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鈥楧uck Dynasty鈥: Will 鈥業 Stand With Phil鈥 petition work?

鈥楧uck Dynasty鈥 patriarch, Phil Robertson, is the beneficiary of a petition that has gathered almost 250,000 signatures, in the wake of his controversial comments about gays. There鈥檚 been other pushback, too, to the condemnation of Mr. Robertson.

By Patrik Jonsson, Staff writer
Raleigh, N.C.

Will Phil Robertson be back on 鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 after all?

The suggestion by the bearded Louisiana duck-call entrepreneur that gays are akin to swindlers, drunkards, and adulterers 鈥 and the subsequent decision by A&E, partly owned by Disney, to put Mr. Robertson on hiatus 鈥 has generated lots of discussion, far beyond the show鈥檚 regular 14.8 million viewers.

Many commentators have said that such 鈥渧ile鈥 commentary can鈥檛 be accepted from those with a reality TV show pulpit. But Robertson鈥檚 defenders, in turn, have flexed their consumer muscle: An 鈥淚 Stand With Phil鈥 petition now has almost 250,000 signatures, and at least one business, Cracker Barrel, has apologized for withdrawing 鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 merchandise and has quickly put it back on the shelf.

鈥淵ou flat out told us we were wrong. We listened.... [W]e apologize for offending you,鈥 Cracker Barrel said on its Facebook page.

Last year, there was a similar consumer show of support for the chicken eatery Chick-fil-A after its CEO, Dan Cathy, was widely criticized for saying on a radio show, "I think we are inviting God's judgment on our nation when we shake our fist at Him and say, 'We know better than you as to what constitutes a marriage.鈥 鈥 On consumer-generated 鈥淐hick-fil-A Appreciation Day,鈥 franchises across the country were inundated with customers.

In the 鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 standoff, the stakes are high. The show鈥檚 cavalcade of redneck antics has generated nearly $500 million in merchandise and advertising sales since it first aired in the late winter of 2012. Now, the recent dispute constitutes an interesting quandary for the entertainment business 鈥 especially for Disney, a company that has allowed gay weddings at its resorts since 2007, thus providing fodder for a culture war over the legal and societal acceptance of homosexuality.

鈥淵ou鈥檝e got an America polarized on issues of sexual orientation, race, gender, all of which is tied into civil rights, and there are radicals on both sides of that fence,鈥 says Rob Weiner, a pop culture expert at Texas Tech University. 鈥淏ut as in life, a reasonable path is the way to go, and there are consequences to what you say, whether it鈥檚 鈥楧uck Dynasty鈥 or 鈥楢merican Idol.鈥 鈥

Indeed, 鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 is hardly the first television show to engender controversy. Earlier this year, Food Network chef Paula Deen resigned after she defended past racist commentary during a court deposition. MSNBC also recently let go of liberal stalwarts Alec Baldwin and Martin Bashir, after the men made what they acknowledged were inappropriate remarks.

But the 鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 case is different in that Robertson has not apologized (although he did say in a written statement that he, too, has sinned, and that he loves everybody like God loves everybody). Also, family members say they won鈥檛 do any more new shows (filming is set to start this spring) unless A&E brings Phil back, no questions asked.

鈥淲hen big, powerful TV executives ask a star to apologize for what they deem inappropriate comments or behavior, the star simply complies,鈥 writes Lee Habeeb, a Mississippi-based vice president at the 海角大神-themed Salem Radio Network. 鈥淏ut the TV gods never met a man like Phil Robertson. Or his family.鈥

鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 was a sleeper hit, suggesting to some that it was a way for coastal elites to 鈥渇eel progressive and enlightened by comparing themselves to simple country folks in Louisiana ...,鈥 CNN contributor Ruben Navarrette writes.

According to a worldview held by some in this segment 鈥 and also held by many on Madison Avenue 鈥 A&E made exactly the right call in punishing Robertson.

"This is not different from Paula Deen," Michael Stone, head of New York-based brand-licensing agency Beanstalk, tells Bloomberg News. "I'm surprised that A&E has not pulled the entire show. The Food Network did the right thing."

But it turns out that A&E may have misread at least part of its core audience 鈥 America鈥檚 rural working class. They may chuckle but ultimately see themselves represented through the Robertsons in a respectful way 鈥 God-fearing, fun-loving, prayer-sharing Americans, many of whom do believe homosexuality is a biblical sin even though, as Robertson later pointed out, they still love the sinner.

Moreover, the Robertsons are hardly bumpkins, but gung-ho American entrepreneurs who unashamedly enjoy life according to the Bible 鈥 where killing for food is moral, where prayer is warming at the end of the day, and where there鈥檚 a right and a wrong.

And the family has made about $200,000 per episode.

Yet it鈥檚 unlikely Phil and the rest of the crew will blink. As Jase Robertson told GQ, there were three 鈥渘o compromises鈥 during negotiations with A&E. Those were 鈥渇aith, betrayal of family members, and duck season.鈥

Even as A&E executives have banished Robertson, they have also tipped their hats: They decided to air a 鈥淒uck Dynasty鈥 marathon over Christmas, raking in viewership from the controversy.

" 'Duck Dynasty' is A&E's biggest revenue generator and major viewer franchise," Porter Bibb, managing partner at Mediatech Capital Partners, a New York-based merchant bank, told Bloomberg. "America believes in second acts," he added, saying he believes Robertson "will be given another chance."