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Autopsy: Steven Cohen and the Ad Boycott That Ended His Career

By Jim Edwards | Aug 25, 2009

The news that Steven Cohen has lost both his Fox Soccer Channel TV show and his Sirius XM radio show following an advertiser boycott urged by Liverpool F.C. fans does not sit comfortably with me. As a journalist (of sorts), it is always worrying when someone is literally driven off the air because a powerful segment of his audience merely disagrees with what he has said.

But this is not a simple case of censorship in which Liverpool’s Red masses have forced their way (even though to the observer it must look a lot like that). Rather, it is a case of a broadcaster who successfully established a market but failed to understand how strong the market he created had become.

Cohen’s demise has generated enormous interest on this blog. So it’s worth examining why it happened, and whose “fault” this was.

I’ve received a small number of emails from people suggesting that while they disagreed with Cohen’s “conspiracy theory” about who was to blame for Hillsborough, they were nonetheless only opinions and that Liverpool fans who urged the boycott have struck a poisonous blow against free speech. Cohen even took calls from Liverpool fans on his final show who were against the boycott. This BNET reader stated the case cogently:

Although I personally did not agree with the comments made by Steven Cohen about the tragedy at Hillsborough, it is an absolute disgrace the way some members of the Liverpool FC fan clubs have treated the situation.  Sending death threats and anti-semitic emails to Cohen and his family is unforgiveable.  In an effort to prove some point, these fans have eliminated the most important show about soccer in this country and alienated Liverpool supporters from the soccer community.  As a journalist, you of all people should be able to appreciate the value of free speech.

This is serious stuff. It is not to be taken lightly. And it certainly seems as if the Liverpool fans have committed a crime against the First Amendment if you read this highly misleading item by the New York Times:

… when does passion cross the line to madness, fanaticism or worse?

One can argue with the appeal of a TV chat show like “Fox Football Fone-In” on the Fox Soccer Channel, but what is hard to argue with is the right of one of the co-hosts, Steven Cohen, to state an opinion without becoming the victim of opprobrium, ugly scorn, death threats and vitriolic taunts.

But it is not at all clear that Liverpool fans did send such threats to Cohen. BNET readers know I am a Liverpool fan. I’ve asked around the LFC New York supporters club about these threats, and (predictably) come up with nothing. If you read Liverpool fan blogs, there aren’t any anti-semitic messages on them. The supporters I know are genuinely baffled at Cohen’s allegations. And, as I mentioned on Monday, Israel captain Yossi Benayoun is key to Liverpool’s hopes this season — so to be an anti-semite LFC fan is currently a contradiction in terms.

Regardless, it was not threats that pushed Cohen off the air. It was the loss of his advertiser base. Had brands such as Heineken merely shrugged at what Cohen was saying, the emails he received would have made no difference. But the advertisers sided with the fans.

This is a key issue, because it is important to understand that Cohen did not lose his jobs because of some angry emails, he lost them because his market — advertisers — concluded he had stepped beyond the pale.

Why would advertisers reach that conclusion? (Interestingly, they’ve reached the same conclusion regarding Glenn Beck’s claim on Fox News Channel that President Obama is a “racist.”)

The answer is that Cohen’s opinion on Hillsborough — that Liverpool fans share responsibility for 96 deaths at the stadium — is similar to Beck’s. It’s wrong: Not in the sense that I merely disagree with it, but in the sense that it’s at odds with reality. In many ways, Cohen lost his shows the same way any broadcaster would do if, say, they had continued to insist that Sept. 11 was a conspiracy organized by President Bush. At some point, advertisers take note of the fact that the audience they seek is being antagonized by the mistaken host — and the money leaves.

The curious thing about the Cohen case is that he could have gotten away with it. If he had only passed his opinion once, then the Liverpool fans would have had difficulty drawing support for their cause. No one would care. But Cohen went back to the subject again and again, alternately apologizing and then repeating the remarks that he knew upset the listeners who wanted him gone. He even repeated his opinion (for which he had previously apologized and retracted) the day he signed off his radio show.

Cohen remains free to tout the fiction that 96 people were killed by their thoughtless friends 20 years ago, on blogs, in email, just like anyone else. But basing your brand on opinions that are flat wrong and deliberately antagonistic to your audience will always fail as commercial proposition for advertisers.

That’s what happened here: Not censorship, but bad business strategy.

Jim Edwards, a former managing editor of Adweek, has covered drug marketing at Brandweek for four years, and is a former Knight-Bagehot fellow at Columbia University's business and journalism schools. Follow him on Twitter or send him an email.

BNET User Analysis

Web Buzz:
  • Steven Cohen Abandons Sirius Radio Show Following Advertiser Boycott

    BNET Advertising - 86 days 14 hours 41 minutes ago

    Steven Cohen, the Fox Soccer Channel host axed from his show following an advertiser boycott urged by fans of Liverpool F.C., abandoned his Sirius

  • Fox Host Lambasts Sponsors for Abandoning Show After Remarks on Soccer Stadium Deaths

    BNET Advertising - 150 days 14 hours 42 minutes ago

    Fox Soccer Channel host Steven Cohen lambasted advertisers on Sirius Radio Thursday for ending their sponsorships of his show following his comments about a fatal stadium crush that left 96 football fans dead in 1989. Several advertisers have been persuaded to abandon Cohen’s shows by fans of Liverpool F.C. who are angry over Cohen’s...

  • Chelsea F.C. Disowns Fox Host in Ad Boycott

    BNET Advertising - 119 days 13 hours 54 minutes ago

    Chelsea F.C. has disowned Fox Soccer Channel host Steven Cohen over his remarks about the death of 96 Liverpool F.C. fans in a stadium crush in 1989. It is the latest turn in an increasingly strange fight between Cohen, fans of Liverpool who have urged a boycott of him, and the advertisers who have departed his show. Cohen has repeatedly blamed...

  • Fox Host Says Advertiser Boycott Over Remarks About Soccer Fan Deaths Has Hurt His Show

    BNET Advertising - 168 days 14 hours 28 minutes ago

    Fox Soccer Channel host Steve Cohen says he has been “hurt” financially by an advertiser boycott of his Sirius satellite radio show, and has created a fundraising web page to support his business. Separately, Cohen’s business filing status with California appears to be suspended, according to a state web site. The boycott was called for by...

  • Q&A: Fox's Steven Cohen on the Advertiser Boycott Over His Remarks on Soccer Stadium Deaths

    BNET Advertising - 149 days 14 hours 17 minutes ago

    Steven Cohen, the host of Fox Football Fone-In and Sirius XM’s World Soccer Daily, is battling fans of Liverpool F.C. who are urging advertisers to abandon his shows. Cohen offended the fans by blaming them for the deaths of 96 people at Hillsborough stadium in 1989. Those who arrived without tickets, Cohen has argued, contributed to the...

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  •  
    1

    a listener

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Autopsy: Steven Cohen and the Ad Boycott That Ended His Career

    interesting post and good coverage of this story.

    what kind of fascinates me is the level of interest in the story. I used to listed to WSD a few years ago but as other options came on the air that provided more coverage of American soccer (I watch the prem just like everyone else, but I decided I didn't really need to spend time listening to people opine endlessly about the big four) I drifted away. I guess I also decided that a lot of what Steven said was intended to be controversial and that didn't interest me. In other words, the format was getting in the way of the content.

    But that's the template for talk radio in this country -- the host says provocative thing so that people get energized to call in and to boost the show's notoriety. And as more people tune in, more advertisers come. As long as there is advertiser-supported talk radio, there will be hosts for whom stepping over the line is a daily professional gamble (if not a goal!). Long before Don Imus or Howard Stern, I remember the Greaseman when i was growing up in DC getting fired over some moronic comment. And he's still on the air somewhere.

    I suppose the twist to this story is that it showed how volatile feelings about an event that happened 20 years ago in England (and wasn't something that attracted an inordinate amount of publicity here at the time) are thriving here. I guess the one issue this whole messy saga has solved is the debate over whether the US can be a soccer country. Seems clear to me now that, for better or worse, we are.

  •  
    2

    GoonerDave

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Autopsy: Steven Cohen and the Ad Boycott That Ended His Career

    I find it strange that you conclude the advertiser pull out is the reason for WSD's demise, but you provide no data, not even a quote to support your theory. The truth is, the sponsors that pulled out were quickly replaced with 2 more ready to come on board as of this week.

    I am not sure if you consider yourself a journalist, but this is really poor reporting. If you go back and get some evidence, then you might sway my opinion. But what you have written is typical blog trash that isn't worth the bandwidth it takes up.

  •  
    3

    Pakapala

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    Full disclosure says it all

    I'm glad you made us aware that you're a LFC fan. Yet had you not say so in your article it wouldn't be hard to figure out that you are indeed a LFC fan because you just reiterate the same song that LFC fans have been singing on this topic.

    Saying that because Liverpool FC have a player from Israel in their squad, there's no way some LFC fans could be antisemitic is laughable and yet it is the kind of logical fallacies that LFC fans have been throwing out there during this whole ordeal.

    Steven Cohen's WSD downfall actually came because he had alienated or ignored his US fanbase and US-based advertisers, focusing mostly on UK-based sponsors. Most of the sponsors he lost were UK-based and the biggest one Heineken did indeed shrug off the mails by the boycotters until the group realize they might have to contact the UK branch of Heineken to get their point across. Since this is a no-no in the UK it was definitely a clever idea to contact Heineken in the UK.

  •  
    4

    BNET's Jim Edwards

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Autopsy: Steven Cohen and the Ad Boycott That Ended His Career

    @a listener: Good point. The fact that the Hillsborough Disaster got any play at all in the U.S. is --arguably -- proof that the world's game has, at last, infected America. This incident is an ugly one but in the long run it's a good thing.

    @Pakapala: OK, admitted: Having one Israeli in the side doesn't prove all Liverpool fans aren't anti-semitic. But my larger point stands: It is difficult to find evidence of this phenomenon beyond Cohen's unbacked allegations.

  •  
    5

    Haiyai

    08/26/09 | Report as spam

    RE: Autopsy: Steven Cohen and the Ad Boycott That Ended His Career

    Jim,

    I have been reading your Liverpool fan fired rhetoric on WSD and Steven Cohen since the shows unfortunate demise. You start out with ?the show being closed by an advertiser boycott urged by Liverpool F.C. fans does not sit comfortably with me. As a Journalist? (Don?t worry your not).

    The Beginning it looks as if your going to give this a proper Journalistic shot, but when you hit us with the ?Israel captain Yossi Benayoun is key to Liverpool?s hopes this season ? so to be an anti-Semite LFC fan is currently a contradiction in terms?. Come on Jim just because he plays on the team and makes it better No Liverpool football fan could ever be an anti-Semite? Jim, what fairy-tail world are you living my friend!

    As for the Advertisers that the LFCNY were touting on their website for help in removing the scourge Cohen, I wrote one to tell them my distaste for WSD going off the air in this way. Their representative said the boycott in no way swayed their judgment for advertising with WSD.

    In the end America lost a soccer show that was entertaining and informative For what?

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