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Dr. Laura - Radio's Queen of Pop Psychology


By Bill Berkowitz

drlaura2a.jpg - 10.47 K Over the past several years Dr. Laura Schlessinger has taken talk radio to new heights with her extraordinarily popular and controversial advice program. She has adapted the call-in format to her own special brand of schtick - a no excuses, "tough love" approach which frequently turns into a confrontational bloodletting of her callers. But that doesn't stop nearly 50,000 callers from jamming the phone lines every day trying to air out their problems. She calls these exchanges her "nagging, preaching and teaching" approach. Critics claim she's arrogant, rude, mean-spirited and the "queen of mean."

A few weeks ago I experienced a typical Dr. Laura moment. I was riding my exercise bike and watching the Fox News Channel. The guest, Dr. Laura, was poised to take viewers' questions. The phone lines got screwed up, so the co-host went personal, telling Dr. Laura how conflicted she felt when she left her children at childcare and asking her what she could do about it. Without so much as raising an eyebrow Dr. Laura icily replied, the choice is simple, it's either you or your kids. Your kids come first and then your career. Period. The host, thoroughly discombobulated and embarrassed, immediately went to commercial.

Arrogant and mean-spirited talk-radio host? Censorship maven? Internet pin-up? Her kid' s mom? Poster girl for the Religious Right? Dr. Laura Schlessinger is all that…and more. At 52, and barely five-foot-three and 110 pounds, Dr. Laura, a recent convert to Orthodox Judaism, has moved from entertainer with an edge to reliable conduit for the Religious Right's social agenda.

A Multimedia Sensation

In August, her picture appeared on the cover of Dr. James Dobson's Focus on the Family Citizen magazine with a headline that read, "Dr. Laura wants America to behave - Pornographers and pedophiles beware: You can't hide from 20 million listeners." Jeff Hooten, associate editor for the magazine, writes: "Five days a week on more than 450 stations, broadcast live in most markets, tape-delayed in others, The Dr. Laura Program, is basically a three-hour sermon save for the fact that the pulpiteer takes questions from the congregation."

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She is the most listened-to talk-radio host in North America, eclipsing even Rush Limbaugh and Howard Stern. Kraig T. Kitchin, president of Premiere Radio Networks which syndicates her show, claims: "The Dr. Laura Program reigns as the fastest growing national radio program in our medium's history, both in listeners and affiliates." Leslie Bennetts writes that in 1997, "Schlessinger, her husband, Lew Bishop, and their partner, John Shannon, sold her show to Jacor Communication Inc. for $71.5 million" (Vanity Fair, September 1998)

"My job," says Dr. Laura, "was basically to bring ethics - God's decision of what's moral, because God decides what's moral-and that was just such a turn-on." She knows she is extremely influential: "I believe my show has brought more people back to the Catholic Church than anything the Pope has ever said." You might expect that a statement dissing the Pope (remember the uproar when John Lennon declared the Beatles to be "more popular than Jesus"), might bring some comment from William Donohue's Catholic League for Religious and Civil Rights. But it hasn't.

Ironically, last year Dr. Laura single-handedly fueled an Internet explosion in pornography, becoming an overnight cyber-phenomenon when pictures of her as a naked twenty-something went up on the net. She was Clintonesque in her immediate response, denying that it was her in the photos. Hooten writes, "when her restraining order was denied and the photos loosed for public ogling, an embarrassed Dr. Laura decided to have a heart-to-heart with her listeners." While millions logged on to the Internet to catch a glimpse of Dr. Laura (and were linked to one of the thousands of pornographic sites on the net), her listeners inundated her with supportive faxes and letters. Sometimes when a person suffers an injustice, it makes them a tad more empathetic and understanding of others who are dealing with adversity. For Dr. Laura, says Hooten, the experience "motivated her, made her more relentless, more devoted to her mission."

drlaura1a.jpg - 10.23 K In addition to her radio program, she has written a string of best-selling books, including: "Ten Stupid Things Women Do to Mess Up Their Lives"; "How Could You DO That?!: The Abdication of Character, Courage, and Conscience"; "Ten Stupid Things Men Do To Mess Up Their Lives"; and her most recent book "The Ten Commandments: The Significance of God's Laws in Everyday Life"; co-written with Rabbi Stewart Vogel. She publishes a magazine called Perspective and her web site offers all kinds of goodies for sale from tee-shirts and mugs, to a mouse pad and a computer screen saver that "features Dr. Laura inspirational messages for every day of the year." She recently signed a $3 million agreement with Paramount Domestic TV to develop a syndicated daytime talk show, which will begin airing in the fall of 2000, and is tentatively being called My Kid's Mom. (It will be interesting to see if she learns from Limbaugh's short-term television exposure of a few years ago and becomes a kinder and gentler Dr. L.).

In September, the conservative Capital Research Center's Philanthropy Culture & Society newsletter focused on the Dr. Laura Foundation, which she established last year to specifically support "charities that discourage abortion, encourage teen abstinence, promote adoption and stay-at-home parenting and prevent child abuse." (For an assortment of Dr. Laura info and links, see www.anusha.com/drlaura.htm)

Over the past few years she has spiced-up her program by taking on a whole batch of social issues; in almost every case, she unabashedly champions the Christian Right's social agenda. On her radio program and through her nationally syndicated column she dispenses a steady stream of antifeminism, homophobia, antiabortion propaganda, liberal bashing, and advocates against hate-crimes legislation and for censorship of the Internet. To bolster her views she uses information gathered from a cross-section of right-wing think tanks, policy institutes, and advocacy organizations including: the Family Research Council, formerly headed by GOP presidential wanna-be Gary Bauer; the Capital Resource Institute, an affiliate of Focus on the Family; and the National Association for Research and Therapy of Homosexuality, which advocates "reparative therapy" to "treat" homosexuality.

Rising Star on the Religious Right

drlaura3a.jpg - 12.30 K The American Library Association is one of Dr. Laura's favorite current targets. On her April 15 program, reports Patrizia Dilucchio (Salon.com, May 27, 1999), Dr. Laura went off on a major rant: "The ALA is boldly, brashly contributing to sexualizing our children. And now the pedophiles know where to go." She bashed the ALA because their web site recommends to teens, "Go Ask Alice, a [web] site discussing many graphic issues including bestiality, sadomasochism, and group sex. In my opinion, the ALA has done something evil, which - as you know from Mother Laura - is something way past dumb." Dilucchio points out that "Go Ask Alice is, in fact, a site produced by Columbia University's Health Service to provide 'factual, in-depth, straightforward information to assist readers' decision-making about their physical, sexual, emotional and spiritual health'….[and that] the site has earned favorable attention from media like the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, and the Harvard Health Letter."

Dr. Laura followed-up her radio diatribe with a column ripping the ALA for standing by its "so-called Bill of Rights, which opposes limiting access to any and all material, based upon, among other things, age. This means that the ALA, along with the ACLU, fights against parental, community and governmental pressure to put filters on computers used by children, to protect them from accessing the No. 1 Internet business - pornography" (Washington Times, August 24, 1999). In this campaign, she has received support from Rev. Donald Wildmon's American Family Association who, in his September 1999 AFA Action Letter, warned supporters that "your local library and librarians are hostages of the national ALA," and he encouraged them to "get informed, get involved and kick them [the ALA] out!" He also enclosed post cards to send to Dr. Laura encouraging her in her efforts "to expose the American Library Association's indefensible stance on children's access to sexually graphic and pornographic material in our public libraries."

Dr. Laura reserves a healthy portion of her vitriol for "homosexuals" (she refuses to use the term gay), and "homosexual activist groups," who, she complains, call her "homophobic, hateful, dangerous and a voice for promoting violence." "Why?" she asks in her August 24 column. "Because I believe that homosexual behavior is deviant; that when homosexuals adopt children, these children are intentionally robbed of a necessary mom and dad; and that marriage ought to stay defined as a covenant between a man and a woman and God." She goes on to explain, "Mind you - I never have advocated hate or hostility toward homosexuals. In fact, homosexuals often call my program with their life struggles and write me of their disgust with the homosexual activists' behavior and agenda"

In a July 20, Washington Times column, she calls President Clinton "nuts" for proclaiming June the month for "celebrating homosexuality," and, using information from the virulently antigay Family Research Council, she attacks Human Rights Campaign leader Elizabeth Birch, and her partner Hilary Rosen, for adopting twins and then "announc[ing] that the children will be raised by nannies," a charge that HRC spokesman David Smith vigorously denied. Dr. Laura goes on: "Since when do people have a 'right' to practice deviant sexual behavior and bring innocent children into their homes?" On her radio program, she could barely control herself when addressing the same issue: "I don't give a damn about what these two women want! It hurts children!…The psychological literature for decades and decades has amassed voluminous information that says these kids will be damaged because there's no father in the home."

Bruce Mirken writes that the Gay and Lesbian Alliance Against Defamation (GLAAD), in an attempt to counter her growing homophobia, "has recently tried turning up the heat [on Dr. Laura] with a campaign urging gays and lesbians to write her and 'tell Dr. Laura the truth,' as the group's representatives met with producers of Schlessinger's upcoming TV show" (San Francisco Bay Times, September 2, 1999).

Dr. Laura has injected herself into several of the Christian Right's ongoing political campaigns. She relied heavily on the Sacramento-based Capitol Resource Institute, for material opposing AB222, "which would have added sexual orientation as a category to the law that currently protects students in California public schools from discrimination based on race, gender, religion, etc." Schlessinger, who claims to be committed to the well-being of all the children, declared that the bill would "take sexually deviant behavior into schools from kindergarten and up, and say it's normal and equivalent to heterosexual, which undermines the basic foundation of civilization, which is the family, which is defined by God as a man and a woman…." Look for her to play a leading role in support of the Knight initiative, the anti same-sex marriage bill appearing on California's March 2000 ballot.

Dr. Laura slams Planned Parenthood with great regularity. In a recent article about gun violence in America (Jewish World Review, September 22), Dr. Laura wrote that she was "in the middle of a big change in attitude" in favor of a better-armed populace. By video, Dr. Laura welcomed participants at the Family Friendly Libraries conference in Cincinnati. Family Friendly Libraries, founded by Karen Jo Gounaud, has been in the forefront of efforts to remove gay-positive materials from public libraries, and a supporter of blocking Internet access schools and libraries.

drlaura4.jpg - 7.45 K In the June issue of Perspective, she announced a campaign called "Dr. Laura's Warriors," saying that "a true Warrior will take specific, documentable action to effect a positive change in his or her community that reasserts values, morality and ethics."

If Dr. Laura and her "Warriors" are champions for all children, here are three issues they could immediately get involved in: 1) focus attention on the appalling reality that one in five children live in poverty in this country; 2) become advocates for universal health care for America's children; and 3) support "living wage" campaigns so that working people can provide for their families.
Bill Berkowitz edits CultureWatch: www.igc.org/culturewatch/, a monthly publication tracking the Religious Right and related conservative movements, published by Oakland's DataCenter. Subscriptions are $35 a year. Contact him via phone: (510) 835-4692, ext. 308, or by email: culturewatch@datacenter.org.

For a free sample copy, send a self-addressed stamped envelope to:CultureWatch, 1904 Franklin St., Suite 900, Oakland, CA 94612.

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