Posted on 08/21/2003 7:48:24 PM PDT by Dan from Michigan
Nugent sues Muskegon officials over concert cancelation
The Associated Press
8/21/2003, 7:11 p.m. ET
DETROIT (AP) Michigan rocker Ted Nugent filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday, claiming organizers who canceled a June performance wrongly accused him of making racist comments.
Nugent claims that accusations made by city officials and others, and the cancelation of the June 30 concert, damaged his reputation and career, according to a statement issued by his attorney.
The lawsuit names the City of Muskegon; Mayor Stephen Warmington; City Manager Bryon Mazade; Meridian Entertainment, the concert's promoter, and others as defendants.
"In a world of political correctness, there is no more reputation-destroying term than racist," Nugent said in the statement. "And the alleged statements falsely attributed to me could not have been more inaccurate or misleading, completely counter to what I stand for."
Officials for the Muskegon Summer Celebration canceled Nugent's appearance after the Motor City Madman did an interview with two Denver disc jockeys in which the DJs say he used slurs when referring to Asians and blacks.
Following discussions with community leaders, Summer Celebration's board decided it was in the best interest of the community to drop Nugent from the festival lineup, city officials said at the time.
Officials for the festival and the city could not be reached for comment late Thursday evening.
Rick Lewis and Michael Floorwax, morning talk show hosts on radio station KRFX-FM, stopped the live interview with Nugent on May 5 after they said he made the remarks.
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Remarks put Nugent in stranglehold, baby
DJs, listeners want to wring his neck over racial ranting
By Mark Brown, Rocky Mountain News
May 6, 2003 Denver radio listeners and disc jockeys were shell-shocked Monday after rocker Ted Nugent used derogatory racial terms for Asians and blacks on live radio.
The highly rated Lewis &Floorwax morning show on 103.5-FM The Fox quickly turned into a discussion of race relations after the '70s rocker made his statements.
In using the words "g----" and "n-----" on live radio, Nugent was apparently trying to make the point that the terms were just words and shouldn't offend anyone. But he missed the mark, listeners and Fox personnel agreed.
Rick Lewis and Michael Floorwax, longtime Nugent supporters and friends, were taken aback when Nugent went on his rant and took him to task on the air. Floorwax said on the air that he was disappointed that Nugent used the words; Lewis noted that Nugent likes to shock but went too far.
The show's producer, Kathy Lee, is of Korean descent. She said on the air that she wasn't personally offended but suggested that Nugent make an apology to the Asian community in Denver.
"I don't think he's a racist, but he'll come on the show occasionally and drop a bomb like that and then step back to see the reaction it gets," Lewis said after the show. "He loves that reputation of a shoot-from-the-hip kind of guy."
Eric Sung, chapter president of the Organization of Chinese Americans, said that Nugent's words still cut deep.
"Whatever his intentions . . . the fact that he's using them so freely is dangerous," Sung said. "In 2003, to hear someone like Ted Nugent using those words so freely and carelessly, without thinking about it, is really disappointing."
The conversation was innocuous talk about guitars until Nugent referred to "Japs" in reference to Japanese-made guitars. Lewis and Floorwax immediately called him on that, which only encouraged Nugent to go further, using the word "g----."
The DJs protested further, and Nugent went further, noting Richard Pryor's use of the word "n-----" as a comic device and said that, long ago, one of the Funk Brothers used that term as a compliment to describe Nugent's guitar playing.
"We called him twice on it, and he kind of dug a deeper hole for himself," Lewis said. "As one listener said, we threw him a life preserver and he didn't use it."
The phone lines lit up with outraged listeners. Many said they understood the point Nugent was trying to make, but that his use of the terms and attitude ended up hurting him more than helping.
Nugent, a board member of the National Rifle Association and known for his outspokenness, was traveling and could not be reached.
One fan took him to task for the terms on Nugent's Web site, and Nugent replied that political correctness "has brought America to its knees. Not me. NEVER!"
It puts the DJs in an awkward position because Nugent, a frequent guest, is scheduled to headline the radio station's Hawgfest show in Winter Park in July. The fireworks could continue today, as Nugent's wife is slated as a phone-in guest on the show.
Lewis and Floorwax were adamant in their opposition to Nugent's views. "Sometimes all (listeners) remember is the offensive part and relate it to you because it was on your show," Lewis said.
Instead of becoming indignant over someone's choice of vocabulary, they should thank God for their lives and try to help those who are worse off than themselves. If they must get indignant over something, their outrage would be better spent over slavery in the Sudan and in Serbia. Those are atrocities! Not some yahoo saying nigger or gook.
Well "wang dang, sweet poontang."
I know the"n"...but what's the "g"?
FMCDH
FMCDH
FMCDH
Gook. It's really just the anglicized pronounciation of the Korean word for Korean people. As such it was picked up by US soldiers in the Korean War to refer to Koreans. Later became used as a derogatory slang word for any Asian. In any case Nuge is no racist, but he will certainly never be politically correct.
"g" stands for "gook". I have been called all kinds of epithets between "wop" and "crazy kraut", and frankly it never bothered me one iota, even my wife calls me a "wop"ing nuts.
Than again I do have a sense of humor, and I know how to differentiate between humor and serious talk!
The majority of plebiscite, usually needs a disclaimer every time a subtle joke has beign made.
Hmmm, well I don't speak Korean, I was just repeating something I read once. So guk just means "people"? Could it be that they refer to themselves as "the people" for short?
CTR
Oh Yea!

Did you know Ted is a "Bad American".
I haven't seen that thread in a while. I think we may need to revisit that thread.
LOL
More like eating nature ... and doing exactly what man was intended for :)
Oh Yea! One week from today I will be in the Wilderness, with Bow in hand, hunting Wapati!
It sounds like Ted was using the words to discuss the words. Meanwhile Senator Sheets Byrd dropped the N-bomb on television and meant it as the enwurd and refused to apologize for using it. Some people get a pass in the politically correct world, some do not.
Where are Susan Sarandon and Tim Robbins to talk about the blacklist and "chill wind" now? Where is the ACLU?
Don't you mean "whitelist"? "Blacklist" is too offensive. ;-)
Is "Japs" any worse than "Brits"? Yes they are Japanese (and the latter are British). Actually the Japanese are Nipponese (from Nippon).
Don't know the context of the "g" word (it isn't given in the article).
Ah, the old Lenny Bruce trick. But Lenny made it work through humor. And Ted, as much as I like him, isn't exactly known for his sense of humor.
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