Tag CBS

“Harvest Of Shame”

This is wonderful: CBS has made the landmark 1960 CBS Reports documentary “Harvest Of Shame” available for viewing on YouTube. (they’ve disabled embedding or you can bet your ass I would have embedded it here)

“Harvest Of Shame” was produced and reported by Edward R. Murrow along with his usual co-producer Fred Friendly and field producer David Lowe. The plight of the American migrant farm worker was far from the minds of the public in the late 1950s and early 1960s, and the documentary was seen as groundbreaking. It would be one of the last big achievements of Murrow and Friendly at CBS; their “See It Now” show had been supplanted by the more occasional “CBS Reports”, and Murrow would leave CBS after the election of John Kennedy to head up the USIA. Now, more than 50 years after its original airing, perhaps the most remarkable thing about it is that so little has changed for the people who work bringing agricultural products to the American marketplace.

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Oh, Rochester, Start The Maxwell!

We’ve got Jack Benny on the brain, mostly thanks to Mark Evanier, who has had a spate of posts about the great comedian.

Evanier has had several posts lately about trying to discern whether or not Benny made a small cameo in the classic movie “Casablanca”. This latest one looks like he might have been successful. If you look at the large version of the image, which shows the full length of the man walking behind Sam the piano player, his gait is very much like Benny’s. So much so that Jack Benny’s daughter has said that she believes it is him.

Now, this morning, Cory Doctorow has a post at Boing Boing about how CBS is blocking the release of some long-lost episodes of the Jack Benny Show from the 1950s and early 1960s. The copyright has long expired on these episodes, so they actually belong to the public domain, but CBS doesn’t want the hassle and expense of releasing them, despite impassioned pleas from Benny fan groups and the official sanction of the Benny estate. Here’s a link to the source article for the Boing Boing story, which explains many of the details and the efforts to convince CBS to release the films. This being the 21st Century and all, you can rest assured that there is a Facebook group you can join to show your support.

Dick Cavett, who occasionally blogs in the New York Times, had a recent remembrance of Jack Benny, too. In typical Cavett fashion, the story is really about himself, but told in that charmingly droll and self-effacing way that Cavett has. He is mostly skewering Tiger Woods and remarking on the price of being a public figure, and Jack Benny appears at the end to set up a hilarious punch line. Anyone who has ever read much about Benny and knows about his real personality (as opposed to the elaborate stage persona of the cheap guy) will instantly recognize the absolute truth and genuine humor of the story.

And back again to a link from Mark Evanier: a YouTube clip of Jack Benny and Mel Blanc performing the famous and hilarious “Si, Sy, Sue” sketch on an episode of the TV series. Blanc played dozens of incidental characters on the radio version of the show, and despite being a bit more limited due to his recognizable physical appearance carried a number of them over to television. THIS, my friends, is COMEDY:

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Follow-Ups

A few links related to some previous posts:

  • This Ars Technica story from last week sums up what should be pretty obvious to anyone who has followed the OLPC story — they’ve screwed the pooch. Last week it was announced that the XO laptop will use Windows XP as its OS instead of the custom-designed “Sugar” OS, but between the hardware problems and the difficulties OLPC has had trying to sell the laptops to governments, plus the defection of many key execs, Ars Technica is ready to pronounce the whole program a failure. They had more luck selling the laptops to leftie bo-bos than anyone who actually NEEDED them. Nicholas Negroponte soldiers on, but it doesn’t look good for the program.
  • I linked to Psiplex’s blog the other day and this post about the hard realities of cancer treatment. He followed up with this post about the encounters that he has had with health care professionals, almost all of which he says were extremely positive. That’s an encouraging message for anyone who might have to face extensive medical treatment. I know from my experience a few years ago that it can be a mixed bag and that the ones he calls “All-Business-Plus” really do make a huge difference.
  • In this post a couple of weeks ago, I mentioned that the union for radio and TV performers, AFTRA, was sitting down with the producers’ representatives, the AMPTP, to discuss contract terms. AMPTP walked out of earlier talks with the Screen Actors’ Guild, but industry experts believed that AMPTP would force AFTRA to take a bum deal, which would in turn bring SAG back to the table for a similar deal and avert an actors’ strike this summer. The AFTRA folks say that talks are not going especially well, and that negotiations could get long and difficult. Still no threat of a strike, but the contracts do expire June 6.
  • The Katie Couric Death Watch has not stopped for a moment. The CBS Evening News’ ratings have dropped to their lowest point in the entire 45-year history of the broadcast, and substitute anchor Bob Schieffer has signed a new long-term contract with CBS, postponing his previously-announced retirement. This New Yorker article by TV critic Nancy Franklin considers what went so horribly wrong at Black Rock.
  • Like a jillion other bloggers on the planet, I could hardly wait to post about the substitute teacher who was fired for “practicing wizardry” in Florida. Apparently some people who read the story decided to take it on themselves to call and harass members of the local school board as a result. Meanwhile, the superintendent released more details about the incident that revealed several other complaints about the substitute that he says led to the man’s dismissal AND the local TV station that broke the story admitted to playing up the “wizardry” angle as a hook for the story. And who started all of this? The substitute teacher himself, who called the TV station and offered his distorted version of events. This whole story offers a scary look at the reach of bloggers and how a badly-reported story can get out of hand quickly. There’s plenty of blame to spread around here, but everyone who overinflated this story, myself included, needs to own up to a little of it.
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Wires And Lights

This year marks the 50th anniversary of a speech given by Edward R. Murrow to the Radio and Television News Directors’ Association (RTNDA). Murrow’s speech is sometimes called the “Wires and Lights” speech but is generally simply known as “the RTNDA speech”. Already in a precarious position with CBS for having caused so much controversy with his broadcasts about Joseph McCarthy the year before, Murrow did not hesitate in the slightest to generate entirely new waves of controversy with his remarks. Murrow openly chastised his fellow television reporters and editors for neglecting their role as watchdog of the halls of power at a very troubled time, and upbraided the entire television industry for its unwillingness to deliver the hard messages of truth in favor of insipid entertainment. His words have echoed for half a century but are as true or truer now than that day:

Our history will be what we make it. And if there are any historians about fifty or a hundred years from now, and there should be preserved the kinescopes for one week of all three networks, they will there find recorded in black and white, or color, evidence of decadence, escapism and insulation from the realities of the world in which we live. I invite your attention to the television schedules of all networks between the hours of 8 and 11 p.m., Eastern Time. Here you will find only fleeting and spasmodic reference to the fact that this nation is in mortal danger. There are, it is true, occasional informative programs presented in that intellectual ghetto on Sunday afternoons. But during the daily peak viewing periods, television in the main insulates us from the realities of the world in which we live. If this state of affairs continues, we may alter an advertising slogan to read: LOOK NOW, PAY LATER.

It may be that the present system, with no modifications and no experiments, can survive. Perhaps the money-making machine has some kind of built-in perpetual motion, but I do not think so. To a very considerable extent the media of mass communications in a given country reflect the political, economic and social climate in which they flourish. That is the reason ours differ from the British and French, or the Russian and Chinese. We are currently wealthy, fat, comfortable and complacent. We have currently a built-in allergy to unpleasant or disturbing information. Our mass media reflect this. But unless we get up off our fat surpluses and recognize that television in the main is being used to distract, delude, amuse and insulate us, then television and those who finance it, those who look at it and those who work at it, may see a totally different picture too late.

Murrow, like so many other critics of television then and now, had a somewhat idealistic view of what television should be — a source of genuine information and serious debate. In his mind there was indeed room for entertainment, but not at the expense of mature, informed, realistic discourse. He felt obligated, he said, to make his concerns about the seductive and sensational side of television known because he felt there would come a time when the public’s ability to engage in an open an intelligent forum about the issues that would face them might be totally corroded by the meaninglessness of constant entertainment. Television, he concluded, would be little more than “wires and lights in a box”.

Keith Olbermann’s regular homages to Murrow notwithstanding, Murrow’s Cassandra-like words came true a hundred times over. I’m sure his body is spinning in the grave so fast that it makes an audible hum that can be heard clear into outer space. This week just happens to be the annual RTNDA meeting, held in conjunction with the convention for the National Association of Broadcasters and the Broadcast Education Association (the academic organization affiliated with the NAB). TVNewser reports that after the big Correspondents’ Dinner last night, which featured Dick Cheney as the keynote speaker, there was a panel discussion to commemorate Murrow’s speech and to consider whether or not broadcast journalism still has a vital role. According to TVNewser, the panel went to great pains not to focus on the current state of broadcast journalism — a wise decision to be sure, since if they had I have little doubt the Ghost Of Murrow himself would have haunted the hall and melted the plastic-perfect faces off of every anchormonster and blowdried reporterchick in the room.

While Murrow would have given an arm and a leg for the sheer volume of news coverage that presently fills the endless hours of cable channels, local news blocks, and broadcast network news programming, he could be nothing short of appalled at the self-referential echo chamber that it has devolved into. Countless hours wasted arguing about flag lapel pins, the “War On Christmas”, “elitism”, haircuts, cleavage, recipes, and dozens of other utter inanities. Last night a “debate” that seemed to consist only of Charlie Gibson insulting the intelligence of Barack Obama AND Hillary Clinton with questions about being a “regular person”. An entire cable news network that exists only as a mouthpiece for one political party and makes no bones about their distortions, lies or slants. Local news that consists of rehashed corporate PR videos, fear-mongering features, and overblown animated graphics. And, most of all, a slavish devotion on the part of each and every person to maintaining the fabricated idea that Everything Is Perfect As Long As We Keep Shopping.

Murrow brilliantly reused the words of William Shakespeare to hit home the idea that it was our own complacency that created a monster like Joseph McCarthy: “The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars, but in ourselves.” To this I would add a few lines from Macbeth:

Life’s but a walking shadow; a poor player,
That struts and frets his hour upon the stage,
And then is heard no more: it is a tale
Told by an idiot, full of sound and fury,
Signifying nothing.

Murrow’s own true legacy is half a century of prophecy I am sure he would have wished would never come to pass.

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And That’s The Way It Is

Yesterday, the Wall Street Journal broke a story that CBS and Katie Couric have started talking about the possibility that she would give up the anchor spot on the CBS Evening News after the 2008 elections. It’s not the first time this story has made the rounds, but this morning the story was being picked up by other media outlets and appears to have the stink of credibility to it.

The TV news industry blog TVNewser has been chiming in with insider dirt and industry speculation since the story broke yesterday. This post considers who the likely contenders are to take the anchor seat and gives the inside edge to Harry Smith, with Bob Schieffer as a possible dark-horse. This post considers the timing of the story in the wake of last week’s big round of layoffs at CBS O&O stations, many of which saw long-time anchors and other celebrity on-air talent get the axe (here in Boston, for example, WBZ fired sportscaster Bob Lobel, entertainment reported Joyce Kulhawic, and anchor Scott Wahle, all veterans). And this post talks about what might happen for Couric if she steps down — it’s practically a given that she would be made a regular on 60 Minutes, but there’s talk she could jump to CNN and replace Larry King.

CBS News is having a bad couple of weeks. Earlier in the week it was revealed that CBS was considering outsourcing some of its newsgathering operation to CNN, though they later very publicly backed away from that. Paying a mega-star anchor bajillions to host a dud newscast is very hard to justify when you’re firing staff and trying to outsource your basic news operation. Given the now-very-public discussions, it wouldn’t surprise me to see her bail even earlier than November from the nightly news, do 60 Minutes for a short face-saving amount of time, then leave CBS entirely.

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