General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsJust watched a Nova on PBS re:JFK (sponsored by Koch and Boeing)
I found it quite off-putting at the end of a show about science, to find an ad thanking Boeing and David Koch for sponsoring PBS.
It somewhat puts a taint to the whole show (maybe to the series as well as the network).
Yes, I said "taint".
stopbush
(24,396 posts)The Kochs are big supporters of the arts in this country as well.
We're gonna run out of things to like and eat if we really start thinking about who's funding what.
Maybe it's the broken clock syndrome at work.
bluestate10
(10,942 posts)on DU who get enraged when Progressive and business people are put in the same sentence. But there are such people around, but not as many as there are the Koch types and closed minded conservative Chamber of Commerce type. Unless people on the Liberal side start evening up the business balance in the country, people like the Kochs will fund, then take over national communication channels.
jakeXT
(10,575 posts)PBS Killed Wisconsin Uprising Documentary "Citizen Koch" To Appease Koch Brothers
By Brendan Fischer
"Citizen Koch," a documentary about money in politics focused on the Wisconsin uprising, was shunned by PBS for fear of offending billionaire industrialist David Koch, who has given $23 million to public television, according to Jane Mayer of the New Yorker. The dispute highlights the increasing role of private money in "public" television and raises even further concerns about the Kochs potentially purchasing eight major daily newspapers.
The film from Academy Award-nominated filmmakers Carl Deal and Tia Lessin documents how the U.S. Supreme Court's Citizens United decision helped pave the way for secret political spending by players like the Kochs, who contributed directly and indirectly to the election of Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker in 2010 and came to his aid again when the battle broke out over his effort to limit collective bargaining.
Originally slated to appear on PBS stations nationwide as part of the "Independent Lens" series, "Citizen Koch" had its funding pulled after David Koch was offended by another PBS documentary critical of the billionaire industrialists.
"People like the Kochs have worked for decades to undermine public funding for institutions like PBS," Deal told the Center for Media and Democracy. "When public dollars dry up, private dollars come in to make up for the shortfall."
And that private funding can conflict with PBS' "public" mission and its editorial integrity. The PBS distributor "backed out of the partnership because they came to fear the reaction our film would provoke," Deal and Lessin said in a statement. "David Koch, whose political activities are featured in the film, happens to be a public-television funder and a trustee of both [New York PBS member station] WNET and [Boston member station] WGBH. This wasnt a failed negotiation or a divergence of visions; it was censorship, pure and simple.