Todd 'MJ' Schnitt |
He did his first morning talk show. The MJ Morning Show in
West Palm Beach, and then got a call in 1994 for a job in the Tampa area which
became the MJ and BJ Morning Show for Clear Channel’s WFLZ 93.3 FM. His morning
show included comedy/prank phone calls and pop culture, targeting women aged
18-49.
He currently does the "Schnitt Show" in the
afternoons on N/T WFLA 970 AM radio.
The swflorida.blog reports he said he considers himself a
broadcaster with a reputation "in good standing" in the community.
But says, it's "Not as good as it used to be," alleging Todd ‘Bubba’
Clem was the factor in a change of his reputation starting in January, 2008. He
described people calling him names, screaming at him, and nasty emails and
phone calls. Bubba Clem returned to the Tampa
radio market in January, 2008.
The jury was shown dozens of nasty reading emails from listeners.
Todd 'Bubba' Clem |
He described a Mother's Day 2008 incident as he was taking
his wife and kids to lunch when he found his
wife's car, the house and yard littered with eggs and had to cancel the
dinner out in order to clean up the mess he told the court.
Schnitt says he found a note at his gate signed by the
"Bubba Army." He then contracted to buy a $12,000 video security
system after making a report with the Tampa
police about the vandalism.
Also testifying were more members of Bubba the Love Sponge
Clem's radio show. They said the Tampa
shock jock's alleged verbal attacks on fellow Tampa DJ Todd "MJ"
Schnitt were all about a radio war, not character assassination.
Matthew Lloyd, a 102.5 The Bone FM personality known as
"Spice" on the radio, was a member of Bubba's show five years ago
when the alleged verbal attacks took place.
"The goal was to be No. 1 in the ratings)," Lloyd
said. "MJ had the number one slot, and the goal was to win,"
according to BayNews9.
Schnitt's lawyer asked Lloyd, who could be heard laughing in
the background of one of the clips, if he thought calling Schnitt's wife a bad
name was funny. Lloyd said it was all part of the game.
Clem denies the claims, saying he was using
"hyperbole" and "satire," that the Schnitts are public
figures and his comments were protected by the First Amendment, according to
tbo.com.
The trial is now in its second week and testimony is expected to continue Wednesday. For live coverage, Click Here.
The trial is now in its second week and testimony is expected to continue Wednesday. For live coverage, Click Here.
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