roundtable: RE: RELISTNAMEHEREgt;TPR-NE and PBS -Reply
roundtable: RE: RE>TPR-NE and PBS -Reply
RE: RE>TPR-NE and PBS -Reply
Terry Dugas 813-598-9737 (DUGAST@mail.firn.edu)
Fri, 20 Jan 1995 02:04:21 EST
Date: Fri, 20 Jan 1995 02:04:21 EST
From: Terry Dugas 813-598-9737 <DUGAST@mail.firn.edu>
Subject: RE: RE>TPR-NE and PBS -Reply
In-Reply-To: <sf1e24a6.098@dcccd.edu>
To: "roundtable@cni.org" <roundtable@cni.org>
Message-Id: <D65ZVPA3GVSZ*/R=FIRNVX/R=A1/U=DUGAST/@MHS>
You say commercial; I say underwriting.
Exactly what a business can say on a PBS station is regulated both by
law and by FCC regulations (with the FCC being the actual arbiter.)
What separates PBS from both the commercial and cable stations is what
we cannot include:
no "qualitative or comparative language" (no "SALE, SALE, SALE!" no
"best deals in town.")
no "price information" ($29.95, today only)
no "call to action" ("buy now!")
no "inducement to buy, sell, rent or lease."
and the big difference, "an underwriting announcement may not interrupt
regular programming."
The exception is for non-profit organizations and their non-profit
activities.
I'll admit, though, that some TV and NPR stations push these to the very
limit. Others, though, have far more restrictive rules. It's that "local
thing" I've harped about.
The real problem is the amount of time PBS leaves between the end of one
show and the beginning of the next. We have anywhere between 3 and 10
minutes to fill, depending on the source of the show. So we have a far
more serious problem with "clutter" than the commercial stations.
And that's where comments like yours are most perceptive. If a PBS show
is underwritten, it might have three acknowledgments at the end. Then
the local station comes on with three on four acknowledgments of 15
seconds. Then they tack on two minutes of promos. Then three more local
underwriters. Then a couple of national underwriters for the next show.
The total time devoted to these underwriting credits is less than a 2:00
break in a syndicated show, but the impact, the "clutter," is far worse.
Now, if Congress would only increase my station's CPB appropriations by
25%, I could banish all local underwriters from my air!
I won't hold my breath for the extra revenue :-)
Terry Dugas
WSFP-TV
Ft. Myers/Naples, FL
<DUGAST@mail.firn.edu>
"We don't need no budget recession/
We don't need no thought control/
No dark sarcasm with our funding/
Congress, leave CPB alone...
HEY, CONGRESS, leave CPB alone."
- P-Head Floyd