Waterloo Region Record

Radio stations broadcasti­ng #MeToo hypocrisy

It’s good that the Hedley allegation­s are being taken seriously. But what about the sexual misconduct of countless other stars we hear every day?

- THE WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

It’s heartening to see the recent allegation­s against rock band Hedley taken seriously.

Prior to the #MeToo movement, one imagines the tweets of teenage fans claiming band members engaged in sexual misconduct, possibly with underage girls, would have been dismissed as dramaqueen hysterics and swept under the rug.

However, the alacrity and enthusiasm with which everyone from managers to awards shows is rushing to denounce the Vancouver pop-rock band has the sour tang of hypocrisy.

Corus Radio stations across Canada have declared they will no longer include Hedley songs on their playlists.

But Corus has no problem playing L.A. metal band Mötley Crüe, despite lead singer Vince Neil’s multiple conviction­s of assaulting women. Crüe drummer Tommy Lee spent six months in jail after battering then-wife Pamela Anderson; he and bassist Nikki Sixx admitted to raping a woman in their band autobiogra­phy, “The Dirt.”

And yet barely a day goes by that the band’s “Girls, Girls, Girls” doesn’t hit the airwaves.

Bell Media joined in the ban of Hedley songs, but the network of stations happily helped rapper Chris Brown, convicted of felony assault of then-girlfriend Rihanna, reach No. 1 with his 2017 album.

We can probably agree that sleeping with underage girls is a strange career perk to aspire to, but it’s certainly one that’s well documented among some of music’s biggest names.

Bill Wyman of the Rolling Stones. Steven Tyler of Aerosmith. Led Zeppelin’s Jimmy Page. David Bowie. All had “relationsh­ips” with girls younger than 16, yet it is impossible to spend one day listening to classic rock stations without hearing one, if not all, of those artists.

When the members of Hedley addressed the accusation­s, they wrote: “(T) here was a time, in the past, when we engaged in a lifestyle that incorporat­ed certain rock and roll clichés.”

This weak excuse smacks of rationaliz­ation, but if you look at the Billboard charts or turn on the radio, that clichéd lifestyle is still being rewarded; rockers, rappers and country stars alike aren’t punished for bad or even criminal behaviour, as long as they’re still making money for the industry. The haste with which the Canadian music industry is repudiatin­g connection­s with Hedley feels more like a wish to get out from under a bad-PR tsunami than a genuine interest in changing its ways.

It’s notable that the Feldman Agency, which dropped the band last week, still represents Nick Carter, the former Backstreet Boy recently accused of rape.

The horde of Johnny-come-latelies jumping on this particular #MeToo bandwagon need to know their swift reaction doesn’t absolve them from being complicit in decades of no action, decades of fostering, even celebratin­g, an environmen­t that’s inherently hostile to women.

Doling out repercussi­ons only after a groundswel­l of disgust only proves the music industry knows what side its bread is buttered on. For once, it would be nice to see the industry take a proactive stance, instead of pandering to the public and covering its bottom line.

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