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Hannity Marks Fifth Year In Syndication
RADIOANDRECORDS ^ | Sep. 15, 2006 | Al Peterson

Posted on 09/17/2006 2:07:58 PM PDT by DuxFan4ever

In 2001, ABC Radio Networks gave its brash, young WABC/New York afternoon host a shot at the brass ring by launching him into national syndication. Sean Hannity grabbed that ring and a few more over the next five years. Today, he’s heard by millions on more than 420 radio stations nationwide. n It came as no surprise to industry observers that Hannity was called up to radio’s big leagues. At WABC, he racked up stellar ratings for the ABC Radio news/talker since 1997 while also gaining national attention from his nightly role as co-host of Fox News Channel’s “Hannity & Colmes,” and from frequent fill-in stints for Rush Limbaugh.

In short, the unabashed conservative with boyish good looks and Irish charm seemed primed to take on the challenge of anchoring a daily national talk radio show. Little did Hannity or ABC realize at the time how a history-changing event would shape the future of the show and its host when the network debuted “The Sean Hannity Show” on Sept. 10, 2001.

I recently caught up with the seemingly always-on-the-run Hannity to talk about how his show, his life, the country and our world have changed since he first began hosting his syndicated program five years ago.

R&R: Are you surprised it’s been five years already? SH: I personally cannot believe this period of time has gone by as quickly as it has. In many ways it seems like yesterday that it all began. It has been the greatest time of my life, and I can say honestly that I love what I am doing more than ever. I’m fortunate to be doing a job every single day that I love, and I try hard never to forget that. It never becomes routine to me.

R&R: How do you think you and the show have changed in the past five years? SH: I’d hope that we’re a little smarter, a little more mature and a little bit better than when we started, but those are really little changes. The biggest change came on our second day in syndication—Sept. 11, 2001—because our world, what we do and what we talk about all changed that day. In late summer of 2001 the big story was Gary Condit and the Chandra Levy incident. Sort of seems superfluous when you look back at it now, doesn’t it?

Since the show launched in 2001, we’ve gone through war and all the politics that surround that, Katrina, the 2004 elections, the Terry Schiavo case, immigration and so much more. It’s been an unprecedented news cycle. We’re living in really transformative and consequential times, and from that sense, there is nothing I would rather do than be on the radio every day talking to people about the events and issues that impact our lives.

Another big change has been access to information. When I started out at WVNN in Huntsville, Ala., my only sources of information were the local newspaper and all the magazines I could read. Looking back, I don’t know how it was even possible to do a talk show. Today, I spend hours every night and each morning going through every imaginable Web site and reading every obscure newspaper looking for stories that listeners will relate to. I firmly believe that in the age of the Internet a host should never have a slow news day.

R&R: How have you managed to avoid the pitfall of losing your local success in the transition to national host? SH: I didn’t really change the show at all when we went nationwide. I was already doing a show that was more focused on national issues to begin with because that’s where my natural area of interest lies. I’ve always talked about national politics and issues, so I don’t think listeners in New York are hearing a show that’s really any different than what they were used to.

R&R: You frequently credit ABC Radio VP of news and talk Phil Boyce for some of the success you and the show have experienced. What kind of a role has he played? SH: I have always had the good fortune in my career to work for people who believed in me and supported me. It was Phil who really wanted to syndicate the show more than I did. I didn’t really have a great desire to do it at the time, but Phil had a vision and he believed in the program. He overcame my own fears and doubts about syndicating it, and he has been a rock-solid supporter since day one. I really give him as much credit for the success of the show as anything we’ve done.

R&R: How do you respond to critics that say you and other conservative talk hosts simply parrot so-called Republican talking points? SH: I’d say people who would make that assertion haven’t listened to the show. I don’t do my show for critics, program directors or anyone except the audience. The reason I think I’ve been able to connect with and build an audience is because they know I am going to be honest with them and true to what I believe.

I don’t consider myself a Republican. I’m a Reagan-type conservative. Did I want George W. Bush to win the last election? Absolutely. Do I think he was the right man for the job? Definitely. Am I proud I voted for him? I think he’s had a backbone of steel, and he’s never wavered on the most important issue of our time, and I’m proud I voted for him.

With that said, I have been openly critical—even more harsh on Republicans than Democrats—on issues like immigration, spending, the growth of government, the Dubai ports deal, Harriet Miers and other issues where I’ve found myself having an honest, intellectual disagreement. Frankly, I think the biggest vulnerability to Republicans today is that too many have abandoned their Reagan-conservative principles.

R&R: Whenever there’s a lull in ratings for news/talk, pundits are quick to suggest that listeners are tired of political talk. I take it you’d disagree? SH: What’s always amazed me is that there are people in this business that don’t really understand what our business is. Our business is the news and talking about the news. If the news just happens to be in a slower cycle, then the format may not have the highs it gets during an intense election year or a major crisis. There is always a natural ebb and flow to news/talk’s ratings.

Sure, after five years on a war footing in this country, I think there is probably some day-to-day fatigue by listeners on the issues surrounding that, but there will be other events—probably sooner than later—that will capture the entire nation’s attention and news/talk’s ratings will reflect that. I think, for example, we are heading into the Super Bowl of all elections in 2008. It will be an election where who we elect will probably be more important than at almost any other time in our lives.

R&R: Are you optimistic about talk radio’s future? SH: I am more optimistic about this format’s future than ever. I think we can say that phase one of talk radio’s success is what we would all call the Rush revolution—the period from about 1988 when he went on the air until now—when Rush, rightfully so, is credited with saving AM radio.

I think we can probably also say that phase two is beginning right now as talk begins to replace music on the FM band with many different forms of personality radio. I really think the format is headed for another major growth spurt, and the future of personality talk radio looks very bright to me.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
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To: DuxFan4ever

Go Dux!


81 posted on 09/17/2006 9:58:53 PM PDT by oneamericanvoice
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To: wtc911

Hannity can. And you are coming across as intellectually superior, whether you realize it or not. Especially your last statement.

How do you pronounce "Harvard"?


82 posted on 09/17/2006 10:02:09 PM PDT by oneamericanvoice
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To: wtc911

If we are "room temperature IQs", why are you listening?


83 posted on 09/17/2006 10:03:38 PM PDT by oneamericanvoice
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To: oneamericanvoice
And you are coming across as intellectually superior....

-----------------------------------

If I were, why would it be a bad thing? Is this one of those "it ain't cool to be smart" things? I read, I research, I engage people whose experience or intelect I respect as being wider or greater than mine, I try to think things through for myself....don't you?

84 posted on 09/17/2006 10:07:51 PM PDT by wtc911 (You can't get there from here)
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To: oneamericanvoice

Taking things a bit personally aren't you?


85 posted on 09/17/2006 10:08:54 PM PDT by wtc911 (You can't get there from here)
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To: oneamericanvoice
Weren't you the one that made the case for the WWF?

No.

If you don't like him so much, why are you wasting your time posting on someone you dislike so much?

If you really have a problem with this, you're visiting the wrong type of website.

86 posted on 09/17/2006 10:09:17 PM PDT by Lunatic Fringe (Man Law: You Poke It, You Own It)
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To: oneamericanvoice
And you are coming across as intellectually superior....

Just like Hannity and Rush and every other talk show radio host. First you don't like people wasting time posting on a website about someone they don't like (**pull all the anti-Clinton threads, I guess), now you pretend to eschew the very trait that you embrace in that idiot Sean Hannity.

Bottom line: Hannity's show is for brain-dead, NASCAR-watching, evangelical conservatives. And that's fine. I don't believe anyone is advocating censorship of Hannity... he serves his purpose, keeping the rubes in line. But don't think for one second that he is some kind of major voice for the conservative movement. If it ever comes to that, I'm tearing up my GOP membership card.

87 posted on 09/17/2006 10:16:39 PM PDT by Lunatic Fringe (Man Law: You Poke It, You Own It)
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To: wtc911

If you want to hear a real conservative clown we have this guy named Lars Larson here in Oregon. I think he might even be syndicated now. He makes Hannity and all the other radio personalities look like brain surgeons.


88 posted on 09/18/2006 8:08:12 AM PDT by DuxFan4ever (The next rational liberal I meet will be the first.)
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To: StarFan; Dutchy; Timesink; VPMWife78; phantomworker; ajolympian2004; Gracey; Alamo-Girl; ...
FoxFan ping! (actually Sean Hannity's radio show)

Please FReepmail me if you want on or off my FoxFan list. *Warning: This can be a high-volume ping list at times.

89 posted on 09/20/2006 9:55:01 AM PDT by nutmeg (National security trumps everything else.)
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To: mware; dinasour

ping


90 posted on 09/20/2006 9:55:20 AM PDT by nutmeg (National security trumps everything else.)
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To: nutmeg

Nothing seems to get the boys more riled than a Sean Hannity thread.

It's like going to a pit bull fight.


91 posted on 09/20/2006 10:47:47 AM PDT by dinasour (Pajamahadeen and member of the Head SnowFlake Committee)
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To: nutmeg

Shepherd Smith is going to be at the Don Cesar in mid-October for a live broadcast. Oct. 13th or so. Don Cesar by St. Pete Beach. I threw the paper out, was a blurb in the Tampa Tribune.


92 posted on 09/20/2006 12:48:49 PM PDT by floriduh voter (www.conservative-spirit.org or Join Terri's Legacy List Contact: 8mmmauser)
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