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To PBS, with (Tough) Love
Neither of us is old enough to have been fooled by the Trojan Horse (see Wikipedia). But we each have been working in public television decades enough to remember the days when distribution was handled by physically transporting bulky 2-inch videotapes from station to station — “bicycled” was the word — and much of the broadcast day and night was devoted to blackboard lectures, string quartets and lessons in Japanese brush painting: The old educational television versions of reality TV.
Yet it also was a time of innovation and creativity. As the system evolved we saw bold experiments like PBL — the Public Broadcasting Laboratory and Al Perlmutter’s The Great American Dream Machine, each a predecessor to the commercial TV magazine shows 60 Minutes and 20/20. The TV Lab, jointly run by David Loxton at WNET in New York and Fred Barzyk at WGBH in Boston, nurtured and encouraged the first generation of video artists — Nam June Paik, Bill Viola and William Wegman among others — and the early documentary work of such video pioneers as Jon Alpert and Keiko Tsuno of the Downtown Community Television Center, Alan and Susan Raymond, and the wild and woolly, guerrilla camera crews of TVTV.
The descendants of those pathfinders are the independent filmmakers whose works have not only re-energized the motion picture industry but also have vastly expanded the realm of the documentary — in both the scope of its storytelling and the size and diversity of its audience. Public television has faithfully provided an enormous national stage where nonfiction films can be seen by far more people than could ever buy tickets at the handful of movie houses willing to put documentaries up on their theater screens.
As Gordon Quinn of the independent documentary company Kartemquin Films (Hoop Dreams) told Anthony Kaufman of the website IndieWire, “In terms of having an audience in a democratic society, in terms of getting people talking about things, there’s nothing like a PBS broadcast. PBS is free, and it’s huge in getting into rural areas. That reach, all over the country, it’s a critically important audience that’s vastly underserved.”
Two PBS series have provided outstanding showcases for the work of new and established documentarians and between them have 13 Oscar nominations and 54 Emmys to prove it. For years, Independent Lens and POV held a nationwide time slot as part of the PBS core schedule on Tuesday nights, with public TV stalwart Frontline as a worthy lead-in, funneling to the independent films just the kind of audience that enjoys and appreciates documentaries.
But this season, PBS chose to move Independent Lens and POV to a new time slot — 10 PM ET, on Thursday nights. This may not seem like such a big deal at first, until you know that on Thursday nights stations can broadcast any program they like in prime time, whether it’s part of the PBS schedule or not. Many take the opportunity to offers viewers locally produced programs, British sitcoms or reruns of Antiques Roadshow. As a result, episodes of the independent documentary series can now be run anywhere local stations choose to fit them in (here in New York, WNET airs the films at 11 pm on Sundays) or maybe not at all.
POV does not begin the new season — its 25th — until June, but as Dru Sefton first reported in the public broadcasting trade publication Current, in the first few months since Independent Lens was shuffled into its new Thursday time slot last October, ratings plummeted 42 percent from the same period last season. With programs scattered throughout the schedule in different cities, not only is it now more difficult for viewers to find them but coordinated national advertising and promotion campaigns are, at best, extremely difficult.
The team at PBS consists of dedicated people; all are our colleagues and many are our friends. They are constantly looking for ways to increase the audience that watches public television. But there is always a danger, in any organization, of only seeing the world from the top down, and then counting heads to measure whether something is good or not. An open letter to PBS from Kartemquin Films says it well:
“Public television is not just a popularity contest, or a ratings game. Taxpayers support public broadcasting because democracy needs more than commercial media’s business models can provide. PBS’ programming decision makes a statement about PBS’ commitment to the mission of public broadcasting.”
It goes on to note the mandate cited in the recently revised and reissued Code of Editorial Integrity for Local Public Media Organizations: “Our purposes are to support a strong civil society, increase cultural access and knowledge, extend public education, and strengthen community life through electronic media and related community activities.”
Most of both our careers have been in public television. Our affection and gratitude for it abideth, but we are not blind to the problems. Public broadcasting’s ever-tenuous funding places it in a perpetual dilemma and forces it into a delicate balancing act. PBS provides programming like Independent Lens and POV that may not garner the most viewers but helps fulfill its essential mission of public service — and, candidly, attracts grants from kindred spirits who believe in a robust mix of ideas and visions. But to lure a wider audience, it also airs what our neighborhood diner calls “lighter fare” — whether entertaining, upscale imports like Downton Abbey, home-grown, how-to programs like This Old House or (during pledge drives) nostalgic reruns of folk musicians, pop crooners, and financial and spiritual gurus – aimed at older viewers with, presumably, more disposable income.
Add to this the constant political pressures, especially from conservative politicians ever eager to cut off its funding (Mitt Romney says he wants to see commercials on “Sesame Street”), plus the self-censorship that all too often results, and you get a tendency toward orthodoxy and an aversion to controversy.
A PBS spokesperson told The New York Times that the service “is fully committed to independent films and the diversity of content they provide.” That can quickly be demonstrated by reversing a bad decision and returning to a national core time slot the independent documentaries created — often at real financial sacrifice — by the producers and filmmakers whose own passion is to reveal life honestly and to make plain, for all to see, the realities of inequality and injustice in America.
Along with its open letter to PBS, Kartemquin Films published a petition and asked for signatures from independent filmmakers and their supporters. We two are among the more than 300 who have signed it as of this writing. If you think the creativity and unique visions of life captured by independent producers, journalists and filmmakers deserve the best possible platform on public television, you can read and sign it yourself.
The effort has made a difference. Talks are ongoing and the Times reports that PBS now has “agreed to find a new home next season” for the two series. An announcement is expected to be made at the PBS annual meeting in May. That’s good news, but until the decision is made, it’s important to keep letting them know how you feel — write PBS or sign that petition.
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20 Comments so far
Show AllMy local PBS station a couple of years ago hired a new administrator from Texas. The first thing he did was cancel all broadcasts of Democracy Now. Which was airing at 5 am every morning. Not a prime spot. But when ask why he cancelled the program, he replied he did so because the local demographic was not liberal enough to justify it's continued airing. What did we get in return? We got repeated airings sometimes 4 times in one day of same sofballing sort of news coverage and programming we get on network tv. I can only take so much of the Mclaughlin Group, with it's underwriters: Pfizer, the New York Stock Exchange, and GE .
Independent Lens is a great program. The "Traveling T-Shirts" episode was a real eye openner. It examined how the World Bank and privatization destroyed the economy of Zambia. But now I see our Texas administrator will be given the freedom to shuffle this great program into obsurity.
http://www.pbs.org/independentlens/tshirttravels/film.html
"Bye Bye!" and that's exactly what I've done with my PBS station. I'd rather watch old episodes of "Law and Order" and the "Big Bang" than the dribble they are providing. Shit I am watching old George Burns and Gracie Allen shows when I used to be watching Democracy Now and Independent Lens. Maybe that's intent of the corporate powers, but I think they better watch some of that old programing before they think they're furthering demise of the 99%. They might be surprised at some of it's content.
I have watched the decline of PBS with sadness. Here in the Washington area, the station's schedule is now filled with vapid and/or trivial stuff. Oh, and did I mention all the British imports? I think PBS should stand for "Primarily British Shows." I have contributed to my local station for over 20 years. I will not do so again
You can watch Democracy Now on your computer, either as a live show or from their archives, as you can Bill Moyer's & Co and other lifelines to reality and thoughtful examinations thereof. It's likely that the internet does and/or will offer increasing opportunity for the new documentarians as well. Who needs television?
Many of us do not have a connection speed fast enough to watch TV in any but poor quality from a computer. Also, I want to watch TV from a comfortable couch in a living room, not a desk, or a little laptop with tinny speakers.
The internet has been very instrumental in sequestering any left-progressive thought to obscure soundproof corners. There is simply no substute for real broadcasting if you want an idea to get out to the mainstream.
I guess I'm old. I can remember when 'noncommercial" public television actually had no commercials. They've got them now. They come between programs, but they are in many cases the same commercials that are to be seen on regular TV.
My thought is that if public television wanted more viewers, they ought to do far fewer pledge drives. It has come to seem now that it's pledge drive all the time. And the people they get to talk at us during the pledge interruptions are all boring and uninteresting. I can't watch them and listen to them and their annoyingness keeps me from even considering sending them money.
while they're at it, revive the show "Encore."
I love you Bill and Michael, but i've given up on PBS. Used to be one of their biggest fans and, when i had it, one of their biggest supporters. No more. Eagerly awaited a "new" show on Arctic bears that was so feel goody it made me sick. Close ups of the carcasses of the polar bears (cubs, too) dying from starvation and drowning would have been the truth, and in the old days, PBS would have shown it. No more; so sad and infuriating.
Keep on keepin' on, you two. We love you.
Tough Love?
Give me a break.
Moyers is so blinded by his love affair with CPB (which supported him for all those years) that is virtually impossible for him to see what PBS and even worse still, NPR have become: corporate supported entities driven by the "need" to "expand" their market share.
If Moyers wanted to actually "save" CPB (if that is indeed possible), he might start by educating himself about what it has REALLY become.
Take of the blinders, Bill. You might start by spending some time reading the excellent analysis of NPR's "public" broadcasting done by Matthew Murphy on his blog NPRCheck.
I won't hold my breath.
Excellent post, I wasn't aware of this site! Heading there right now.... and thank you!
of course, this piece is about PBS, which is television and you're commenting on NPR, which is radio... but the issues are the same. My circle of friends has been calling NPR "national pentagon radio" for some time now...
>Moyers is so blinded by his love affair with CPB (which supported him for all those years) that is virtually impossible for him to see what PBS and even worse still, NPR have become:<
The above statement is so, so unfair to Moyers that I must assume it has been made by a rabid rightwinger under a liberal clothing. Anyone who'd followed the many, many writings and speeches made by Bill Moyers during the last few decades would've known his concern and condemnation of the perversion of free speech in PBS. Do a little research before smearing the name of an American who'd done far, far more for free speech and democracy than what his detractors would've done for the rest of their lives.
How about Phil Donohue on PBS?
Business, the GOP and American right wing (all the same people) have virtuallly destroyed PBS. I have seen it change from an actually-educational resource 24/7 (I mean, you could find the lives of poets at 3 a.m.!) to a vacuous, timid, worthless waste of time now featuring no less that LAWRENCE WELK re-runs, British nobility-tales, antique-roadshow greed-fests, and endless fund-raisers. "Support this extraordinary programming!" they say----Huh? Poor America---so utterly terrified that anybody is going to start thinking and PBS is leading the charge down the rabbit-hole, while shamelessly pitching for retirees' estates and savings. What a disgrace. My family used to donate all the time. And they spit in your face while building themselves gigantic offices and studios from which NOTHING gets produced anymore. Thanks again, Mr Businessman---You make everything better!
As long as we're kvetching about the preponderance of deplorable "filler" material on PBS teevee: for the past few years, WHYY-TV (Philly) has turned their late-night and overnight slots into a garbage can of endlessly recycled self-help and healthotainment lectures-- endless, and I mean ENDLESS Wayne Dyer, supplemented by various doctors preaching healthy living and the odd Suze Orman-type financial advisor.
I realize that the devout PBS congregation is "graying", but this dreck is like a closed-circuit loop from some assisted-living facility.
I wondered what happened to Independent Lens! I haven't caught it all season when usually I don't miss an episode. Now I know where it went. Sort of. Thanks.
PBS differs from commercial media in that that instead of promoting products promotes the corporate logos producing the products
Everything is relative and to understand how remote PBS is from the one step needed for public salvation check http://publicdom.net/pgi/aiming-starting-line and see for yourself
Just give me one day without hearing some goddam "authoritative" Brit accent! -30-
just take into account the reactions to financial problem solving by moving personal bank accounts from one bank to across the street bank account and calling it a national action, or worry in one sentence about foreclosure and falling house prices - whose accent is this
Open*Letter to PBS...
Dear*Folks,
Should you TRULY*CARE about saving what little public credibility remains in Public Broadcasting...
Take your skills, cameras, guts and bravado into the streets, homes and alley ways of America and talk directly to The*People...
NOT about the crap in their attics and garages, NOT about their retirement or self help plans...
Get down and dirty and realistic about the suffering, depletion and over all rain of shit which has befallen their American-Dream....
Then look for the common folk who have the radical solutions, both public and private that will claw this country and the world back from the abyss...
Forget the DAM "Experts" and "Suits" that created the situation...
We The*People have LIVED their VISION... THEIR - FAILURE.
Allow US the public platform to Unite and empower OUR*SELF...
C.H.A.O.S.
Transparency begets Independent Documentaries. Independent Documentaries beget low-cost Access to Me and You. Low-cost Access begets The Truth. The Truth can be hidden when monied interests call the shots on Access. Move POV and all other Transparent Commentary back to their previous time slots. Otherwise, My Trust in PBS moves to a mistrust in their hypocrisy.
And other questions emerge. Who are these PBS's administrators? What about their backgrounds? Investigations, definitely are in order.
We see the past several decades' as an assault on the Commons [and Common Sense] of Our Cities and Villages by the corporate private interests.Their willful attempts to block some news while letting other propaganda stand as news shocks and incenses this sixty-six years young breathing, thinking American. Shameful, if not outright disgusting.
Sincerely,
Bob
If corporate bigwigs want to hide controversial programs in the wee hours of the morning, it's fine with me. I record any progam I want (sometimes two at once), watch it whenever I want, and skip all commercials. When is the rest of the world going to wise up and get DVRs?