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Citizen Group Kicks Off Campaign to Reform Public
Broadcasting
November
16, 1999
Washington,
DC - Citizens for Independent Public Broadcasting, (CIPB) will
launch a national campaign on Tuesday, November 16, at 11:30 a.m.
to reform public broadcasting as a public trust, independent of
corporate and government influence, as well as to empower community
groups to democratize their local stations.
"The time
has come to return public broadcasting to its mission to serve as
a town hall of the air and a voice for groups in the community that
may otherwise be unheard," said Jerry Starr, CIPB Executive Director.
Speakers will
include:
- Nicholas
Johnson, Federal Communications Commissioner from 1966-73,
who was present at the creation of the Public Broadcasting Act.
According to Johnson, "What public broadcasting has failed to
recognize is that the ideas of the marketplace do not make a marketplace
of ideas."
- Alvin
Perlmutter, Emmy award-winning producer of over 100 documentaries,
including The Great American Dream Machine, praises the reforms
proposed by CIPB. According to Perlmutter, "Public TV can and
should provide hard-hitting documentaries with in-depth analysis
of the vital issues of our time. Unfortunately, the increasing
reliance on corporate underwriting has deprived the American public
of this important service."
- Janine
Jackson, Program Director of Fairness & Accuracy In Reporting,
is concerned that, "Public broadcasting routinely covers our society
from the top down (government and corporate officials and Wall
Street investors), but almost never from the bottom up (workers,
consumers and those concerned with the environment)."
- George
Gerbner, Professor of Telecommunications at Temple University
and Founding Dean of the Annenberg School of Communications at
the University of Pennsylvania, advises, "For most of human history,
our children's stories were told by caring people with something
to tell, not corporations with something to sell. It is a tragedy
that a once safe public broadcasting environment now has been
invaded by these same commercial forces."
As five-second
underwriting acknowledgements have expanded into 30-second commercials,
a goal of CIPB will be to reclaim the Carnegie Commission's mission
of public broadcasting to create programs "not to sell products or
to meet demands of the marketplace," but to "enhance citizenship and
public service."
CIPB will
organize local chapters to democratize the governance and programming
of their community's public broadcasting stations. CIPB also will
act as a clearinghouse on the activities and accomplishments of
these local chapters and on programs available for airing both nationally
and locally.
Starr, Jackson,
Perlmutter, and Gerbner will sign the CIPB Declaration
of Public Broadcasting Independence during the press conference. |