Charles McGrath, in his Feb 17 New York Times article, points out that while National Public Radio's listenership is growing, PBS television, he believes, has seen it's best days, and may perhaps be no longer relevant or necessary.
I couldn't disagree more.
We now live in a climate where local printed newspapers are in sharp decline, and where the cynical irony in Fox News Channel's name and slogan goes unchallenged. Even my parent's nightly network news broadcasts have devolved into 15 minutes of entertainment interspersed between 15 minutes of drug company commercials. In this climate where journalistic integrity and high standards are the exception rather than the rule, it seems to me that shows like the News Hour with Jim Lehrer, NC Now, and Frontline are now more important than ever - certainly not less.
Despite years of siege by politicians who seem to prefer the tractibility and journalistic abdication prevalent on Britney-obsessed cable news outlets - and make no mistake, their issue with PBS is the news - PBS television remains one of the only places to get trustworthy news on television.
As McGrath points out in his article (the title is sharper than the content of the piece itself), the answer to whatever woes PBS television may be facing is more public funding, not less. It seems miraculous to me that PBS can, on pennies, continue to do what Big Corporate Media seems unable to do with all it's billions of dollars. In truth, perhaps the absence of billions is the secret of PBS' success. But while we wait for more public funding for PBS television, that miracle has an earthly foundation.
Oh and don't forget masterpiece theater. The Jane Austin - a- thon is rocking my Sunday nights.
This is not on PBS, but behaves as a PBS show (sort of). I find CBS Sunday Morning very refreshing. It is a news and entertainment show, but it is slow-paced and the entertainment focuses on what can be found in Museum Gift Shops instead of Spencer's. I am probably the only person under 50 that watches it, but I am addicted. I love the pace.
Just this morning we were mocking the (d)evolution of legitimate news into crappy infotainment. Granted, it's wildly interesting to watch the ongoing catfight between Keith Olbermann and Bill O'Moron...but I am getting really frustrated with the lack of trustworthy news available to me. Thanks PBS. Thanks Charlie Rose. Thanks Jim Lehrer. I have at least 2,000 pennies for you if you'll keep it up...
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