Air America Goes Green (& Al Franken Takes the Green and Runs)

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The latest chapter in the looooong saga of Air America has evidently been penned, but I must say that even those of us who’d wondered if the network’s tortured history had become parody/proof of the right’s criticism of the left didn’t quite see this one coming. AA or Ax2 or Asquared will, it seems, be acquired by NYC real estate mogul Stephen Green, brother of perennial NY mayor/senate/attorney general candiate Mark Green. “Speaking only as the brother of the purchaser,” Mark Green, who’s also played guest host on AA, told the NYT that “no hiring or programming positions had been decided for the network, should the deal go through.”

None ‘cept one, I’d guess.

And if Brother Green becomes a permanent AA personality, he won’t have to live in the shadow of Al Franken. Franken, who’d been paid a truly outrageous $2 million a year—10 times more than “many other syndicated hosts with a similar audience reach“—will host his last show on Valentine’s Day. Franken’s outsized salary makes him an easy target for those who mourn AA’s passing, but to my mind it’s just further proof that the people behind the network (and there have been lots) just had too much money and little idea of the media terrain. Wishing you (and why would you?) had a lefty 24-hour equivalent to Rush/Imus don’t make it so people.

Meanwhile, Spinsanity Alert: Green said the sale will, in the words of the NYT, “usher in a new phase for Air America, focused on digital content distribution rather than radio.”

“In this digital era, the tech changes by the day and Air America Radio has to become something of a new media company,” Mark Green said. “We look forward to an A.A.R. 2.0 that has sharp smart content better distributed over a variety of platforms. And what better time to try this than with progressive and democratic values obviously on the rise?”

So does this mean that Stephen is buying his brother a podcast? If so, Senator Chris Dodd has some programming suggestions.

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Managing an independent, nonprofit newsroom is staggeringly hard. There’s no cushion in our budget—no backup revenue, no corporate safety net. We can’t afford to fall short, and we can’t rely on corporations or deep-pocketed interests to fund the fierce, investigative journalism Mother Jones exists to do. That’s why we need you right now. Please chip in to help close the gap.

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