Quote:
Originally Posted by spence
I think it's pretty simple.
Conservative hosts tend to reassure their audiences. Look at Rush, the message is always that you're fine just how you are...
Liberal programming by contrast tends to challenge the audience. You can't justify change unless you think something's wrong.
Most people would rather be stroked than provoked.
-spence
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Are you aiming at a parallel contrast here? Conservative hosts to conservative audiences and liberal hosts/programming to liberal audiences? And thus Rush telling his audience that they're fine as they are, and liberal programming telling its audience (liberals) that there is something wrong with them and they need to change?
Or are you "mixing apples and oranges" by contrasting that PORTION of Rush's broadcast, small as it may be, where he might imply that they are just fine to the entirety of liberal programming that is constantly saying that this country has something wrong with it and that "liberal" ideology is the cure (discounting, of course, the implication that the programming is telling the liberal audience that it is just fine as they are)?
I think JohnR's point about the two way nature of talk radio makes the liberal approach more difficult than the one way approach of TV.