BACK TO CIPB IN THE NEWS
Putting
the Public Back in Public Broadcasting
(May 18 , 2000)
By
Dan Kennedy for the Boston
Phoenix.
Jerold
Starr first took up the cause of public broadcasting in the early
1990s, when the public-television foundation in his hometown of
Pittsburgh, some $14 million in debt, proposed selling one of
its two stations. Starr, a sociology professor at West Virginia
University, mobilized grassroots support to save the station,
registering some 40,000 calls, letters, and petition signatures.
The effort nearly failed, and it may fail yet. Last year the FCC
-- prodded by Senator John McCain, whose friend and financial
contributor Lowell Paxson would have benefited -- approved a complicated
three-way deal to put the station in the clutches of a right-wing
religious broadcaster. The deal fell apart only because the broadcaster
backed out, worried about FCC rules against religious proselytizing
on public stations (see "This Just In," News and Features,
January 21). Congress is now considering legislation to overturn
the ban, which Starr warns would "completely open the door
to terrible abuse."
Starr's
experience led him to form Citizens for Independent Public Broadcasting
-- and to write a just-released book, Air Wars: The Fight To Reclaim
Public Broadcasting (Beacon). He spoke with the Phoenix by phone
from his organization's Washington office.
Q: How do the lessons of Pittsburgh apply nationally?
A:
The deeper I got into analysis of its financial problems and structural
problems, the more I came to realize that they were endemic to
the service as a whole. Structurally, PBS member stations suffer
from insufficient federal funding, from over-reliance on contributions
from affluent subscribers, and from over-reliance on corporate
underwriting. Consequently, their programming is driven primarily
by the need to please these sponsors. There clearly has been a
significant retreat into more and more commercialism and programming
designed not to offend anybody -- certainly not to engage people
as citizens.
Q: McCain's intervention in Pittsburgh, which would have resulted
in his friend Bud Paxson's winding up with a lucrative spot on
the dial, was briefly controversial during the presidential campaign.
What's your take on McCain?
A:
We're the ones who broke that story, as you recall. And my take
on McCain, as was revealed in the New York Times and Boston Globe
reports and other venues, is that by his own admission he does
favors for wealthy contributors. He calls himself a victim, but
let's just say he's a participant in the same system of patronage
and privilege that has so alienated citizens from the federal
government. He is certainly not a friend of public broadcasting,
as he has made clear on many occasions. Obviously it was quite
permissible to John McCain and his people to open the door to
the religious right taking over public broadcasting.
Q: What would you identify as the single biggest problem in public
broadcasting today?
A:
The lack of independent public funding, which we would solve by
creating a Public Broadcasting Trust. The Public Broadcasting
Trust would replace the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and
the Public Broadcasting System. It would be sufficiently endowed
and supported to provide $1 billion a year in programming support
for noncommercial educational broadcasting. Moreover, it would
remove public broadcasting from the federal dole, where it's constantly
subject to political harassment. It would remove public broadcasting
from corporate underwriting, which drives programming toward subject
matter that is in the interests of the corporations. And it would
provide the financial security that it needs for editorial independence.
Our
proposal also includes a number of measures that would ensure
public openness and accountability. We don't believe in simply
throwing a lot of money at the present system. We are interested
in making the stations much more responsive to the local community
than they currently are.
Q: Your work in Pittsburgh led you to help found Citizens for
Independent Public Broadcasting. What is your organization's mission?
A:
To put the public back in public broadcasting. We work on three
fronts. One is to promote the idea of a Public Broadcasting Trust.
Two is to found local chapters and to guide and support these
chapters in improving their community public-broadcasting service.
And the third thing we do is we take an active role in FCC and
congressional deliberations concerning noncommercial educational
broadcasting.
Q: Your book should inspire outrage. How can ordinary citizens
get involved?
A:
The first thing they should do is contact Citizens for Independent
Public Broadcasting, because we are a clearinghouse for citizens
who are interested in improving their service, both locally and
nationally. They'll find a ton of material on our Web site [www.cipbonline.org].
And for people who don't Web surf, they can call us [202-638-6880].
We offer various materials, such as training manuals, videos,
and the like.
We're
collecting the names of people all over the country who are interested
in starting local chapters. We're also partnering with national
organizations as diverse as the National Library Association,
the AFL-CIO, and NOW. And they put out the word to their members
that there is this organization whose mission is to broaden the
public dialogue on social issues through broadcasting.