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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: Dissident Domestic Violence Authorities Sponsor Historic Conference

January 23, 2008

Los Angeles, CA–My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles discusses the California Alliance for Families and Children’s upcoming, historic conference–“From Ideology to Inclusion: Evidence-Based Policy and Intervention in Domestic Violence.” The conference will be held Friday/Saturday, February 15-16, 2008 in Sacramento, California.

The conference will feature speakers from the National Family Violence Legislative Resource Center–a group of domestic violence experts and authorities who are challenging laws and policies based on the idea that only men commit domestic violence in heterosexual relationships. Many of the leading authorities in the domestic violence field will be speaking at the conference.

To listen to the commentary, click here.

To learn more, see my blog post Group of Domestic Violence Dissidents/Authorities Sponsors Historic Conference.

His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim.

From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here.

[audio:http://www.glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-conference.mp3]
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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: Army Dad Comes Back from Iraq to Visit Kids, Is Jailed for Child Support

December 18, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles discusses the case of Aaron O’Connor, a father serving with the 3rd Infantry Division in Iraq who came back to the United States to visit his two daughters and ended up in jail over a small, questionable child support arrearage. To listen to the commentary, click here. To learn more, see Welcome Home, Soldier–Dad Comes Back from Army in Iraq to Visit His Daughters, Is Jailed for Child Support. His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage. From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here. [audio:http://glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-welcomehome.mp3]

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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: ‘Single Motherhood by Choice’

December 13, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles criticzes the “Single Motherhood by Choice” movement. To listen to the commentary, click here. To learn more about “Single Motherhood by Choice”, click here. His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage. From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here. [audio:http://glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-singlemothers.mp3]

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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: Child Support Audit Finds Fathers Wrongly Punished

December 11, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles discusses a recent Missouri child support auditor’s finding that 27% of the state’s 240,000 child support cases have incorrect balances. Some of the errors have gone unfixed for nearly a decade, and have led to enforcement action against innocent men.

To listen to the commentary, click here.

To learn more, see Truth-Telling Child Support Auditor Susan Montee Under Fire from CS Industry.

His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage.

From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here.

[audio:http://glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-childsupport.mp3]
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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: Child Support and Ex-Offenders

November 26, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles discusses one of the child support system’s more insane aspects–the way it saddles ex-offenders with impossible debts as they exit prison and try to reintegrate into society.

To listen to the commentary, click here.

To learn more, see my co-authored column New Justice Department Report”s Recommendations Could Reduce Prisoner Recidivism (Chicago Sun-Times, 10/26/07).

His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage.

From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here.

[audio:http://www.glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-exoffender.mp3]
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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: Boston Red Sox Pitcher Curt Schilling & His Dad

November 26, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles discusses Boston Red Sox pitcher Curt Schilling’s bond with his late father.  Schilling says that in every game he starts, he reserves a seat for his dad.

To listen to the commentary, click here.

To learn more, see my blog post Curt Schilling: ‘My Father Was the Glue That Held My Family Together’.

His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage.

From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here.

[audio:http://www.glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-shilling.mp3]
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NPO in the media

Brandweek Discusses ‘Dad as Idiot’ Advertising, Says ‘It’s Hard to Argue that Guys Like Sacks Don’t Have a Point’

November 21, 2007

Background: We’ve done several protests against ads which portray men and fathers as clowns–see Campaign Against Anti-Father Verizon Commercial, Campaign Against Anti-Male Advertising, Campaign Against Detroit News ‘Get Her a Gift or She”ll Give You a Black Eye” Ad and Portable On Demand Storage Decides to Remove Anti-Male Ad in Face of Protests. To learn more about the problems with the way men are portrayed in advertising, click here. Brandweek editor Todd Wasserman discusses the problem of ‘Dad as Idiot’ advertising in his recent column The Surviving Dads Of Ads (Brandweek Magazine, 11/12/07).
Wasserman interviewed me for the piece a couple weeks ago, and he seemed to understand and sympathize with our point. His column has some interesting quotes from advertising experts about the evolution of the TV dad. Brandweek Magazine is a weekly marketing trade publication, one of the largest in the advertising world. If readers would like to write a Letter to the Editor and express their views about this problem within the advertising industry, go to feedback@brandweek.com. To email Wasserman , click here The Surviving Dads Of Ads By Todd Wasserman Brandweek Magazine, 11/12/07 There are many advertisements that tick Glenn Sacks off these days. Take the one from Kohler that shows a man trying to stop up his toilet so he”ll have an excuse to summon the hottie (female) plumber whose van is parked across the street. Then, there”s the Pizza Hut ad that features a father “cooking’ for his kids–by ordering out. But Sacks” beef has little to do with the creative quality of these spots. Instead, he comes at it from the angle that our sibling publication Adweek has characterized as “bizarre.’ Those commercials, Sacks says, are “anti-father.’ Sacks, who”s a columnist, radio commentator and blogger, got Adweek“s attention in February when he led an effort to try to keep the firm of Arnold, Boston, from maintaining the Volvo account during a review. Sacks took issue with Arnold ads for Fidelity Investments that showed a dad jumping up and down like a twit after beating his daughter in ping pong. (Arnold kept the Volvo account; Sacks deems the new Volvo ads inoffensive.) Sacks” complaint admittedly seems weird at first, and also a little suspect–akin to making a case for WASP”s rights or a public plea to refrain from discriminating against Austrians. After all, aren”t fathers all-powerful in this society? Can”t they take a little ribbing? It turns out, though, that Sacks isn”t the only one making this case. Mark Penn”s book Microtrends, a survey of emerging demographic and psychographic groups, includes a chapter on “Neglected Dads.’ Penn charts the course of McDonald”s, which figured out early on that marketing directly to kids could increase the bottom line (not to mention those kids” bottoms). But sometime in the mid 1990s, “moms started paying more attention to what their children ate.’ That led to initiatives like 2004″s “McMom,’ which includes an online newsletter with tips on parenting. Yet at a recent company retreat, Penn pointed out to McDonald”s execs that since the 1970s, fathers have been spending more time with their kids. In fact, in 1997, dads living at home spent 65% as much time in the company of their progeny during the week as their mothers did, and 87% as much time on the weekends, per a University of Michigan study. Penn continues: “This is serious father-child interaction time, say the researchers–which means meals. But where is the McDad initiative? Who”s targeting the volunteer coaches who need a place to take the kids after Saturday”s practice?’ Penn goes on to demand Daddy-and-me books and back-to-school clothing ads targeted at fathers. If marketers take Penn up on his offer, they”ll be reversing years of not just neglect, but scorn–at least if you agree with cultural analyst and NYU professor Mark Crispin Miller. Miller”s theory is that since the 1950s advertisers have been scheming to subvert fathers” power. Recall that fathers in the “50s were children during the Depression. Wooing dad–often tight with the cash–was not the way to go. So, most advertisers (except for makers of big-ticket items like cars) not only ignored fathers, they elevated mothers and children above their heads with ads showing who was really pulling the family purse strings. Over time, programmers picked up on the switch as well: Stolid figures like Ward Cleaver morphed into the Bill Cosby of the “80s who often came off as an overgrown man-child next to the witty-and-wise maternal oligarch, Phylicia Rashad. The trend, if anything, has gotten worse. Comedy flicks like Knocked Up or any screen fare featuring Will Ferrell typically feature wise, understanding women falling for men who act like 12-year-olds. Sure, it”s funny, but it”s also hard to argue that guys like Sacks don”t have a point. “I understand they want to make funny commercials,’ he said. “But why does the man always have to be the idiot?’ Sacks isn”t totally discouraged though. He was buoyed by a recent ad for the 2008 Ford Taurus that likened the automakers to the spot”s upstanding father shown buying the car for the same child that we see him teaching (in flashbacks) how to ride a bike. And Sacks also sees progress in a Disney kiddie show where, for once, the father isn”t made out to be a clueless idiot or nonpresence. See, Sacks and other fathers like me aren”t asking for much. We”re so desperate for positive media role models that we”ll even give a shout out to Hannah Montana.

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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: Passport Rules Unfair to Child Support Obligors

October 25, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles criticizes the new child support/passport rules which are so overwhelmingly popular among the editorial boards of our nation’s newspapers.

To listen to the commentary, click here.

To learn more about the passport law, see my co-authored column, Passport Rules Unfair to Child Support Debtors (San Antonio Express-News, 9/8/07).

His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage.

From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here.

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NPO in the media

His Side with Glenn Sacks Radio Commentary: New Yankee Rookie Phenom’s Heroic Father

October 12, 2007

My recent His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentary for KLAA AM 830 in Los Angeles discusses New York Yankee rookie phenom Joba Chamberlain, who was raised by a single father, Harlan Chamberlain, who was partially crippled with polio as a child and grew up in foster homes. Joba explains: “If I can be half the man and half the father he was, I’ll be very, very happy…[my father] was given what he was given and never batted an eye, never looked back.”

To listen to the commentary, click here. To learn more, see my blog post New Yankee Rookie Phenom Joba Chamberlain Was Raised By Disabled Single Father. His Side with Glenn Sacks radio commentaries are broadcast daily on KLAA AM 830, a 50,000 watt talk station in Los Angeles and Orange County. KLAA AM 830 is owned by Arte Moreno, owner of the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim. KLAA hosts include Glenn Beck and Michael Savage.

From 2003-2005, His Side with Glenn Sacks ran in a syndicated talk show format in Los Angeles, New York City, Boston, Seattle, and other cities. To listen to show archives, click here. [audio:http://www.glennsacks.com/hsrc/mp3/hsrc-joba.mp3]

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NPO in the media

Holstein Co-Authors Piece on Mary Winkler Custody Case

September 25, 2007

Ned Holstein, M.D., Executive Director of Fathers & Families, recently co-authored a piece on the Mary Winkler saga, arguing that Winkler, who killed her husband in March of 2006, should not receive custody of her three children. The column, written with columnist Glenn Sacks, is No child custody for husband-killer Mary Winkler (World Net Daily, 9/14/07). It appears below. No child custody for husband-killer Mary Winkler By Glenn Sacks and Ned Holstein, M.D. World Net Daily, 9/14/07 A killer shoots his spouse in the back, and then pulls the phone cord out so the victim can”t call 911. As the victim slowly bleeds to death, the killer abducts their three children and flees to another state. An Amber Alert is declared for the missing children, and the killer is hunted down by police, caught, and tried. Were the killer a man, he would be locked away for life. However, this killer is a woman, Mary Winkler. The kid gloves treatment she has received from the legal system demonstrates how courts tilt heavily in favor of women when adjudicating claims of domestic abuse.

Mary Winkler told the court that Matthew had abused her physically, sexually and emotionally. For that reason, the Selmer, Tennessee jury convicted her of voluntary manslaughter, not first degree murder. Since the March 22, 2006 killing, Mary and Matthew”s three children–girls ages 2, 8 and 10–have lived with Matthew”s parents, Dan and Diane Winkler. The Winkler grandparents seek to terminate Mary”s parental rights and adopt the girls. Mary, who served only 67 days for the killing, wants custody of her girls, and went on Oprah this week to win public sympathy for her cause. The custody trial begins in Carroll County Chancery Court next week, and many Tennessee family law attorneys believe she has a good chance to gain custody. A win for Mary would be a loss for the three girls, as well as a terrible injustice. Despite the sympathetic media Mary Winkler has received, she is a dangerous, psychologically disturbed woman who is unfit to raise her children, and whose parental rights should be terminated. Mary Winkler”s claims of abuse were largely uncorroborated during the trial. According to the testimony from Matthew Winkler’s oldest daughter, Patricia, the dead father–who as he lay dying looked at his wife and asked “why?”–was a good man, and did not abuse her mother. Former judge and prosecutor Jeanine Pirro says the case “sends a terrible message about the criminal justice system, that you can commit a homicide and literally get away with it…You had a preacher, who by all accounts was loved in his community, who was shot in the back while he slept. You have a woman who says she was abused with absolutely no history, no shred of evidence.’ At the trial, Diane Winkler, Matthew Winkler’s mother, said: “The monster that you have painted for the world to see, I don’t think that monster existed…for everything you’ve accused him of, there never was proof, just accusations. I think that’s sad because he can’t speak for himself.” A few of Mary Winkler”s friends and family members have publicly claimed that they had previously seen indications that Mary was being abused. These witnesses will probably be out in full force during the upcoming custody case, and Matthew is unavailable to contest their version of events. It’s easy to smear a dead man. Mary Winkler says she”s sorry for killing Matthew, but she does everything she can to portray him as a monster and herself as his meek, timid victim. Despite her protestations, she has no concept of the gravity of her crime, and claims her dead husband’s parents are mistreating her by not letting her be with her children. Her court pleading reads, “The three minor children continue to be withheld from their mother without just cause,’ which her legal team deems “unconscionable.” Winkler killed the children”s father–if that’s not “just cause” for withholding a child from a parent, what is? In describing her crime to Oprah, Mary Winkler says she was angry at her husband and “just wanted to talk to him,” and then she “heard a boom.’ A more complete description of the incident would have been that she wanted to talk to him, waited until he fell asleep, retrieved the shotgun, pumped it, aimed it at his back, pulled the trigger, and then “heard a boom.’ Her description of the killing was so devoid of personal responsibility that even a sympathetic Oprah didn”t accept it. Perhaps the most absurd aspect of both the trial and Oprah was the way Mary highlighted the white platform shoes which she claimed Matthew “made her’ wear, and which she said were deeply humiliating to her. During the trial, Mary held up the shoe and bowed her head down in mock pain and shame. Oprah bought it, telling her audience that on her show “everybody gasped when they saw the shoe.’ It was up to feminist Court TV commentator Lisa Bloom, Gloria Allred”s daughter, to explain to Oprah that in any “big city” people would have “laughed at’ Mary”s claims that the shoes were part of the “abuse’ she suffered. Bloom added: “We [at Court TV] all thought it was a first degree murder case.” In order to win permanent custody, Dan and Diane Winkler must show that Mary Winkler poses a “substantial threat of harm to her children,’ and that ending her parental rights is in the best interests of her children. In family court, claims of abuse in custody cases are often decided merely by the preponderance of the evidence standard–if the judge believes that there”s a 51% chance one side is telling the truth, they win. Yet Mary was found guilty of voluntary manslaughter, not by preponderance, nor even by the clear and convincing evidence standard, but instead by the standard of beyond a reasonable doubt–the highest standard in our legal system. That alone is sufficient evidence that Winkler poses a “substantial threat of harm.’ Mary says she”s a different and better person now, and that she”s learned important things. She told Oprah: “I communicate better. I speak up when there”s something I don”t like.’ The last time Mary Winkler faced something she “didn”t like’ and sought to “communicate,’ she did it with a shotgun. Is this a fit parent for three young girls? www.FathersandFamilies.org