`...@...[[]]{}.||||||||
2012-03-21 10:30:58 UTC
The fallout from Rush Limbaugh's words continues. As advertisers
continue to disassociate themselves from the right-wing pundit, the
reverberations are being felt all across the talk radio landscape.
Oddly, in a medium that's supposed to spark controversy, people — like
Dan Sileo, who worked at Tampa's WDAE for15 years before getting fired
for referring to three black football players as “monkeys” — are
losing their jobs for doing so. The Post's Paul Farhi explains why the
leash is now shorter.
Some peo
continue to disassociate themselves from the right-wing pundit, the
reverberations are being felt all across the talk radio landscape.
Oddly, in a medium that's supposed to spark controversy, people — like
Dan Sileo, who worked at Tampa's WDAE for15 years before getting fired
for referring to three black football players as “monkeys” — are
losing their jobs for doing so. The Post's Paul Farhi explains why the
leash is now shorter.
Some peo