News (Media Awareness Project) - US WA: Best Bet for Seeing ACLU Marijuana Video Featuring Steves? Comcast |
Title: | US WA: Best Bet for Seeing ACLU Marijuana Video Featuring Steves? Comcast |
Published On: | 2008-08-08 |
Source: | Seattle Times (WA) |
Fetched On: | 2008-08-08 20:50:35 |
BEST BET FOR SEEING ACLU MARIJUANA VIDEO FEATURING STEVES? COMCAST
The TV program is titled "Marijuana: It's Time for a Conversation,"
but it's unlikely many viewers of network stations will be talking about it.
Of the three local network stations, only one agreed to run the show,
produced by the American Civil Liberties Union and hosted by travel
writer Rick Steves.
KOMO-TV turned down the ACLU this week; KIRO-TV never got back to the
group at all. KING-TV ran the program in March -- but only at 1 in the
morning.
ACLU produced the video to engage people in a serious conversation
about whether marijuana laws are good and working well, or are
actually harming society, said Alison Holcomb, ACLU of Washington's
marijuana-education project director.
"Our frustration is that we see plenty of prime-time TV shows
depicting marijuana use in a humorous light, yet when we produce a
half-hour program designed to take a serious look at our marijuana
laws and their impact on our communities, we can't get any airtime."
Steves, the host of a panel discussion on the video, has been an
outspoken advocate of decriminalization of marijuana and will speak
Aug. 16-17 at Seattle Hempfest.
Producing the program cost more than $100,000, partly for studio time
at KOMO, where Steves moderated a panel of local and national experts
with an attentive audience nodding approval in the background.
But the heads of the TV stations, when asked to sell airtime, weren't
so receptive.
Jim Clayton, vice president and general manager at KOMO, the ABC
affiliate, refused to sell time. The show, he said, promoted marijuana
use.
"The last I checked, it's illegal," Clayton said. "We don't use our
public airways to promote illegal things."
Monday, Clayton met with ACLU Director Kathleen Taylor and others.
"They said, 'How do we generate discussion?' " Clayton recalled. "I
said, 'Get it on the ballot.'"
KIRO-TV, the CBS affiliate, did not respond to requests from the
ACLU.
At KING-TV, Pat Costello, vice president and station manager, said the
video was a "very well-done program" that was "fairly balanced" and
outlined the arguments "pretty fairly, given that it's done by a group
that has an objective."
However, the show delivered "an adult message," he said. "We don't
want to send the wrong message to kids that might be
impressionable."
Locked into network programming slots, and not wanting to run the show
during hours when children might watch, he said, left the 1 a.m. slot.
In March, the show ran 11 times on KING and its affiliate, KONG, at 1
a.m. Holcomb said KING leaders told the ACLU that they were concerned
about the business impact of running the show in an earlier slot,
particularly about reaction from advertisers.
Holcomb said the turndown by KOMO was particularly troubling, because
the ACLU had repeatedly shared the program script with KOMO officials,
telling them they planned to buy time. They were not told of any
concerns, she said.
Comcast, which runs the show on its "On Demand" service, has reported
no complaints, Holcomb said.
But there's a big difference having to actively seek out a show and
having it on a channel a viewer might stumble upon while
channel-surfing, Clayton said.
"We're a federally licensed entity. People welcome us into their homes
by flipping a switch. [The ACLU officials] said the thing is doing
really well on Comcast On Demand. Of course it would. You say, 'Oh, I
want to find out more about the marijuana I'm smoking right now.'"
The TV program is titled "Marijuana: It's Time for a Conversation,"
but it's unlikely many viewers of network stations will be talking about it.
Of the three local network stations, only one agreed to run the show,
produced by the American Civil Liberties Union and hosted by travel
writer Rick Steves.
KOMO-TV turned down the ACLU this week; KIRO-TV never got back to the
group at all. KING-TV ran the program in March -- but only at 1 in the
morning.
ACLU produced the video to engage people in a serious conversation
about whether marijuana laws are good and working well, or are
actually harming society, said Alison Holcomb, ACLU of Washington's
marijuana-education project director.
"Our frustration is that we see plenty of prime-time TV shows
depicting marijuana use in a humorous light, yet when we produce a
half-hour program designed to take a serious look at our marijuana
laws and their impact on our communities, we can't get any airtime."
Steves, the host of a panel discussion on the video, has been an
outspoken advocate of decriminalization of marijuana and will speak
Aug. 16-17 at Seattle Hempfest.
Producing the program cost more than $100,000, partly for studio time
at KOMO, where Steves moderated a panel of local and national experts
with an attentive audience nodding approval in the background.
But the heads of the TV stations, when asked to sell airtime, weren't
so receptive.
Jim Clayton, vice president and general manager at KOMO, the ABC
affiliate, refused to sell time. The show, he said, promoted marijuana
use.
"The last I checked, it's illegal," Clayton said. "We don't use our
public airways to promote illegal things."
Monday, Clayton met with ACLU Director Kathleen Taylor and others.
"They said, 'How do we generate discussion?' " Clayton recalled. "I
said, 'Get it on the ballot.'"
KIRO-TV, the CBS affiliate, did not respond to requests from the
ACLU.
At KING-TV, Pat Costello, vice president and station manager, said the
video was a "very well-done program" that was "fairly balanced" and
outlined the arguments "pretty fairly, given that it's done by a group
that has an objective."
However, the show delivered "an adult message," he said. "We don't
want to send the wrong message to kids that might be
impressionable."
Locked into network programming slots, and not wanting to run the show
during hours when children might watch, he said, left the 1 a.m. slot.
In March, the show ran 11 times on KING and its affiliate, KONG, at 1
a.m. Holcomb said KING leaders told the ACLU that they were concerned
about the business impact of running the show in an earlier slot,
particularly about reaction from advertisers.
Holcomb said the turndown by KOMO was particularly troubling, because
the ACLU had repeatedly shared the program script with KOMO officials,
telling them they planned to buy time. They were not told of any
concerns, she said.
Comcast, which runs the show on its "On Demand" service, has reported
no complaints, Holcomb said.
But there's a big difference having to actively seek out a show and
having it on a channel a viewer might stumble upon while
channel-surfing, Clayton said.
"We're a federally licensed entity. People welcome us into their homes
by flipping a switch. [The ACLU officials] said the thing is doing
really well on Comcast On Demand. Of course it would. You say, 'Oh, I
want to find out more about the marijuana I'm smoking right now.'"
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