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Conservatives and Rivals Press a Struggling PBS
NY Times ^ | February 17, 2005 | JOHN TIERNEY and JACQUES STEINBERG

Posted on 02/17/2005 3:27:06 AM PST by Pharmboy

Edited on 02/17/2005 4:11:57 PM PST by Admin Moderator. [history]

Pat Mitchell, president of PBS,
plans to step down next year.

WASHINGTON, Feb. 16 - It was no accident that PBS found itself turning to Elmo, the popular "Sesame Street" character, to lobby on Capitol Hill this week. There were not many options.

Public television is suffering from an identity crisis, executives inside the Public Broadcasting Service and outsiders say, and it goes far deeper than the announcement by Pat Mitchell that she would step down next year as the beleaguered network's president.

Some public television executives said that running PBS was a thankless job, and that managing a far-flung network composed of independent fiefs around the country was a particularly daunting assignment. They also said they were facing larger issues that would challenge any executive, like increased competition from the cable industry.

Corporate underwriters have been less willing to finance PBS programs, which has left the network increasingly dependent on Washington, where Republicans criticize its programming as elitist and liberal.

The network has also struggled to develop popular new shows.

"The biggest problem we've got is the structure we've got," Alberto Ibarguen, the chairman of PBS and the publisher of The Miami Herald, said in an interview yesterday. "It assumes a lot of government funding, continuing heavy levels of corporate image advertising and no competition. But in the world we're in - the world of increased cable competition, less and less government funding and cutbacks in corporate image advertising - it's a significant problem if that's your business model."

Mr. Ibarguen added: "The risk is the tighter your budgets get, the less you can afford to fail. If you can't afford to fail, you can't afford to take risks."

Among the challenges that Ms. Mitchell has confronted is a trend, lasting nearly a decade, in which corporations have scaled back on the so-called "image advertising" through which they had once financed programs like "Masterpiece Theater." According to PBS's financial statements, revenues drawn from program underwriting - which are paid directly to producers, but catalogued by PBS - reached a five-year peak of $221.9 million in 2001, dropped to $179.4 million in 2003, and rebounded slightly to $184.3 million last year.

PBS hopes to relieve some of the pressure by creating a huge endowment from the proceeds of reselling the spectrum used by its stations when they trade their current broadcast positions for new high-definition stations later in the decade. But that will take persuading the same Congressional and administration officials who have objected to its programming.

Conservatives have complained about Bill Moyers's news program (he has since retired from it) and about a recent children's program featuring a rabbit named Buster who visited a pair of lesbian parents.

After Education Secretary Margaret Spellings threatened to retract financing for that program - a controversy that some called Bustergate - Ms. Mitchell decided not to distribute it.

In an interview on Wednesday, Ms. Mitchell, 62, said she had felt no pressure, either from inside her board or outside of PBS, to step aside.

She also said she had not been personally pressured to change programming by Republicans at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, which provides federal money to the system. But she said her programmers had worked with their counterparts at the corporation, which is led by White House appointees, in developing several new shows, including a talk show for the conservative commentator Tucker Carlson.

"They certainly want to make sure we are providing a balanced schedule," she said. "We believe we are. We check that with the people we report to - our member stations and the American public."

One high-level executive at PBS headquarters in Washington, who declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of the situation for PBS, said new managers at the Corporation for Public Broadcasting had been concerned about a perceived liberal bias at PBS as well as difficulties in fund-raising.

"The thing to remember with public broadcasting is that everything is steered by the money," the executive said. "What used to be a unique thing is now in this competitive environment and has to do whatever it can to survive, which means bending in a way it used to never bend."


Alberto Ibarguen is chairman
of PBS.

Now that 85 percent of Americans subscribe to cable or satellite television, PBS's children shows, historical dramas and wildlife documentaries face competitors like the History Channel, Discovery, A & E, the National Geographic Channel, BBC America, Nickelodeon, and The Learning Channel. PBS has responded by forging new alliances, like a recent agreement to show HBO films.

Ms. Mitchell, who was interviewed between lobbying meetings, said she would devote the rest of her tenure to raising money. Officials at PBS and its affiliated stations are beginning to lobby for a share of the windfall the federal government may get later this decade when public television stations and other over-the-air broadcasters stop using the airwaves to transmit analog signals, relying instead on digital signals over cable and satellite systems.

Once the broadcasters' part of the spectrum is open, the federal government stands to collect tens of billions of dollars by reselling it to other users like wireless broadband companies. Lobbyists for public television stations are supporting legislation that would put some of the money in a trust fund for public television.

Senator Christopher J. Dodd, a Connecticut Democrat sponsoring the legislation along with Senator Olympia J. Snowe, Republican of Maine, has called for the trust fund to be administered by an independent agency following the sort of procedures used by the National Science Foundation and the National Institutes of Health.

Some critics, like Tim Graham of the Media Research Center, a conservative watchdog group, are reluctant to give PBS any independent endowment.

"They want to create an empire that does not have to answer to the Congress or the people," Mr. Graham said. "Conservatives do not want to give more tax dollars to television stations that attack their ideas."

But there are some sympathetic conservatives, at least among the advisers on the Digital Future Initiative committee created by Ms. Mitchell, which met Wednesday in Washington to contemplate how PBS could put a trust fund to use. Norman Orenstein, a committee member who also sits on the PBS board, said Republicans on the committee believed that a trust fund could pay for socially useful programming.

"We're focusing on education and children and making the case that public broadcasting can do valuable things in a digital age that no one else can or will do," said Mr. Orenstein, a fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, a conservative research group.

But he did not expect the money to come easily.

"You couldn't have a tougher budget environment," Mr. Orenstein said, "and you're going to have vicious scrambling over discretionary domestic spending."

Referring to the recent programming incident, he said, "The timing couldn't have been worse on the Buster thing. This is not a time you want to be in the cross hairs."

PBS is also being criticized by others, like Jeffrey Chester, the executive director of the Center for Digital Democracy and a longtime advocate of more money for public television.

"I'm concerned that PBS is so desperate for funding and support from the Republican-dominated Congress that they're willing to sell their legacy," Mr. Chester said. "They could forgo their historic mandate to do cutting-edge programming and replace it with Bush-administration-friendly educational content."

John Tierney reported from Washington for this article, and Jacques Steinberg from New York.


TOPICS: Constitution/Conservatism; Culture/Society; Extended News; Government; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: gummintfunding; liberalbias; patmitchell; pbs
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To: MKM1960

My Dear Bride and I both read the Mars/Venus thing a few years ago, and bravo. Everyone should be allowed to achieve whatever they want (no "glass cealing") provided they are willing to sacrifice what it takes, but it is also important to remembet that people really are hardwired differently. Viv la differance! It is coming as a revalation to some in the 21st Century that men are actually more inclined to work hard for a woman who shows she looks up to him, and that women like to be treated as if they were really something special to a man. Shocking! Have you heard? ;)


41 posted on 02/17/2005 6:56:31 AM PST by 50sDad ( ST3d - Star Trek Tri-D Chess! http://my.oh.voyager.net/~abartmes)
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To: Pharmboy

At Elmo is'nt gay - yet.


42 posted on 02/17/2005 6:59:11 AM PST by KC_Conspirator (This space outsourced to India)
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To: MKM1960
I like the way you approach housework.

( :-D

43 posted on 02/17/2005 7:27:30 AM PST by Pharmboy ("Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God")
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To: Prophet in the wilderness

You know, they always say that the national arts budget is such a small piece of the pie that it won't do much good to cut it, but if you keep leaving the small cuts uncut, they add up to big pieces eventually.


44 posted on 02/17/2005 7:45:36 AM PST by formercalifornian (Daschle b-gone!)
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To: Pharmboy

One of my responses to a local PBS affiliate 'beg letter':

Friday, March 07, 2003

TO: Claude Kistler, KSPS station manager
RE: Request for contribution

Dear Claude,

I received your letter asking me to contribute to Spokane’s ‘public’ television and radio stations. It was very kind of you to offer me a membership in what I’m sure is an exclusive and sophisticated group, the “Friends of Seven.” But something tells me that I might not fit in.

Sure, you mention programming such as “The Antiques Roadshow,” NOVA and “Masterpiece Theater.” Great stuff, mostly. But you failed to mention some of the other programming that you routinely present. There’s your history of showing anti-Israel / pro-PLO programs such as "Days of Rage" and "The Faces of Arafat." But this is hardly a recent phenomenon. Let’s go back ten years or so. In a well-documented example, NPR ran 32 – yes, that’s 32 – reports concerning Baruch Goldstein's killing of Arabs in Hebron in February 1994. In each case, much time was spent on the type of weapon used, and the exact nature of the casualties was described in detail. By way of comparison, let’s look at NPR's coverage of Arab terrorist attacks in that same time frame. Two months after Goldstein’s rampage, Hamas blew up an Israeli bus in Afula – multiple hideous casualties, body parts strewn about; NPR ran a total of 3 stories. One week later, Hamas bombed an Israeli bus in Hadera – same hideous toll; NPR ran 1 report about it, and like the previous report, no mention of the nature of the casualties. How about the October 1994 Tel Aviv bus bombing, which left 22 dead? Eight – count ‘em – eight whole stories on NPR – and one of them called Hamas "terrific community organizers" who help to "develop young people" and who promote "business projects like honey, cheese making, home-based manufacture." You left out the hate preached in their schools, the “home-based” bomb- and rocket-making enterprises – yes, indeed – great “community organizers.” That’s about as fair and balanced as a carnival ring-toss game.

Others besides myself notice that when Israeli men, women and children are slaughtered by these monsters, you merely call them ‘Israelis.’ True as far as it goes, but by failing to mention that the casualties are in fact men, women and children, your use of the sole term ‘Israeli’ is an attempt to strip them of their human identity. It’s an old propaganda trick, and pretty transparent to the attentive observer. But you seem to recover your sense of humanity when you report Palestinian casualties - NOW we hear about women and children and ‘unarmed’ men.

I don’t know – perhaps I lack the sophistication, the requisite multicultural sensitivity to grant a pass to the Islamic Jihad and Hamas homicide bombers for what is, to NPR at any rate, an understandable and forgivable approach to dealing with Israel.

I suppose that my outlook is positively Neanderthal by NPR’s lights because I can’t seem to nod my head with approval when you demonize gun owners and gun rights organizations. Perhaps you don’t recall that, during an NPR news magazine and documentary broadcast, an NPR commentator, Bebe Moore Campbell, gave a harangue against the NRA for having attended a particular meeting. She said that the NRA had gone there to tell Korean merchants that blacks are criminals. She said that the NRA initials should stand for the "Negro Removal Association." She said that the NRA wanted sixteen year old boys to carry Uzis because “the gun would probably be used to kill a black person.” Well, hey – one man’s ‘hate speech’ is another man’s courageous crusade against evil gun owners, I suppose.

Somehow, I don’t resonate to the upbeat, hopeful tone of voice your announcers use when the names of prominent leftists and socialists like Bill Clinton are mentioned versus the thinly veiled contempt evident when your announcers are obliged to utter the names of folks like Bush and Reagan.

You bemoan the fact that only 24% of your funding comes from money taken under the threat of force and/or imprisonment from folks like me. That just breaks my heart. In a better, freer world, I’d have some say about the ‘redistribution’ of my hard-earned dollars to your essentially anti-American enterprise. And you would receive none:

• I am not in the habit of supporting those whose views are diametrically opposed to my own.
• I won’t contribute to those whose liberalism amounts to crimes against Man, nature, justice and reason.
• I refuse to send so much as a penny to applauders of socialism, communism and any other tyrant who happens to oppose the United States.
• I will not reward sympathizers of those who bomb innocent Israeli women and children.
• I would have none of my hard-earned money go to those who regard duty, honor and a willingness to fight for one’s country as the sneering punch line to a party joke.

In short, you will receive nothing from me or my family, and I will actively work to see that you are defunded of the government subsidy that you currently receive. And by the way – your letter mentions your ‘slowing membership growth.’ Could your pro-tyranny, leftist bias have something to do with it? Ya think?


45 posted on 02/17/2005 8:05:06 AM PST by Noumenon (The Left's dedication to the destruction of a free society makes them unfit to live in that society.)
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To: em2vn
Why would the creators of Elmo and Clifford want to kick anything back to PBS?

Oh, I wouldn't think they'd want to. But it could have been written in as part of the contract on these more recent shows. Even one percent would probably put them into the black.

46 posted on 02/17/2005 8:31:49 AM PST by old and tired
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To: Noumenon

Excellent letter. Somehow I intuit that there was no response from him...


47 posted on 02/17/2005 8:42:22 AM PST by Pharmboy ("Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God")
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To: Pharmboy; 185JHP; aculeus; Bigg Red; Calpernia; Davis; Doctor Raoul; DPB101; elbucko; evad; ...
*NPR/PBS* Ping list

If you want on or off this *NPR/PBS* ping list, please FReepmail me or just bump the thread
AND indicate your desire to be included. You must opt in! Don't be shy!
This is a low to moderate activty list.

Special note: PBS is having it's annual meeting...That's one reasone were are seeing a lot of news coverage and you are getting these pings.

48 posted on 02/17/2005 9:33:39 AM PST by Drango (FReepmal me to get on/off the *NPR/PBS* ping list)
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To: cloud8
Where is the anti-PBS lobby?

There really isn't one. Republicans vote to fund PBS/NPR all the time. Click on my name and go to my homepage for an old list.

On a side note, $3 million of federal funds are being used to find ways for "public broadcasting" to get their hands on the "endowment". Conservative voices are notably absent from these discussions. We weren't invited.

49 posted on 02/17/2005 9:51:10 AM PST by Drango (FReepmal me to get on/off the *NPR/PBS* ping list)
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To: Drango
Speaking of lobbying. Yesterday, almost every congress critter got a visit from a constituent, requesting they support PBS. It is a massive grassroots effort put on by the liberal APTS http://www.apts.org/events/capitolhillday/Schedule.cfm
50 posted on 02/17/2005 10:08:07 AM PST by Drango (FReepmal me to get on/off the *NPR/PBS* ping list)
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To: Pharmboy

I gotta confess that I usually like the PBS Christmas programming, albeit not enough to campaign to use tax dollars to keep the network afloat.


51 posted on 02/17/2005 10:14:33 AM PST by Tribune7
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To: Tribune7

...and I like some of their nature shows and their nostalgia shows. But I prefer to keep my money too.


52 posted on 02/17/2005 10:36:33 AM PST by Pharmboy ("Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God")
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To: Pharmboy

The problem is content. Nothing else.


53 posted on 02/17/2005 10:58:54 AM PST by writer33 ("In Defense of Liberty," a political thriller, being released in March)
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To: Pharmboy
"If PBS doesn't do it, who will?"

Let's see, I can list about 200 different cable channels that carry every kind of programming that PBS carries (liberal bias and all).

PBS has outlived any usefulness it ever had. It is time to shut it down and sell off its broadcast frequencies.

54 posted on 02/17/2005 12:42:58 PM PST by kennedy ("Why would I listen to losers?")
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To: Pharmboy

I don't admire the History Channel, Discovery or A&E very much either: they are same-same and likely as not to present a program like "Ancient UFOs", or a biography of, say, Lisa Gilbert, followed by a Manson Family documentary.

I'm glad we have cable though. PBS has been drumming this "heroic 60's" perspective for so long it's hard to bear. From their essayists on the Newshour, to their Frontline show, and any other of their documentaries, it seems like they are as obsessed with Vietnam and the civil rights movements as, say, the History Channel is with WW2 and Hitler.

Then, it's not just the government funding that is so offensive. On top of that, the pledge drives! How is this even defensible anymore? I think they should fold up the tent.
___
and i feel sorry for any little kid who has to turn to "Dragon Tales" for entertainment...GAAAAH !


55 posted on 02/17/2005 1:50:48 PM PST by withteeth
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To: withteeth

The stations you mentioned (A&E, History, etc.) are pretty close to the lefty bent of PBS. Not a whole lotta difference...


56 posted on 02/17/2005 4:55:40 PM PST by Pharmboy ("Rebellion to tyrants is obedience to God")
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