[The good news is that this infomercial will likely be a total snooze.
Why are Quaaludes needed when we've got George Schutz and a bunch of
pro-Schulz talking heads?]

from FAIR:

PBS, George Shultz and Funny Funding
Do PBS's conflict of interest rules apply?

7/12/10

Many PBS stations around the country will begin airing a three-part,
three-hour documentary tonight (7/12/10) about Reagan-era Secretary of
State George Shultz. According to the New York Times (7/12/10), the
unusually lengthy, completely uncritical tribute is partially
sponsored by corporations linked to Shultz's corporate career.

The special, Turmoil and Triumph, was funded by the Stephen Bechtel
Fund and Charles Schwab. Shultz was a board member at both companies,
and was president of the Bechtel Corporation from 1975 to 1982.

According to reviews, the documentary takes an overwhelmingly
positive, even gushing stance. The Times' Alessandra Stanley points
out, "There is no mention that Mr. Shultz was a cheerleader for the
2003 invasion of Iraq while still on the board of Bechtel, a
construction and engineering firm that won huge contracts that were
later criticized by the special inspector general for Iraq
reconstruction."

As the San Francisco Chronicle put it (7/10/10), "Only once in
Turmoil's three hours will you hear someone disagree with Shultz"--not
about his own performance, but about whether Reagan knew about the
Iran/Contra arms deals. Conservative Wall Street Journal columnist
Dorothy Rabinowitz (7/9/10) noted that the speakers in the film are
"an exceptionally enthusiastic lot even by the prevailing standards
for testimonials of this sort."

The political slant of the film is not a surprise. The company that
produced it, Free to Choose Media, has had a hand in several
conservative-oriented programs that have aired on public television,
including 1980's Free to Choose, a special PBS series celebrating
conservative economist Milton Friedman. As Greg Mitchell noted in the
Nation (7/12/10), Free to Choose Media "was founded with money from
the conservative Bradley Foundation and is part of the Palmer R.
Chitester Fund."

Beyond questions about the tone and length of the special--"Even Ken
Burns was able to polish off an entire mini-series about Thomas
Jefferson in three hours," Stanley notes--it's troubling that PBS is
airing a documentary funded by corporations with distinct ties to the
subject of the film. In the past, PBS has rejected films for
distribution based on these apparent conflicts of interest: The 1997
film Out at Work was refused because it received funding from labor
unions and a lesbian group. The 1993 documentary Defending Our Lives
addressed domestic violence--but one of the producers was affiliated
with a support group for battered women, so PBS wouldn't air it
(Extra!, 1-2/98). Even Lost Eden, a historical drama about a 19th
century textile strike, was turned away because of labor funding
(Extra!, Summer/90).

Corporate interests, by contrast, have been given more freedom; a
series about the oil industry presented by industry-affiliated
companies (Extra!, 9-10/93), for example, or the glowing tribute to
New York Times pundit James Reston--produced with funding from the New
York Times (Extra!, 1-2/98). A 2002 film about corporate globalization
was underwritten by the likes of FedEx and British Petroleum (FAIR
Press Release, 4/3/02).

What's PBS's excuse this time for airing a program whose subject is so
closely tied to the interests of its funders? PBS chief TV programming
executive John Wilson told the New York Times (7/12/10): "We evaluate
programs on their merits.... PBS has a vivid track record of covering
this administration's key players. It goes without saying this is not
our first look at the Reagan White House and not the last."

So apparently we should wait for the next time PBS airs a three-hour
documentary on George Shultz to hear a critical word about the man.

PBS ombud Michael Getler once wrote (10/23/06) that the "internal
guidelines are fairly extensive. They state, in part, that 'PBS
expects producers to adhere to the highest professional standards'
including 'real or perceived conflicts of interest.'"

If those are still the rules, how does PBS justify its decision to
give Turmoil and Triumph a national public television platform?

ACTION:
Write to PBS ombud Michael Getler and ask him to investigate the
relationship between the subject and funders of Turmoil and Triumph.

CONTACT:
PBS Ombud
Michael Getler
[email protected]
(703) 739-5290


-- 
Jim Devine
"All science would be superfluous if the form of appearance of things
directly coincided with their essence." -- KM
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