The public be bland.

AuthorKnoll, Erwin
PositionPublic radio and TV political timidity - Editorial

A radio listener in Slinger, Wisconsin, wrote to his public radio station, WUWM in Milwaukee, suggesting that it air Insight, my brief (two-and-a-half-minute) daily commentary on the news. Since January of this year, The Progressive has been distributing Insight--free--by satellite transmission or cassette to listener-supported, community, and public radio stations in the United States and Canada. At latest count, some thirty-eight stations were putting Insight on the air. (See inside back cover.)

Dave Edwards, the director of WUWM, replied as follows to the listener in Slinger:

"WUWM broadcasts both liberal and conservative viewpoints in the programming we present from National Public Radio. Although Mr. Knoll is well respected, I do not believe that we would want to stray from the balance that we receive from NPR."

Thanks, Dave, but I'd rather be heard than "well respected." And as a public-radio listener, I'd rather hear broadcasting that strays from the bland fare you call "balance."

For about a year in the early 1980s, I delivered a weekly commentary--much like today's Insight--on NPR's afternoon All Things Considered. In those distant days, I wasn't the only leftist whose views received a regular airing on NPR--and we were "balanced" by right-wing commentators. But NPR has shifted decidedly to the right since then; the conservative pundits are still there, but the leftists are gone. My friend Daniel Schorr, who rarely strays from the center, is about as far left as NPR gets these days.

The result is not only a lack of "balance" but an absence of lively publicaffairs discourse on NPR. I'm not talking about Insight alone, which is aired by only five NPR-affiliated stations. Laura Flanders produces a stimulating mediacriticism program called CounterSpin for Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR), and David Barsamian of Boulder, Colorado, is a source of constant highquality radio broadcasting that challenges conventional political wisdom. But while such programs find listeners on community and listener-sponsored stations (as Insight does), they are virtually frozen out by NPR affiliates (as Insight is).

The public loses.

The situation in public television is no better, and may even be worse. A medium that was specifically mandated to "provide a voice for groups in the community that would otherwise go unheard" has become, instead, just another outlet for the views of corporate underwriters.

On...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT