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Good Job: WCBU, WOAM

In tribute to the great job Jonathan Ahl does on his WCBU program “Outside the Horseshoe,” the city council defeated a motion to move the council meeting start time back 15 minutes to 6:00.  That move would have caused the cancellation of Ahl’s much-liked interview program that airs every Tuesday night at 6:00 when there’s a council meeting.  What a compliment to local radio that the city council recognized the value of this program to the community.
 
Also, I listened to the Midwest League All-Star game tonight on WOAM.  In addition to the usual play-by-play, they also included interviews with Pete Vonachen and the president of the Midwest League, among others.  Way to add value to the program!  WOAM also broadcasts all the regular-season Chiefs games and other local sports games.  Just another example of good local broadcasts.

Don’t cut funding for public broadcasting

What hath man wrought–and how will man use his inventions? The law that I will sign shortly offers one answer to that question. It announces to the world that our Nation wants more than just material wealth; our Nation wants more than a “chicken in every pot.” We in America have an appetite for excellence, too. While we work every day to produce new goods and to create new wealth, we want most of all to enrich man’s spirit. That is the purpose of this act.
 
— President Lyndon B. Johnson, upon signing the Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 (11/7/67)
Republicans have put funding for public television on the chopping block, wanting to cut it by 25% this year, and eventually do away with it completely.  The reasoning given by the committee recommending the cuts was “something’s got to give.”  In other words, the budget has to be cut somewhere, and public broadcasting is one of the less-necessary expenditures. 
 
And that would mean something if they were submitting a balanced budget.  But they’re not, and one has to wonder if all the other deficit spending is really more important than public broadcasting ($3.1 billion for a mission to Mars, for instance?).
 
I know there are those that think public radio and television are politically liberal.  And they’re probably right.  But public radio and television is more than just news programming.  Most of WCBU’s day is spent playing classical music; WGLT plays jazz.  There are also entertaining shows like A Prairie Home Companion, Car Talk, and locally there’s Outside the Horseshoe and the weekly broadcast of the city council meetings.  WTVP offers concerts, plays, musical theater, ballet, opera, British entertainment and news programming, documentaries, local sports (Lady Braves), and other local programming such as Illinois Adventure and documentaries on Grandview Drive and Peoria in general.  And all these programs are commercial-free.
 
There’s another thing that public TV offers that’s becoming an endangered species on television:  children’s educational programming.  Kids programming on network television is dwindling, and none of it is what one would call educational.  Meanwhile, PBS regularly offers entertaining and educational children’s programming, like Sesame Street, just as it has for the past 35 years. 
 
And that’s why I find it odd that Republicans are anti-public-broadcasting.  I would think that conservatives worried about the dearth of family-friendly programming would be the first in line to support quality programming on radio and television.  Why sacrifice all the good of public broadcasting just because a few political programs tilt to the left?  I’m a moderate Republican and I wake up to NPR news every morning.  While I have heard some biased reporting (it’s inevitable, in my opinion, regardless of whether you’re a conservative or liberal reporter), by far most of the news reports are well-balanced, and opinion pieces are clearly identified as such.
 
Public broadcasting should be preserved and it should be funded.  President Johnson’s argument is still persuasive:  how will we use our inventions?  We already know what television looks like in the “free market,” and that has its place.  But our nation “wants more than just material wealth”; we want “most of all to enrich man’s spirit.”  It’s a noble and worthy goal.  And that’s just what the arts, educational, and entertainment on public broadcasting provides — and, I might add, provides to everyone on over-the-air broadcast stations.
 
I encourage everyone to call or write their representatives and ask them to keep funding public broadcasting:
 
Sen. Richard Durbin (D-IL) 1-202-224-2152
Sen. Barack Obama (D-IL) 1-202-224-2854
Rep. Ray LaHood (R-18th) 1-202-225-6201
Rep. Lane Evans (D-17th) 1-202-225-5905
Rep. Tim Johnson (R-15th) 1-202-225-2371
Rep. Jerry Weller (R-11th) 1-202-225-3635
 

Why not put MWL All-Stars on TV?

Tonight is the Midwest League All-Star Game, which is in Peoria for the first time since 1992. It starts with a home-run derby at 6 p.m., followed by the first pitch at 7 p.m. Here’s the roster for tonight’s game.

When the Chiefs played their first game at the new O’Brien Field, it was broadcast on WEEK-TV. It was a very exciting event — they even had Cardinals pitcher Steve Kline pitching that night as part of his rehab. Channel 25 did a good job of covering it — the camera work was professional, the play-by-play was entertaining, and it was just like watching a big-league game.

I can understand why regular-season minor league games wouldn’t be the most exciting television on a regular basis, so I can see why they haven’t broadcast any since O’Brien Field opened. But why not televise the all-star game? WEEK shows regular-season Bradley Basketball games every year, and WTVP broadcasts some of the Lady Braves games. It seems like the MWL All-Star game would be a natural for local sports broadcasting, with all the minor league stars destined for the big leagues right here in Peoria.

Instead, all we’ll see of them on TV will be coverage on the local news tonight, which will probably be about the same length segment as they devote to White Sox highlights. That’s too bad.

Just out of curiosity, I looked up what was on TV tonight that would have been preempted if they showed the All-Star game:

WEEK: “A Katie Couric Special” on Jennifer Wilbanks, the ditz who faked her own abduction (big loss to preempt that); “I Want to Be a Hilton” (Premiere: “Kathy Hilton works with 14 young contestants, who compete for the chance to live a champagne-and-caviar lifestyle for a year”), “Law & Order: SVU” (repeat)

WTVP: “Nova” (repeat), “The Harlem Globetrotters: the Team that Changed the World” (repeat), and “Frontline” (which is new, but will be rebroadcast on the 23rd and 26th)

WMBD: “AFI’s 100 Years… 100 Movie Quotes” hosted by Pierce Brosnan

WHOI: “My Wife and Kids” (repeat); NBA Basketball (okay, that one’s gotta stay)

WYZZ: “Trading Spouses” (repeat); “House” (repeat); News; “M*A*S*H” (repeat, obviously)

WAOE: “All of Us” (repeat); “Half & Half” (repeat); “Girlfriends” (repeat); “The Bad Girls’ Guide” (new); “Becker” (two repeats)


Based on these lineups, I think there are several stations which could have preempted (or time-shifted, in a couple cases) their programming to broadcast the All-Star Game.

Jeff Melbourne recently alerted us that Peoria’s TV station’s FCC licenses are up for renewal at the end of the year. The FCC has established a Localism Task Force to “promote localism in radio and television broadcasting.” I’ve already acknowledged that a couple of our local stations have shown a commitment to local sports by showing Braves games, and of course WTVP does the most local programming of anyone, so I want to be careful to give credit where credit’s due. But I think showing repeats of network shows instead of tonight’s baseball game is a big missed opportunity for more local broadcasting here in Peoria.

My grandfather, the prophet

I was at my parents’ house recently, going through some of my grandfather’s memorobilia, and I came across some letters that he had written back in 1928-1929. He worked for the Journal Star (in one of its incarnations) most of his life, starting as a paperboy in the early 1920s and retiring in 1974 as their National Advertising Manager.

But when he was 19 years old, he took a job at Columbia Records in Seattle, Washington. During the year he worked there, he wrote home to his folks, and they kept his letters. One particularly interesting passage was this one, from a letter he wrote April 14, 1929, a little over a month before his 20th birthday:

I’m glad you got to see the show, Mother. Take Dad to one of the all-talkings sometime. I think he’ll like it. They are just like vaudeville. Mr. Kilgore is just like Dad. He doesn’t care for moving pictures. I’ll bet within ten years there won’t be any vaudeville shows. They will all be talking pictures. Even the big shows in Seattle are doing away with vaudeville.

And how right he was! I get a kick out of his prescience every time I read it. It’s also interesting to me that even though technologies change, people’s reactions remain the same. His dad was reluctant to embrace the new “talking pictures” technology. I remember hearing this same reluctance from some people when computers replaced typewriters and CDs replaced vinyl records. Pretty soon it will be iPods and egocasting replacing radio and IP-VOD replacing cable TV.

And somewhere, some 20-year-old will probably write an e-mail or instant message to his mom saying, “tell Dad to try these new IP-VOD movies — I bet within ten years there won’t be any cable TV….” But his grandkids will never read his wise words, because the technology on which it was written will be obsolete by then.

Wanna make big money? Make a G-rated film

I always heard that the reason there weren’t more family-friendly movies out there was because sex and violence sell and mamby-pamby G-rated flicks are big money losers.

But now there’s a new report out by the Dove Foundation called Profitability Study of MPAA-Rated Movies, and their findings are fascinating. I encourage you to click the link and check out the whole report (it’s only 12 pages), but here’s the bottom line:

While the movie industry produced nearly 12 times more R-rated films than G-rated from 1989 – 2003 (1,533 and 123 respectively), the average G-rated film produced 11 times greater profit than its R-rated counterpart ($78,982,000 and $6,939,000 respectively).

G-rated films also produced an average rate of return on investment (ROI) three times greater than R-rated films (94.5% vs. 28.7%).

Between 2000 and 2003, Hollywood produced nearly four times as many PG-13 films as PG (75 vs. 21). During that same time, the average PG film produced $33 million greater profit than a PG-13 film ($78.8 million vs. $45.6 million).

G-rated films were identified overall as most lucrative in all of the following categories:

-Net profit per film
-Theatrical box office per film
-Video revenue per film
-Rate of return per film

Films with a PG rating consistently report higher profits and rates of return than PG-13 and R-rated films.

So, it appears the conventional wisdom is off-target. If it’s all about the money, the theaters should be flooded with G- and PG-rated fare. So one wonders, why aren’t there more family-friendly movies?

The Day After

Hi everyone — sorry I haven’t been around lately. I just peeked out of my bomb shelter today after being holed up since last night’s council meeting. You can understand why. Listening to Chuck Grayeb talk about what would happen if the city didn’t buy the water company had me scared nearly to death. I was expecting the evil German IAWC troops to be at my door any minute, forcing filthy water down my family’s throats and robbing us of all our worldly possessions while the ICC looked on with approval. When the due diligence measure went down to defeat, I knew I had to act fast. I got all the bottled water I could find (Evian, bottled in France, ironically) and headed into the bunker. Surely, I thought, Armageddon was soon to start.

Imagine my surprise when I found out the sun still came out today! And, I’ll be darned if I didn’t hear birds singing. I looked out the window and there were even children playing! We were still able to wash our dishes and do our laundry just like always. Things didn’t seem to change at all, actually. How did this happen?

Okay, enough snide comments. I’m not celebrating much because I know it’s all coming up again (like a bad lunch) in a few short years. Water-buyout advocates won’t let this little setback stop them. Start preparing now for Water Buyout ’07.

Oil Dependence

There’s a series of articles in the Journal Star this week focusing on gas and oil prices. Yesterday’s was pretty good. It talked about the reasons oil prices are going up: increased demand due to China’s industrialization and America’s insatiable consumption, plus the lack of new oil drilling or other measures that could increase supply. It even explained “peak oil.”

One thing it failed to mention about consumption, however, is how city planning contributes to Americans’ need to drive everywhere. As I mentioned in a previous post, Peoria has grown from just over 13 square miles to about 44 square miles in the past fifty years, with very little population growth. If you look at how that new area is organized, you’ll find that it’s split up by type of zoning. For the most part, residential houses are grouped together, office parks are grouped together, and retail is set off by itself, with roads connecting all these pockets.

If you want to get anywhere, you have to drive. If you want to go to the store, it’s a five- to ten-minute drive. Doctor’s office — same thing. Heck, if you’re already at the Shoppes at Grand Prairie — let’s say you’re eating at Famous Dave’s — and you want to see a movie at Rave, you have to get in your car and drive across the parking lot!

If kids want to spend some of their allowance, can they just hop on their bikes and go to the mall? Not without taking their lives in their hands. Nope, Mom or Dad has to drive them. If elderly people who can’t drive anymore, but can walk just fine want to go out to a movie or something, can they get there without someone driving them? No.

Our city is not unique. Sprawl is the rule in America. And it’s a big reason why there’s so much consumption of gasoline. If cities were denser, with more mixed use, we could cut down on a lot of consumption. It’s not something that can be accomplished overnight, but there are steps that can be taken.

In Peoria, the Duany “Heart of Peoria” plan is an excellent example of what can be done to make city life less dependent on automobiles — or at least less dependent on long car rides to basic services like groceries.

Community Values: Prelude to PAC?

The community values recently adopted by the City Council is “modeled after an initiative in Fresno, Calif.,” according to the Journal Star. So I did some searching on the Internet to see if I could find out more about the Fresno initiative. There, the group who put together the values is called Fresno Citizens for Good Government (FCGG), and their values are strikingly similar to the ones adopted by Peoria. I guess we have a lot in common with Fresno. For instance, we both believe in the “art of the possible thinking” (*eyes roll*).

The FCGG’s missions statement is “to provide a powerful, non-partisan voice for citizens who wish to encourage our elected officials to exercise community stewardship in pursuit of solutions that are in the best interests of the totality of our community.” One of the ways they carry out their mission is through a political action committee called C-PAC. C-PAC endorses candidates for public office (council, school board, etc.) who adhere to the community values and raises funds to financially support such candidates. It appears that average Joes and the major newspaper in Fresno have bought into the community values enough that FCGG can bring political pressure to bear on candidates through these efforts; that is, being blackballed by the FCGG heaps a heavy load of negative publicity on your candidacy.

So, considering Peoria’s initiative is modeled on Fresno’s, is a similar PAC in our future from the Peoria Coalition of Concerned Citizens? And how will that affect Peoria politics? Is the adoption of seemingly innocuous community values a veiled and measured attempt to gain political power over time?

P.O. Polly

PollyPeoria is really ticked off at the pending appointment of George Jacob to the council’s vacant at-large seat.  Even though her rhetoric is heated, she makes some good points.  Jacob wouldn’t have even been eligible had a law not been repealed that prohibited liquor license holders from serving on city councils or county boards.  And the person apparently responsible for getting that legislation through is Rep. Leitch, who was the recipient of some campaign contributions from Jacob’s company, Brewers Distributing.  And, as soon as Blago signed the bill, Jacob was chosen in a straw vote in a closed session of the council.
 
It certainly has the appearance of impropriety.  Like they say, if it looks like a duck and quacks like a duck…. 
 
On the other hand, maybe this guy really is the best-qualified candidate, in which case one could see why our local officials would want to do whatever they could to take any unnecessary roadblocks out of the way for him.  I really don’t know the guy, so I’m inclined to withhold judgement until I see how he votes and how ethical his tenure is.  I personally would have preferred to see Pat Sullivan on the council — he was even willing to divest himself of his liquor license so all the Springfield finegling would have been unnecessary.
 
Note:  The Peoria Pundit has posted an interesting interview with Jacob.

Peoria’s cable TV franchise renewal is coming up — how is Insight doing?

I noticed that one of the items on the agenda for tomorrow night’s council meeting is a request to hire an attorney to negotiate a new cable franchise agreement. I learned from CableFAX’s Cable World website how Insight is positioning itself for the renewal process:

Insight presents its customer service improvements–as well as details of its rebuilt cable plant and new service–as proof to city officials that it is living up to the commitments in its franchise agreement, which is coming up for renewal in 2006. Randy Ray, the Peoria city attorney who handles the franchise renewal negotiations, says it’s too early to tell if there are any demands the city might have. He is looking for more input from the community in city council meetings leading up to the negotiations. He expects the franchise term will be shorter than the 20-year agreement that expires at the end of this year. “This is the city’s first opportunity to even really look at this,” Ray says.
Relations between Insight and the city of Peoria are “relatively trouble free,” he says. “I hesitate to comment on plant or any other infrastructure issues because…we haven’t really addressed them yet. But I know when I go home and turn my TV on, I have cable.”
Kim Sheetz, Insight’s Peoria district community and public affairs manager, is gearing up for several other franchise renewal meetings this year in communities outside of Peoria proper. She’s not expecting to field angry demands at any of the meetings.
“With all the advanced services, they are pretty willing to agree to new franchises,” Sheetz says.


Specifically, Peoria’s franchise agreement with Insight expires April 15, 2006. The article doesn’t say how short Ray would like the new franchise agreement to be, but Galesburg’s most recent franchise renewal with Insight in May 2002 was for only five years. One fee in particular the city would like to avoid is mentioned in the request for council action: The city currently pays $32,000 per year to broadcast the city council meetings on Insight’s public access channel. In the new franchise agreement, the city wants to eliminate that fee.

I wonder what else could be included in the franchise agreement that would benefit Peoria.

Back in February of this year, the FCC rejected proposals that would have required cable companies to provide (a) enough space for broadcast stations’ analog and digital channels during the transition to digital television (“dual must-carry”), and (b) enough space for multiple signals from each broadcaster (“multi-cast must-carry”). Could or should the new franchise agreement in Peoria require dual or multi-cast must-carry provisions?

What about television decency? Could or should there be a provision in the new franchise agreement that the cable company provide a family-friendly package lineup for basic cable subscribers?

One of the provisions in the city’s municipal code calls for public, educational, and governmental access channels, and that these channels be “available for all forms of public expression, community information and debate of public issues.” They also are required to provide facilities for producing public access programs. Should the new agreement include a requirement that sound and video be upgraded in these facilities? Public access programs have notoriously poor sound and video quality.

Another provision in the city’s municipal code allows the city to buy the cable company and own/operate it itself. Since the city is trying to get into the water business, should the city try to get into the cable broadcasting business, too, for the sake of saving Peorians money and having another revenue stream? (Okay, that question was tongue-in-cheek, if you couldn’t tell.)

According to the Cable World article, Randy Ray is “looking for more input from the community” regarding the new franchise agreement. So, what do you all think? Let me know and I’ll pass your serious comments on to Mr. Ray.