at CBS will confirm it had an effect, but after it was filed, network executives began considering the unthinkable: bringing Imus back. Giving Imus his old job wouldn’t just help restore WFAN’s morning ratings—it would quite possibly cost less than having to go to court with Imus. What if, instead of fighting, CBS renegotiated to take Imus back at, say, half the $40 million? Or even a third? “They desperately need the revenue,” says Mainelli. “This is no secret. Les Moonves has said he loves the cash flow that radio provides, but it’s no secret he thinks there ought to be a lot more of it.”
What about the protesters? Wouldn’t the same tsunami of anti-Imus forces regather? Wouldn’t the advertisers boycott? Perhaps. But then Al Sharpton started telling reporters that he, at least, wasn’t necessarily against the idea of Imus’s coming back on the air. “The demand was he be fired from a job he routinely abused,” Sharpton told me in July. “There was never a sense that he be removed from making a living.” Where Sharpton goes, advertisers might follow: The door, it seemed, was cracked open.
Imus, his friends say, is burning to get back on the air. He wants to be a part of the conversation again, especially now. “He’d like to be around for the presidential race,” says Bob Sherman. He also feels pressure to sustain his charity work and to support Deirdre, who has benefited from Imus’s radio plugs for her line of ecoproducts and her own charitable causes. What a comeback is really all about for Imus, though, is not letting “nappy-headed hos” be his career epitaph. “He certainly doesn’t want to end on that note,” says a friend.
Over the summer, sources say, CBS and Imus began talking about a possible comeback (though neither side will confirm nor deny any such talks). At one point, sources say, CBS had also started negotiating with Boomer Esiason, another temporary Imus fill-in, to take Imus’s slot at WFAN. But as the weeks went on and no deal was announced, rumors began to circulate that CBS wanted to wait and see if the climate changed, making an Imus return more feasible. Imus’s friends, meanwhile, began whispering to Matt Drudge and “Page Six” that an Imus return was imminent. The gossip game got more interesting when rumors surfaced that Imus might instead sign on at another station.
Where else might Imus go? Satellite isn’t attractive to Imus the way it was to Howard Stern, according to one close friend. The money might be good, but “it would be a small audience, which would have an effect on his guests, and on his charitable work.” And both XM and Sirius (currently in merger talks) have budget issues. Sirius CEO Mel Karmazin loves him, “but Mel’s not going to hire him,” says a source. “There’s not much money to go around after Howard Stern.”
The three traditional radio companies, Citadel, Clear Channel, and Buckley Broadcasting, meanwhile, have all put out feelers. Citadel appears to be the most serious suitor of the three. It just bought WABC and the ABC radio network nationwide. Citadel is run by Farid Suleman, who was Karmazin’s No. 2 for many years at Infinity when Imus was a star there, and Suleman was the comptroller then. So he understands the money Imus generates. WABC in New York already has a successful morning team in Curtis Sliwa and Ron Kuby (and Rush Limbaugh and Sean Hannity later in the day). But one knowledgeable source says that putting Imus in that morning slot could increase the company’s revenue by as much as $20 million. “I think if Don was available, we would be very happy to see what we could do,” Suleman says. He sounds like he’s already got his answer to the inevitable “How can you justify this?” question already written. “What he did was wrong. But the consequences of what he did seemed out of proportion.”
Another possibility would be for Imus to strike out on his own—to create a syndicated program and sell it town to town, door to door. “He’d be working for himself,” one Imus friend says. “He’d own all his rights. That’s how Rush Limbaugh started.” Then there’s TV. There’s no reason why Roger Ailes wouldn’t want to talk with Imus—and one friend of Imus’s says he has heard as much (a Fox spokeswoman says she has no knowledge of such a conversation and that the network is not currently in talks with Imus).
In the end, several sources say, Imus will most likely reach a settlement with CBS and go elsewhere. A source close to Imus says Esiason, despite CBS’s flirtations with an Imus comeback, is almost a lock as Imus’s replacement on WFAN. “They’re going to announce Boomer soon,” he says. “But they also have to have an Imus settlement done in time. Because legally, if they hire someone while he’s still under contract, it worsens their position if they’re in a lawsuit.”
According to one knowledgeable source, the settlement deal on the table at the moment has the money worked out—not the $40 million Imus signed for but not nothing, either. There also may be a limited noncompete feature, requiring Imus to agree not to go anywhere else until January. The potential settlement is also said to include a non-disparagement agreement. “He won’t be able to say anything about Les or CBS for a number of years,” a source says. That clause, the source says, means as much as anything to Moonves.
There’s always the possibility, of course, that no one will hire Imus. For a new employer, taking him on would mean building an expensive new franchise around a 66-year-old shock jock who said something that many people still find unconscionable. “Someone’s going to have make an investment in him until he’s 71,” says one friend. “They have to believe that he’ll still be getting listeners six months after he comes back.”
Most of his friends, however, are certain Imus will be back. The only questions are where and when. “Willie Nelson told me that his favorite thing in his life since he was a little kid was to get into trouble and then get out of it,” says Kinky Friedman, the songwriter, columnist, and recent Texas gubernatorial candidate who is one of Imus’s best friends. “And I think the same thing can be said of Imus. The time he was fired from New York and sent down to Cleveland, for cocaine and alcohol and everything, I never thought I would see him alive again. When I said good-bye to him, I thought, ‘That is it. He will never come back.’ And he rose like a phoenix.”
If he does come back, will he return a changed man? “I don’t think he’ll give up his sense of humor,” says Michael Lynne, the New Line Cinema president who has been Imus’s friend for 35 years. “But I do think he’ll be more sensitive to the implications of words that are said on the air and whether they’re hurtful or not. Don has something meaningful to contribute in terms of creating a dialogue in our society—not just about politics or books but about race and diversity. I think he can be a force for good in that dialogue when he comes back.”
Imus has been cagey on the phone with Friedman lately, but nevertheless clear about what he wants to happen next. “He’s got a secret plan he mentioned, but he won’t tell me what it is. Of course, you don’t want to tell me anything, because I’m the town crier. He’ll be back. It’s his M.O., you know?”
In any case, he hopes so. “I call him a truth-seeking missile,” Friedman says. “He is totally ruthless about it. And, you know, we need this. Society needs someone like this. In that sense, he’s a lot like Lenny Bruce.”
Or perhaps, inevitably, he’s just Don Imus. “Here’s what you have to remember about him,” one friend says. “I love him, but he’s a really angry guy. A recovering alcoholic, okay? So he has demons sometimes.” That, his friend says, “can be difficult.”
Popularity: 4% [?]
By far the most comprehensive analysis of “The Imus Situation” I’ve read.
Good job.
Maybe now we’ll find out why Don Imus really got fired.
bring imus back. hardly listen to radio
anymore. hoping the article will keep us
all upto date. jean m.
COMBE BACK SOON IMUS
WE MISS YOU!!!!!
It is too bad that it is the money which will resurrect Imus rather than free speech.
The PC’s utter contempt for free discourse needs to exorcised. Talk radio is in need of humor since Republicans for NAFTA lacks drive unless one is into slave labor jokes….
Bring him back…I had listened to him for years in the morning while getting ready for work. I miss their humor and have not turned on MSN since!!!
The time is now not later. We need the I-Man to put HRC in her place. She needs to know where the American people stand on her non-stance on anything of substance. HRC is a clone of her husband. She has a big mouth full of hatred. She supports causes that do not matter to the general population of America. Stand Up people. Get Imus up and running and Hillary will go down faster then Sh*t in a toilet
Imus we hope you do come back soon for the upcoming Presidental race in 2008. We need your commentary, guest interviews etc. As far as I’m concerned the sooner you return the better…
Ozkar
I have boycotted MSNBC since Imus was fired. I hate to admit it, but I’ve turned to FOX news, which is no comparison. Come back as soon as possible, Imus! We need you. Maybe some folks just can’t take the truth and they give in to those who do nothing but seek the spotlight - however they can. I’m waiting to hear where you’ll be so I can subscribe or whatever I need to do to get me daily dose of I-Man back!
Bring the I-man back!!!
When he comes back it will be without signing and non-disparagement agreement. He would never sell out. Imus is holding the cards.
The public lynching of Mr. Imus and the PC mob mentality that erupted should have never occurred. I’m still disgusted with CBS radio and MSNBC for their gutless reaction. I’m still disgusted with the various cable television anchors and talking heads who joined Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson in expressing their selective outrage. It was a harmless remark, it was humour, it was funny. I’ve turned cable, network and radio news off and while it won’t make or break the bottom line of the sponsors who ran away from Mr. Imus last April, I’ve cleared my home and company of any of their products. I was stunned to find how many Proctor and Gamble products I had in my house! Not now, not ever again. And you’re right Mr. Imus - Mrs. Imus’ Greening the Cleaning products do work better than anything I’ve ever used. Your coffee’s pretty yummy too. Just wish I was watching or listening to you in the morning when I’m drinking it.
Can’t wait for you to come back Mr. Imus. It’s been a long summer without you.
I agree that this is the best job of reporting about the mess. Although the additional $80,000,000 in the lawsuit was not just for charities but at least $20,000,000 of it was for stock options that Imus negotiates in all his contracts. Can’t wait to hear Don back on the waves and I still support his charities.
Where is the black community now after four kids were shot in Newark. typical hippocrits!
We need the I-Man back now mor ethan ever!
Radio is just not the same in the morning … there’s only so much of WPLJ I can stand. Imus is a good person that makes people laugh, but even more he makes people think. I-MAN, WE ALL MISS YOU … HOPE YOU’RE BACK SOON!!
Don you are missed - not only by your viewers and listener’s but all the causes you defend.
Who will help Vets?
Who will help children with Autism?
Who will raise money for the various charities they way you do?
Not a single person.
Who will help us sort out the politicians for this election?
Not a single person.
Don, you and your group have left a void in AM television. Come back soon!
Imus would do well on Fox (TV); since his firing all the morning shows on TV cable or otherwise are the same old uninteresting drivel. Imus, Stern, Limbaugh, Savage and a few others are unique in their presentation…only Imus is the guy who does what he says and is immersed in charities…personally, not from a distance. He is Mensa level in IQ and he knows what he’s doing. I can only hope he’ll tell some of the sponsors who abandoned him that Sharpton has some air time to sell because Imus can pick and choose who pays the bills.
Joe
This is an excellent article the best in four months. I google Imus everyday and it is just a re-hash of wire reports. It gave us I Fans some insite to what happen and what is going on behind the scenes and what the future might hold. MSNBC and CBS/Infinity have been off my watching litening list since April. This is such a transforming experience I find myself agreeing with Sean Hannity. Which shows the divide with this mis-justice to the I-Man. Don if you read this don’t give in to a clause not to take shots at Moonves and Zucker and that weasel Capus Al Rokers best friend. Taking shots at them on the air is worth golden ratings points $$$$. Just let us know where and when and the Imus nation will be there.
My 81 year old father always watched Imus while having his pot of coffee in the morning. Imus kick started his day (along with the coffee) put a smile on his face & had a good laugh. There’s no doubt in my mind he’s looking down from up above , warming up the coffee pot and getting ready to laugh again with the I man!! Hurry back Imus you are part of our family!
Imus doesn’t have or need a “cockroach’s knack” for surviving in media. His ultra-conservative jive means that 99% of media dearly want his bullshit.
Imus hated “the devil,” hillary clinton, and railed against her constantly. Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson were carrying water for her when they got Imus fired. He won’t be back on the air until after she’s been elected.
Hurry back Imus, You are missed! I learned something new everyday! The sooner the better, cant wait to see all the pundits crawling back!
Please come back soon, Imus. Not only on radio, but on TV also. I no longer watch MSNBC… it is unforgivable what they did to you. I hope they realize now that they made a BIG mistake.
You did so much to educate and amuse your listening public. Please Please come back soon… not only on radio, but on TV… I am not in NYC so can’t listen to you on WFAN… but I hardly ever missed one of your morning shows on MSNBC. Now I no longer watcdh MSNBC.
Also have cleared my home of Proctor and Gamble and will never purchase another GM car.
Deidre’s Greening the Cleaning products are phenomenal. I use them daily.
From all the posts here it is clear how much you are missed, Imus. You were a breath of fresh air in a stale media.
Great article. I for one am a very long time listner of Imus. I want to see him come back soon. Coming back on TV and Radio would be the BEST. We could use someone like him to stimulate interesting and provocative conversation during the upcoming presidetial election period.
Go Don…
Fantastic summation. And, as one poster noted, while this may be true, “Imus hated hillary clinton, and railed against her constantly… Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson were carrying water for her when they got Imus fired.” [actually it was “Media Matters” that taped and distributed his comment.] This is NOT, “He won’t be back on the air until after she’s been elected.” And, for those that label the show as “ultra-conservative jive”, it’s absurdly clear that they are non-listeners.
Finally a fine article. Great journalism. The first and only decent article or report in any media since the Imus firing. I am impressed no end with this writer. Added evidence of the article’s integrity is that here is the first place I find knowledgeable Imus listeners in the comments column.
Hurry back Don.
If cbs and msnbc don’t bring imus back, then there are many other venues to explore. Just bring him back. Thanks to msnbc, because we quit watching them, we started to watch CNN and discovered Lou Dobs. Thankyou dan abrams for that. Just give Imus his spot back and maybe we will watch a show or two on msnbc again. Oh, let’s get rid of dan abrams while we are at it. There must be a station in North Dekota that he might be able to land a position at, maybe janitor.
Long live the I-man. The huge hole that his absence has generated has left me feeling frustrated and angry, and this feeling is reinforced every morning when I have to tune into whatever mindless drivel that happens to be on.
after those two face Reverand All ass kissers on msmbc kicked off the I-man i refused to watch their show and the wanna-bees they tried to replace him with. come on I-man get back on radio at least,so the wife and i can hear you again, tv also.used to start off the day with you, i miss it.
A very well-written article.
Hey Imus fans…
supportimus.org
and
imustruth.com
January Non-Compete?
I would advise Less Moonves to put as much distance between Imus and himself as quickly as he can. The “January Non-Compete” will provide more drama, greater buildup and give CBS’s Imus Debacle legs into 1Q07 for Imus or at least 3 earnings periods for CBS. All works in favor of Imus and against CBS.
Once again; Imus Rules, CBS Drools
Great article!
Can’t remember the last time I witnessed anyone be so unjustly maligned, and it’s about time people started waking up !
Can’t wait until he’s back.
Imus’s firing just proved to me my opinion of network television: VAST WASTELAND. I quit watching the networks 30 years ago. There’s nothing important on any of them. Reality shows? crap. Imus was one of maybe 3 or 4 shows I watched, and that list is dwindling FAST.
96% of people think Imus deserves to come back. Lets not allow 4% of the population to determine what we can watch and listen to.
It has been a long summer without Imus. This article signals a long awaited, well deserved turn of events. Thank God, for the two websites imustruth.com and supportimus.org.
In a reply to Gary Cox who wrote “Imus hated “the devil,” hillary clinton, and railed against her constantly. Al Sharpton and Jessie Jackson were carrying water for her when they got Imus fired. He won’t be back on the air until after she’s been elected.”
Imus will be on the air no later then January 2008 in plenty of time to take on HRC and her attempt at the Presidency. But you know she will not win. This is an excellent article and appreciate the thought involved in writing it. Don Imus is the voice of the regular people in America. One who asks the questions of politicians that most of us would not. And he always gets an answer.
No Gary your wrong. Imus will be back and kill the Devil from Arkansas
Imus risked the integrity of his radio show by expanding his role on MSNBC a few years ago. For all his trouble he got a knife in the back. Good riddance to them. He’ll have a GREAT radio show once he’s back and that’s AWESOME. I don’t care whether he’s back on WFAN or not, but he should reconnect the prior deal with Westwood One affiliates who carried him for decades regardless of where he ends up.
sincerely, a WW1 affiliate
Thanks for this great article. I am boycotting MSNBC, and my mornings are now filled with other TV shows that are not nearly as informative and entertaining as Imus was. Bring back Imus!
Have not watched MSNBC since he left.
Bernie over did Mayor Nagin and other things. They all over did ridiculing Chris Carlin’s marriage.Rob Barlett made me cringe at a few things.With Sid, I just had to laugh at what a hopeless ghoul he was/is.
But the rest of the program was so rich with intellectual stimulation, good causes, good witty humor, great guests,stories, public figures as they really are.
Iman’s “real me” persona brought out the “real me” in most of the guests in the greatest way. ie:Bradshaw,Buchanan,Cramer…..
I was 95% very uplifted.
LOOK FOLKS,… I Have been all over this country, Heck,… ALL over the world !!! The, “ONE PERSON?THING”, I could ALLWAYS start a conversation with, WAS,… Did Ya hear, “IMUS”, this morning. People PLease Just GROW THE HECK UP !!! If Ya don’t like what the man says, then change the channel !!! This Fella has been around, since “I”, was a kid!!! Ya’all have literally Destroyed my mornings,( my whole miserable DAY!!!),. WE LOVE AND MISS YA, “I_MAN”, Come home soon,…….Love -n- Misses ,…Maestro
Kudos to Chris Carlin for fulfilling his duty as the current morning-man on WFAN/NY. Yes, Chris is a great up-and-coming talent, but this show is absolutely unlistenable. I believe the WFAN strategy is to produce a show so awful and unlistenable that we will all BEG for Boomer and welcome him with open arms and minds. Nice try. Bring back the I-man.
Poster child for rude and arrogance.
Imus kicked Clinton for bad behavior and others as well.
His bad behavior finally caught up with him and over the years the excuse that it was humor no longer could mask his middle finger attitude.
I hope he stays off the air, and with the Dem’s and Rep spending $500 million for ad’s over the next year, I hope the stations think twice before thinking about the I (diot) man
Excellent summation of the post Imus happenings. I hope Imus comes back on the air soon.My morning are a big void now. I absolutely have banned MSNBC and have told many people to do the same. Just so that the advertisers know, I am of a demographic making close to a million dollars a year and I remember every single company that back stabbed Imus and believe me, I have taken steps not to patronize them. Let us all hope that he will be back on tha airways soon!
If Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson had ever been scrutinized, their every word used as a barometer of morality and if the same punishment applied, this whole Imus matter would be a moot point, because those two characters would not have a public forum. Imus at least makes this world better for others. Judas is dead.
i live in a rural area…. a radio show might not work for me… i miss his show on MSNBC. hope he comes back and is accessible to the countryside… miss him lots…
Iman’s Karma turned around and bit him in the ass. Brother Fred is at work on satellite radio. Don is unemployed. “Vengence is sweet.” sayeth The Lord. How’s the “loyalty” factor working out for you now, Turkey Neck.
I’d prefer reading in my native language, because my knowledge of your languange is no so well. But it was interesting! Look for some my links:
I’d prefer reading in my native language, because my knowledge of your languange is no so well.
Written by veteran media critic and Emmy winner Rory O'Connor, Shock Jocks features unsparing profiles of the ten worst conservative radio talkers in America, including Michael Savage, Bill O' Reilly, Rush Limbaugh, Don Imus and the rest.

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