Faith not found in fear-driven radio station. - radio program reviews

National Catholic Reporter, Oct 1, 1999 by Tim Unsworth

Recently, we acquired a new car. This time, we're leasing. (I'm only halfway through my chemo treatments. So, I'm not even buying green bananas.) The car has all the bells and whistles one could want, including a radio that has more speakers than the Burning Bush, which explains why I tuned in to Chicago's WYPA-AM. The station carries Catholic Family Radio, a relatively new venture begun last January, and now in eight cities with six more scheduled for this fall. The all-talk network, which will be within reach of nearly 15 percent of America's 61.5 million Catholics, who form 23 percent of the American popular. ion, proclaims that it is "talk radio you can feel good about."

I didn't feel very good about Catholic Family Radio. In fact, I took the car to be washed and vacuumed ASAP lest the talk keep echoing in my car.

Catholic Family Radio is a Rush Limbaugh sound-alike. It is a vestige of the pre-Vatican II church and an extension of George W. Bush's Republican party. Its compassionate conservatism is as rigid as the creed of the National Rifle Association.

Catholic Family Radio is funded by a small group of wealthy Catholic businessmen, including Thomas Monaghan, who made zillions in pizza, David Weyrich, former owner of Martin media, a huge billboard company, and Peter Lynch, well-known money manager. They've budgeted some $50 million to get the venture off the ground. Thus far, they've spent about $35 million. Their goal is 35 to 50 stations in key markets across the country.

The format is very different from Mother Angelica's heavily devotional Eternal Word Television Network -- EWTN -- but the ultra-conservative nun always gets good words when Catholic Family Radio takes her name in vain. Catholic Family Radio is faster paced, much slicker, heavy on ads and as compassionately conservative as George W. would want it to be. Indeed, those who are awaiting word on any planks in George W.'s still vague platform need only time in to CFR.

The idea for the chain of stations allegedly came from Jesuit Fr. Joseph Fessio of the University of San Francisco and the St. Ignatius Press. Fessio got help from Archbishop Charles J. Chaput of Denver and Nicolas Healy, former vice-president of Franciscan University in Steubenville, Ohio. These three men -- all carved from petrified wood -- monitor all programming. Theologically, nothing is beamed unless these three men have vetted it. It's all slightly to the right of the blue-covered Baltimore Catechism III.

Politically, it is an echo chamber for the Republican Party. Its primary targets are Bill and Hillary and any member of the Kennedy family as well as any misguided liberal. The paranoid style is more evident in the frightened words of the call-in Catholics than in the measured words of its articulate talk show hosts. Catholic Family Radio listeners are good people but they appear to be frightened beyond belief. It appears that only one of the old Fruits of the Holy Ghost has taken root in their souls: fear of the Lord.

According to The New York Times, the network's founders intended to provide some Catholic competition for the 1,616 Evangelical Christian stations across the country. Catholic Family Radio has joined only six existing Catholic stations. It has been over 30 years since the late Bishop Fulton J. Sheen and his "catholic Hour" was edging out Milton Berle. But when a jealous Cardinal Francis Spellman sent him off to Rochester, Catholic radio started to sink. While professing to recognize the impact of the media, bishops have been slow to fund radio or television efforts, in part because they cannot turn off their beams at the borders of each diocese, thus posing a threat to a neighboring don.

Some bishops are contributing two-minute booster shots to CFR, although I haven't heard any. Only one prelate, Archbishop Rembert Weakland of Milwaukee has criticized CFR publicly, pointing out that CFR does not represent the Catholic faith. He made it plain that it was not welcome in his archdiocese. (But he'd best be prudent. CFR backers could buy his archdiocese.)

CFR broadcasts over Milwaukee, together with Denver, Kansas City, Minneapolis/St. Paul, Chicago, San Francisco, Los Angeles and Philadelphia. The additional six stations will be in the New England area, beaming CFR's message to an estimated 9 million Catholics.

Commenting on the general climate, one archbishop remarked that liberals are angry at the church because it is too conservative, while conservatives are angry because it's too liberal. He had a point, but it's interesting to note that bishops often break out in chicken skin over conservative efforts, while turning a cold crosier toward those viewed as liberal. The episcopal reactions are simply not balanced.

The wealthy entrepreneurs who are backing this for-profit effort seek to put a conservative spin on politics, religion, news -- even spiritual and personal problems. Raymond L. Flynn, former mayor of Boston and former ambassador to the Vatican, hosts the morning hours. Flynn is likable and cautious but professes to be proud of the fact that he is a loyal part of the 12 percent of Catholics who agree with the pope on everything. The station is fierce in its opposition to abortion but tends not to get involved in related issues such as birth control. It has little to say about divorce and remarriage, annulments, a married priesthood or the ordination of women. Issues such as the priest shortage are routinely introduced as the "so-called" priest shortage.

 

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