Archive for the ‘Power 106’ Category

The L.A. County Fair’s Got Gas

August 26, 2008

I know, it’s a play on the current astronomical price of gasoline. But hmm, it also looks like the L.A. County Fair’s latest ad campaign was inspired by a certain local radio DJ’s quite controversial billboard:

Power 106′s Big Boy Goes National

August 9, 2007

Now Big Boy’s billboards won’t only offend overly sensitive Westsiders. The KPWR-FM morning host, who’s been with Power 106 for well over a decade, is going into nationwide syndication.

ABC Radio Networks confirmed that Big Boy had signed a multi-year deal for his “Big Boy’s Neighborhood” program to be distributed around the country.

Most nationally syndicated hosts come out of the East Coast, due to the time zone difference. L.A. morning personalities who have attempted to enter the syndication market, but have failed to make any traction, include Mark & Brian and Rick Dees.

But Big Boy will be offered live in all time zones from 6 a.m to 10 a.m. (I doubt he’ll actually be in the studio at 3 a.m. PT; thats what computers are for.) The show hits the national stage on Aug. 20.

From the press release:

Big Boy’s image became well known throughout the greater Los Angeles area in the late 1990s and early 2000s, when Power 106 placed his nearly-nude 500-plus pound image onto billboards throughout the area, spoofing Hollywood blockbusters.

In the fall of 2003, Big Boy had duodenal switch stomach surgery and over the next year lost over 250 pounds.

Also included in the agreement is the syndication of Big Boy’s weekend show which currently airs on 25 affiliates as Big Boy’s Hip Hop Spot. The weekend show features the hottest headlines in Hip Hop, A-list artist interviews and hit music. After August 25, the show will take on the same name as the weekday morning show Big Boy’s Neighborhood (Weekend Show).

In 2007, Big Boy is nominated for his third prestigious Marconi Award having received the Personality of the Year by the National Association of Broadcasters (NAB) in both 2002 and 2004. He was named Personality of the Year six times by Radio & Records and four times by the Radio Music Awards.


Coming to a neighborhood near you: Fart jokes, followed by manufactured outrage!

Big Boy’s Got Gas, and One Westsider Is Offended

July 18, 2007

You’ve seen these tacky (yet clearly memorable) Power 106/Big Boy billboards throughout town all summer: “Big Boy’s Got Gas.”

Juvenile way to promote KPWR’s free gas campaign? Perhaps. But that’s no surprise: Big Boy has starred in many slightly tacky billboard campaigns through the years (remember his “Morning Obsession” Calvin Klein parody, when Big Boy — then over 500 pounds — was naked, sprawled across the billboard?)

Nonetheless, WestLAOnline blogger Jim Bursch, who somehow had never heard of or seen Big Boy before (even though the guy has hosted one of L.A.’s top-rated morning shows for ten years) registered his offense:

Context counts, and in this case, the context is a predominantly non-black neighborhood where referring to an adult black man as “boy” is wrong and racist. Also, there are contexts in which fart jokes are funny, but not on a public street where you see the same offensive “joke” every day, day after day.

This is just wrong.

Help us to get this bigoted blight removed by spreading the word that this is offensive and unwelcome.

That led to a series of comments from readers, most of whom tore into Bursch like this:

Big Boy is not a racist caricature, yet to find this offensive that must be how you are viewing him. If it was a white man it would just be a crude fart joke. Even a white man named “Big Boy.” You are the one attaching any sort of racial connotation here. You are the one paying attention to the fact that he is black and not just a human being. You are looking for the racial subtext when there is none. It is just a crude fart joke with a man who just happens to answer to the self-chosen name “Big Boy” and just happens to be black.

So, I guess my point is, you are an idiot.

Blogging.la also got into the act, posting a take from contributor Kent Nichols, who wrote:

Jim, stop being scared and drop the white man’s burden. You don’t need to be offended on behalf of other people, especially not millionaire radio personalities.

Bursch ended the chain of emails yesterday by at least admitting that he enjoyed the exchange. Today, he adds:

So, the billboard has accomplished its primary mission: it has drawn attention to itself. I now know who Big Boy is, and I am actually kind of curious to listen to him to find out why he is so popular.

On the point that the billboard seemed to achieve its goal, I think we can all agree.


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