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thedrifter
07-13-04, 02:59 PM
Group sues to force
display of antiwar ad

Clear Channel rejects Times Square billboard, sparking court battle

The Associated Press
Updated: 12:12 p.m. ET July 13, 2004NEW YORK - An anti-war group is headed to federal court Tuesday to try to force media giant Clear Channel Communications to display its billboard ad in Times Square opposing the Iraq war.


The group, which calls itself Project Billboard, says it agreed to pay Clear Channel $368,000 to show the billboard for three months -- from Aug. 2 until Election Day -- on the side of a hotel at 45th Street and Broadway.

The billboard, 69 feet by 44 feet, was to show a stylized bomb and fuse, decorated in stars and stripes, above the message, "Democracy is best taught by example, not by war."

But when Clear Channel learned of the intended message, the company labeled the message distasteful and blocked the anti-war group from displaying it, according to papers filed in Manhattan federal court.

The contract allows Clear Channel, which owns the billboard space, to revoke the billboard if it is obscene, "misleading or deceptive" or "offensive to the moral standards of the community," court papers say.

Project Billboard planned to ask a federal judge to force Clear Channel to allow the sign to go up.

Bomb image replaced
Paul Meyer, president and chief executive officer of Clear Channel, told The New York Times his company objected not to the sign's text but to the image of the bomb.

But the anti-war group claims Clear Channel also rejected modified versions of the billboard, including one that replaced the bomb with a dove, saying it would not allow any reference to war.

Project Billboard noted in court papers that Times Square already includes many references to war, most prominently in large news "zippers," and even is home to an armed forces recruiting station.

Trying to head off any argument that the sign would be distasteful, the anti-war group said in court papers that Times Square also includes "images of scantily clad models, some in evocative poses."

Clear Channel, the nation's largest radio chain, has been accused of promoting right-wing politics and ban artists -- including the Dixie Chicks, whose lead singer disparaged President Bush -- with whom it disagrees.

The company is a major donor to Republican political candidates.

But the company denies banning the Dixie Chicks from airplay and says pro-war rallies held by some stations during the Iraq war were the work of individual radio hosts and managers, rather than a corporate directive.


http://msnbcmedia.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/040713/040713_projbillboard_vmed_9a.vmedium.jpg

http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/5430114


Ellie

HardJedi
07-13-04, 03:58 PM
know what's funny to me? they equate having an armed forces recruiting station as the same thing as showing support for war. How is that again?

mrbsox
07-13-04, 05:50 PM
What.... nobody gets the HIDDEN message in the ad ??



PEACE

THROUGH SUPERIOR FIRE POWER

That's what it really says.... doesn't it ?? :banana: