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Media
Activist Says A Major Media Scandal Lurks Behind The Recent McCain-FCC
Campaign-Finance Revelations
(Feb.
3, 2000)
Reported by Danny Schechter for Mediachannel.
Jerry
Starr The January 6, 2000 New York Times devoted the center of
its front page to Stephen Labaton's two-column report on Senator
John McCain's aggressive involvement in an issue before the U.S.
Federal Communications Commission that would benefit one of his
financial backers, Lowell Paxson. Paxson is chairman and controlling
owner of Paxson Communications, which has the largest group of
broadcast television stations in the United States. Republican
presidential candidate McCain heads the Senate Commerce Committee,
which oversees the FCC.
The
Times article and an earlier report by Walter Robinson in The
Boston Globe are getting lots of other media pickup because they
reveal that McCain, a loud advocate of campaign finance reform,
is willing to do the bidding of his own deep-pocketed contributors.
"The
McCain angle is getting all the attention," says Jerry Starr,
a professor of sociology at West Virginia University and director
of the newly-formed Citizens for Independent Public Broadcasting.
Starr is a long-time public interest advocate who has been dealing
with this story during a many-year-long public broadcasting battle
in his hometown of Pittsburgh. As he puts it, "There is a
media scandal here that is at least as important as the political
scandal."
In
an interview with Media Channel, Starr expressed fears that, by
concentrating on one well-known personality, the media is missing
the real guts of the story: a classic conflict between the public
interest and commercial interests. "What the story is about,"
he told us, "is the extent to which big money controls media
and the extent to which the media are regarded as property, rather
than as a resource to serve the public. It is about the difficulty
community groups face representing the public interest in the
political process due to the corruption of big money. And finally,
it's about the need to reform the governance of public broadcasting."
These
issues have been buried in the stories about McCain, in part because
they are complicated and appear to only deal with a local situation.
The core of the story is a swap-and-sale deal in which Pittsburgh
public broadcaster WQED would trade affiliated station WQEX (Channel
16) to Cornerstone TeleVision, a religious broadcaster that operates
Channel 40, a commercially licensed station. WQED could then turn
around and sell its new acquisition to Paxson Communications (32%
owned by NBC) for $35 million. The complicated plan was developed
after the 1996 FCC ruling that WQEX could not be "dereserved"commercializedand
thus sold to a commercial broadcaster.
PAX
TV, Paxson's broadcast network, is an ideologically conservative
network that currently owns another previously noncommercial station,
New York's Channel 31, formerly WNYC. Both WNYC and WQEX had been
known for community-oriented shows, independent journalism, and
locally-produced programming. [Full disclosure: these public television
stations carried Globalvision's award-winning series, "South
Africa Now" and "Rights & Wrongs."]
For
years, Jerry Starr has fought for more public involvement in public
television at the local level. He ran the QED Accountability Project,
also known as the Save Pittsburgh Public Television Campaign,
a coalition of activists, community groups and trade unionists.
That campaign presented the FCC with up to 40,000 letters and
petition signatures, and declarations and resolutions from labor
and public-interest groups representing hundreds of thousands
more, all voicing opposition to the deal. The coalition argued
that the plan would deprive the community of a public station
known for alternative programming and give more power to right-wing
broadcasters.
But
George Miles, a veteran public television executive and the CEO
of WQED, sees this story very differently. "I don't believe
there is a story here," he told Media Channel, "a lot
of congressmen urged the FCC to act, but they have sat on this
for two and a half years. McCain didn't do anything wrong. I couldn't
plan for two and half years. I couldn't hold on to people because
of the uncertainty. The real story is the bureaucracy in Washington
that sat on this decision and did nothing about it. You can't
run a station or a business under those conditions."
In
order to sell off its station, Pittsburgh's PBS outlet needed
FCC approval. Its petitions have been under consideration for
years because of complex issues, including the suitability of
an evangelical station as an educational broadcaster. McCain wrote
to the commission, urging them to expedite their decision on the
matter. The chairman of the FCC, William Kennard, called McCain's
personal involvement in the regulatory matter "highly unusual,"
even before it was known that the Senator took money from Paxson
executives and lobbyists, as well as rides on the Paxson corporate
jet. According to Starr, a senior journalist who monitors the
FCC said it was the most aggressive outside intervention he had
ever seen. Paxson told The New York Times, "I'm a political
person. Why? Because I happen to be in a business that politics
is very heavily involved in."
Another
controversy within the controversy is the role of FCC Commissioner
Susan Ness, just re-appointed to the Federal Commission by President
Clinton but not yet confirmed by Senator McCain's committee. Ness,
a Democrat, sided with Republicans to approve the swap and sale.
"Did she do it for political reasons, to curry favor with
McCain, we don't know," says Starr. Ness and the commission
have been the target of intensive lobbying by the firm retained
by WQED and Paxson, Washington lobbyists Patton Boggs. Commissioner
Ness has denied any improprieties, claiming that her decision
was made entirely on legal grounds.
A
number of commentators have suggested that WQED's decision to
sell WQEX was prompted by a financial scandal and mounting $14
million debt at the station going back into the early '90s. Some
of the details of that scandal, involving accusations of a top-heavy
management structure with high executive salaries, cushy perks
including luxury cars and foreign trips, shady accounting practices,
and allegations of embezzlement, were reported by The Wall Street
Journal.
"But
even [the Journal] didn't tell the whole story, " says Starr.
While the local Pittsburgh press did cover the story, they did
no investigative reporting on it at all, according to Starr. Late
last month the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette carried an editorial attack
on Starr alleging that his charges about McCain and other broadcasting
concerns were exaggerated. The paper did print a long letter from
him challenging what he called their distorted and unsubstantiated
charges.
On
January 7th, The Wall Street Journal devoted its lead editorial
to "The 'McCain Scandal'" arguing that "the real
scandal is that Uncle Sam is spending billions of dollars to give
un-elected bureaucrats power." It blasted Jerry Starr, implying
that he was trying to shake down the system politically in order
to win "the potentially lucrative" station license for
himself and his political cronies. This was a reference to one
tactic in the campaign to save WQEX, by mounting a bid for a community
board to take over the noncommercial station. That effort failed.
The Journal editorial did not reference any of the paper's own
earlier investigative reports on internal PBS problems in Pittsburgh
(perhaps because of the well-known gulf at the paper between its
ultra-conservative editorial page and the news sections). Starr
was shocked by the Journal editorial, pointing to many errors
and characterizing it as a "pack of lies." "They
never called me," he told us.
When
you look deeply at this conflict, says Starr, you will find the
involvement of many high-powered members of the Pittsburgh elite
who are, in turn, connected to many local and national corporations.
He charges that they used the public station for years as a private
playground. He shared with us a detailed history of self-serving
behavior by public broadcasting executives, which he says received
little critical coverage by the press. His own detailed account
of the community campaign and corruption in public broadcasting
will appear in his new book, "Air Wars: The Fight to Reclaim
Public Broadcasting," available this spring from Beacon Press.
This
story is likely to continue to generate attention because of Senator
McCain's prominence and the attention given to presidential politics.
Perhaps because of the controversy, Lowell Paxson just canceled
his upcoming fundraiser in Miami to benefit McCain.
But
will the media scratch deeper to examine the background role of
media companies themselves? Will the implications of the PBS angle
surface or be explained? Stay tuned.
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