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xchrom

(108,903 posts)
Thu Jun 5, 2014, 06:18 AM Jun 2014

“Citizen Koch”: The movie about our sick democracy PBS tried to kill

http://www.salon.com/2014/06/04/citizen_koch_the_movie_about_our_sick_democracy_pbs_tried_to_kill/



“Citizen Koch” is kind of a mess. But it’s a mess well worth discovering for yourself — and consider the history of its production and the situation it tries to capture. Filmmakers Tia Lessin and Carl Deal, co-directors of the Oscar-nominated Hurricane Katrina film “Trouble the Water,” premiered an early cut of the film at Sundance in January 2013. Largely filmed in 2011 and 2012 during the Wisconsin showdown between organized labor and Gov. Scott Walker, a Tea Party darling and Republican golden boy, which ended with the failed effort to recall Walker, “Citizen Koch” conveys the feeling of trying to glean meaning from yesterday’s headlines, with mixed success. Since then, Walker’s star has been considerably tarnished, as has that of his East Coast cognate, Chris Christie, while the Koch brothers failed in their quest to elect a Republican president and the Tea Party wave has ebbed (or been absorbed into the Republican mainstream, if you prefer).

Then there’s the reason why we’re seeing “Citizen Koch” in theaters more than a year after its debut. Originally to be titled “Citizen Corp” and focused on the aftermath of the Supreme Court’s Citizens United ruling, which allowed virtually unlimited corporate spending on issue campaigns, Deal and Lessin’s movie was intended for PBS broadcast. But the independent production company ITVS, which is funded by public broadcasting money and supplies films for PBS’ “Independent Lens” series, pulled the plug on this project last year for reasons that remain murky. Or at least for reasons that those involved want to remain murky; as Jane Mayer’s New Yorker story about the whole affair suggested, if you follow the money it doesn’t look all that mysterious.

At some point, “Citizen Koch” acquired a new title to go along with its focus on the activities of right-wing energy billionaires Charles and David Koch, who bankrolled Walker and a host of other extremist anti-labor Republicans during the 2010 and 2012 election cycles. David Koch, interestingly enough, is a major donor to public television, and has given an estimated $23 million to PBS and its affiliates over the years. He’s a trustee of WGBH in Boston, and at the time of the “Citizen Koch” brouhaha also sat on the board of WNET in New York. (In fairness, Koch’s philanthropy is visible all over the place. On the day I wrote this story I walked past a New York subway ad for a performance at the David H. Koch Theater in Lincoln Center, home to the New York City Ballet.) WNET president Neal Shapiro had already gone to extraordinary lengths to placate David Koch after he was unfavorably portrayed in “Park Avenue: Money, Power and the American Dream,” a film by Oscar-winning documentarian Alex Gibney that was broadcast in 2012.

Officials at ITVS have insisted that they pulled the funding for “Citizen Koch” essentially because they didn’t like the film, and not because they got leaned on by Shapiro or the Koch brothers or anybody else. Lessin and Deal saw it differently: “This wasn’t a failed negotiation or a divergence of visions; it was censorship, pure and simple. It’s the very thing our film is about – public servants bowing to pressures, direct or indirect, from high-dollar donors.” PBS ombudsman Michael Getler looked into the whole thing and threw up his hands: Who can know anything for certain amid the informational wilderness of our society? He did admit that “what we may be dealing with here may be a form of self-censorship in which officials at ITVS, and maybe at WNET and PBS itself, become wary of the impact of another PBS-distributed film critical of a hugely wealthy and politically active trustee,” one who was reportedly contemplating “a new, very large gift” to public broadcasting. (Emphasis in the original.) He did not pause to inquire what the term “public broadcasting” means when it depends on the generosity of wealthy private individuals. Reading between the lines, it sounds as if PBS and/or WNET lost a whole bunch of money after the Gibney film, and were anxious to stop the bleeding. (But that’s really just a guess.)
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“Citizen Koch”: The movie about our sick democracy PBS tried to kill (Original Post) xchrom Jun 2014 OP
K&R ....... Hotler Jun 2014 #1
A few years back, I and some others were posting on a different board merrily Jun 2014 #2
Sad K&R. Overseas Jun 2014 #3
"Gifted" = Bribed n/t albino65 Jun 2014 #4

merrily

(45,251 posts)
2. A few years back, I and some others were posting on a different board
Thu Jun 5, 2014, 08:55 AM
Jun 2014

about how much PBS was changing during the Bushco years.

It was around the time that some members of the religious right complained about a children's show that showed two women sitting in a kitchen talking about dairy farming (gasp)--no mention of cow teats or anything remotely controversial. PBS dropped it at the first sign of complaints.

Why the complaints? In real life, the women were either spouses or domestic partners, but no mention of that was made during the show. I learned of the nature of their relationship only because the self-censorship controversy made the news. But for that, you might have thought them neighboring dairy farmers, sitting in a kitchen teaching kids about how they made a living.

http://featuresblogs.chicagotribune.com/entertainment_tv/2005/02/dont_have_a_cow.html

The pushback we got from other Democrats on that board exceeded the pushback we got from the rightist members of the board, even though we had roundly mocked the right for being unable to tolerate even the sight of two women conversing in a kitchen. However, because we had also criticized PBS for caving so quickly, accusing PBS or going right, Democrats claimed they thought they were reading posts from the right. Indeed, worse than the right.

Of course, the right would never have criticized PBS for removing from the air a show depicting two domestic partners talking about dairy farming, but facts don't matter when a sacred cow like PBS is being criticized. Neither does substance. Rather, it was straight to ad hom comments about us for daring to suggest that PBS had not behaved impeccably.

Nine years later, it's apparently finally okay for the left to criticize something that PBS did or failed to do. And, yes, I still believe that PBS changed during the Bush years.

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