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See the Cowardly Eye Blink

November 5, 2003


"Propaganda isn't what you tell people," CBS founder William S. Paley
used to say. "It's what you don't tell them."

And now, on the evenings of Nov. 16 and 18, viewers at Paley's old
network won't be told anything at all about Ronald Reagan, the president
or the man.

The propagandists win again.

Yesterday, CBS bowed to political pressure from a zealous band of
conservative enforcers, deep-sixing a four-hour miniseries about the
former First Family.

The critics had claimed that "The Reagans" was inadequately flattering to
the 40th president. Nowhere in the miniseries, it seems, was Reagan shown
walking on water. The dialogue apparently included a curse word or two
and a passage where Reagan seemed to lack sympathy for the victims of
AIDS. So now the whole two-night program is being shunted off to a small
pay-cable service owned by the network's parent, Viacom. CBS won't air a
single word.

Too bad old man Paley isn't still around to witness this. He knew from
hard experience how a television network must protect its independence
and integrity. Rule No. 1: Don't let the partisan interest groups control
what you air.

Oh, president Les Moonves and the current crew at CBS denied yesterday
that they were crumbling to outside pressure. "This decision is based
solely on our reaction to seeing the final film, not the controversy that
erupted around a draft of the script," the network bosses harrumphed.

If so, what an amazing coincidence it was!

Just as the national Republican chairman and some old Reagan cronies
raised their complaints - and a boycott-CBS campaign was launched -
Moonves and Viacom chiefs Sumner Redstone and Mel Karmazin arrived at an
independent, journalistic epiphany: The miniseries wasn't sufficiently
balanced, they decided. And that led the execs to trash the work of an
experienced producing team, toss a $9-million investment and shoot a
giant hole into the network's November sweeps lineup.

As Gomer Pyle liked to say on the old CBS: "Goll-lee!"

It was just Sunday night that CBS threw itself a lavish 75th-anniversary
bash. Manhattan's Hammerstein Ballroom was packed with CBS luminaries.
The air was thick with self-congratulation. How CBS set the highest
standards. How CBS was Tiffany TV. How CBS always knew where to draw the
lines.

Only Dick and Tommy Smothers reminded the crowd that night how
conservative pressure once led the network to ditch their edgy variety
show. It seemed like a funny, ancient story Sunday, an embarrassing
exception to the general CBS rule.

By yesterday, it was 1969 all over again. A politically charged
entertainment program was being sacrificed at CBS to satisfy conservative
complainers. This time, the Ronald Reagan fan club didn't like that actor
James Brolin, Barbra Streisand's husband, was cast as the Gipper. And
they didn't like a few leaked snatches of dialogue.

But wait!

"The Reagans" miniseries never pretended to be journalism. It's not an
encyclopedia entry or a documentary film, any more than the "Smothers
Brothers Comedy Hour" was. It's a silly four-hour movie made for TV.
Since when are TV movies held to standards like this?

"Roots?" "The Thorn Birds?" The new one about the kidnap girl Elizabeth
Smart? Which of those is drawn entirely from tape-recorded, on-the-record
dialogue?

So why the sudden rigidity over Ronald Reagan?

I'll tell you why.

The conservative cultural war is heating up again. And in this war,
nothing is as sacred as Reagan's legacy.

He is, after all, the president credited by conservatives with leading
them out of the wilderness. He saved the world from Communism, didn't he?
He had that giant tax cut. To his partisans, Reagan can never do anything
wrong. Only a plaster saint will do.

These Reagan idolaters can't stand the idea that their man, like every
president, like every man, also had his faults. No, he didn't walk on
water. He made some blunders, too. Iran-Contra happened on his watch. He
left gigantic deficits. His wife could be a little batty. He could be
forgetful at times. His temper occasionally got the better of him.

But don't go looking for that at sweeps time on CBS. The propagandists
won another one. Reagan's name won't be spoken at all. 

-----
I Pledge Impertinence to the Flag-Waving of the Unindicted
Co-Conspirators of America
and to the Republicans for which I can't stand
one Abomination, Underhanded Fraud
Indefensible
with Liberty and Justice Forget it.

 -Life in Hell (Matt Groening)

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