Home Arts New LGBT radio station debuts in Minneapolis; reception mixed

New LGBT radio station debuts in Minneapolis; reception mixed

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New LGBT radio station debuts in Minneapolis; reception mixed

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iHeartMedia, formerly Clear Channel Communications, has launched 96.7 Pride Radio which bills itself as a station with a “LGBT-centric format.” The station debuted with a 24-hour Madonna marathon and will have non-stop commercial-free music through Twin Cities Pride. The Column first reported on iHeartMedia’s plans for an LGBT station back in October 2014.

“June is Pride Month, and I can imagine no better time to launch a station this important to the Twin Cities community,” iHeartMedia vice president of operations Hartley Adkins said in a press release. “This groundbreaking station represents a place for amazing music and entertainment, but also a platform for the LGBT community. 96.7 PRIDE RADIO is a destination to express opinions, be heard and connect.”

“We’re thrilled to bring 96.7 PRIDE RADIO to the Twin Cities LGBT community,” added PRIDE RADIO Brand Manager and SVP/Programming DON PARKER. “Our PRIDE RADIO programming and content is proven to develop a strong connection with the community on a national level through our iHEARTRADIO digital platform. With Minneapolis-St. Paul having one of the most active LGBT communities in the nation, we look forward to an even greater bond with local listeners, who will now have a customized version of PRIDE RADIO available on FM in the Twin Cities!”

Sister station, KDWB hailed it as “the only FM radio station in the United States with programming devoted to local Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Transgender (LGBT) community and allies.”

The Pioneer Press followed suit labeling it “the first FM radio station in the country with programming devoted to the gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgender and allied community.”

That is news to KPQR 99.1 Wild Planet Radio out of Portland, Ore., which is probably actually the first LGBT FM radio station in the country, having debuted in early 2015. It bills itself as “America’s FIRST nonprofit, noncommercial LGBT Community Radio Station.”

Minneapolis’ new 96.7 Pride Radio station doesn’t orginate from the Twin Cities, however. According to Adweek, programming is mainly a feed from iHeartMedia’s existing digital Pride Radio which originates in San Francisco, San Diego, Washington D.C., and Tampa:

The brand manager, Don Parker, is based in San Francisco, where he also serves as senior vice president of programming for iHeartMedia San Francisco and Sacramento. In addition, both of Pride 96.7’s weekday evening on-air personalities – Pacey (6 p.m. – 10 p.m.) and Christie (10 p.m. – 2 a.m.) – are spinning from the Bay Area. The rest of the station’s weekday rotation will be beaming in from San Diego, Washington D.C. and Tampa, Florida.

Jason Zabel, writing for City Pages, reviewed the new station, and found it lacking:

For example, why is it that much of the programming on 96.7 Pride Radio so far has been bumping club music? Does all of the programming need to be evocative of a Sunday-Funday rooftop pool party? Did that Sam Smith lullaby really need to be juiced-up and sexified, so that now it works better as I pull off my shirt in front of a roomful of sweaty, twerking strangers?
While there may be some LGBT listeners who want non-stop dance-pop, the omnipresence of this music suggests that maybe it would have been better to have named the station “The Club” or something similarly innocuous, rather than try to pander to an entire “community” at the risk of putting them all in a tidy box.
This is not to say that there isn’t room for a smart, nuanced, and diverse Twin Cities radio station that services and elevates all things LGBTQA — that could be a win. But when programming is limited to a Will-and-Grace-ified understanding of what it means to be part of this community — no one is served except those who never leave the Saloon.

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Andy Birkey has written for a number of Minnesota and national publications. He founded Eleventh Avenue South which ran from 2002-2011, wrote for the Minnesota Independent from 2006-2011, the American Independent from 2010-2013. His writing has appeared in The Advocate, The Star Tribune, The Huffington Post, Salon, Cagle News Service, Twin Cities Daily Planet, TheUptake, Vita.mn and much more. His writing on LGBT issues, the religious right and social justice has won awards including Best Beat Reporting by the Online News Association, Best Series by the Minnesota chapter of the Society of Professional Journalists, and an honorable mention by the Sex-Positive Journalism awards.

1 COMMENT

  1. It’s more of a “heterocentric” view of what gays listen to. Heterocentric view of gays is that they go clubbing and listen to house and EDM. We are so much more. Why not use this as an opportunity to share how diverse our community actually is rather than just keeping us in the intoxicated culture of bars and clubs? How about spotlighting artists that are actually LGBTQ identified? How about music of liberation, community, and protest? How about doing a solid and promoting local queer DJs and live music. I love me some Madonna and Whitney remixes like the next person… But our community is NOT just that. We are and have always been more. I’m tired of this “at least we have this” mentality.. Be better, be stronger, address our actual diverse culture, don’t just package it and make it “tolerable”, because really it’s just a mockery.

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