Time's Up, Imus

ByABC News
February 9, 2009, 2:27 PM

April 11, 2007 — -- It's been disheartening to come to work this week and walk into my radio studio facing a phone bank full of callers who want to defend the despicable, ugly, racist rant by Don Imus.

Here are the arguments that people seem to be making on behalf of this vile, nasty old man: "This is free speech." "If Jesse Jackson can call New York 'hymie-town', why can't Don Imus call black girls 'nappy-headed hoes?'" "It's just humor."

What a depressing week.

Listen, when Rosie O'Donnell jumps on the Imus bandwagon by pretending that this is some kind of free speech issue ("What law did he break?"), I feel more confident than ever that I'm right to believe that Don Imus should hang up his goofy oversized Stetson and earphones and retire already. Rosie O'Donnell couldn't find the right side of an important issue if her life depended on it.

I'm certainly not any smarter than the passionate people who want to stick up for Imus. But since I've been working in broadcasting for nearly 30 years, hosting my first radio talk show in 1978, I think I've at least got professional working experience in my corner. After all, I didn't exactly make it to WABC-AM in New York City and then on to national syndication because I don't know the talk radio business.

And one thing about working in radio or TV that should be crystal clear to everyone: None of us who are talk hosts own the radio station or network that we're heard on. We may think we're the boss, but we're not. Like it or not, our microphone and audience comes with a responsibility. And when someone on-air shirks that responsibility by saying something as hurtful and ugly as calling a bunch of young black college girls "nappy-headed hoes," it's time to go.

As Newt Gingrich pointed out to me this week, the Don Imus fiasco doesn't have a thing to do with free speech. Free speech issues involve politically protected speech, not some crude act of public bigotry. When radio shock jocks Opie and Anthony orchestrated a stunt involving people having sex in the pews of St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York City in front of horrified worshippers, no one seemed to fret about their free speech rights being violated as they were given the heave-ho.

Incidentally, former House Speaker Gingrich, who might become a presidential candidate, believes that the Rutgers athletes have a good chance at winning a slander lawsuit against Imus.

Mike Gallagher is a national syndicated talk radio host and a contributing editor for Townhall.com. His Web site is http://www.mikeonline.com.