San Diego Union-Tribune

KUSI NEWS STOPS AIRING RADIO PARTNER CONTENT

‘DSC Show’ and station face criticism from NAACP on segment

- BY MORGAN COOK

A day after the San Diego chapter of the NAACP criticized a segment on the KUSI “Good Morning San Diego Show” about “Famous Baby Daddies” as racist, a KUSI executive said the station will no longer provide a platform to “The DSC Show.”

The segment aired Monday on KUSI’s “Good Morning San Diego” show as part of a collaborat­ion with the “DSC Show” on IHeartMedi­a radio.

The segment involved hosts guessing which of two named and pictured celebrity fathers had the most children with the most partners. Of the 18 celebrity fathers named in the segment, nine were Black.

Black celebrity fathers were overrepres­ented in the segment, said San Diego NAACP President Francine Maxwell in a statement Tuesday.

“If we learned anything from the #MeToo movement, it is that powerful men of all races and walks of life sometimes use their power to obtain sexual favors,” Maxwell said. “By focusing on African-American men, this content was obviously intended to denigrate them, and feed into the lie that Black men are somehow more sexual than their White counterpar­ts.”

Maxwell added that this stereotype has proven deadly for some Black men.

“This trope continued in the Jim Crow era, when Black men were regularly lynched on the excuse of sexual advances toward White women, often invented or imagined. Unspeakabl­e things were done to Black men, while White men, women and even children watched with glee,” she said.

Maxwell called for KUSI to conduct an internal investigat­ion to understand how the station came to air the segment and to include “a place for representa­tives of the community so damaged.”

Steve Cohen, News Director for KUSI TV, said Wednesday afternoon that KUSI has asked “The DSC Show” to apologize to KUSI viewers for the segment’s racial insensitiv­ity.

“KUSI believes that it is our goal to always present content that does not demean or appear insensitiv­e to any minority, racial or ethnic group,” Cohen said in a statement.

“This past Monday, a feature segment aired that did not meet that standard. The segment created by the 101.5 KGB radio program, The DSC Show, was inappropri­ate and an affront to our African/ American community and our viewers.”

The statement said KUSI asked 101.5 KGB to offer an apology on KUSI and officials at KGB declined.

“As a result, KUSI has decided to no longer provide a platform for the KGB - DSC Show,” the statement said. “KUSI will be contacting our NAACP chapter and its president

to further discuss this incident.”

Officials with the “The DSC Show” did not respond to The San Diego UnionTribu­ne’s request for comment Wednesday.

KUSI-TV is an independen­t local station and is not affiliated with a broadcast network. It is owned by McKinnon Broadcasti­ng Co. McKinnon Broadcasti­ng General Manager Michael McKinnon has been described in news reports as a long-time supporter of politicall­y conservati­ve candidates and causes.

Maxwell said in a telephone interview Wednesday that when she first received screenshot­s about the segment around Tuesday around 9 a.m., she was so surprised by the content she wondered if it was a prank. Ninety minutes later, more than 40 people had contacted the NAACP about the show.

“I don’t know if somebody didn’t take the course on Sensitivit­y 101, but I don’t think the community would have reached out with such disgust” if the segment had not focused unfairly on Black celebrity fathers, she said.

Maxwell said that someone from KUSI has contacted the San Diego NAACP to discuss the segment.

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