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Ken Burns Is Better Than That!
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"It was Ken," said John Wilson, Senior Vice President & Chief TV Programming Executive for PBS, explaining the reversal of an earlier decision that no changes could be made to Ken Burns' forthcoming, magnum opus on World War II, scheduled to air in September. "Ken elected to make changes."
Controversy erupted recently because Burns and PBS had somehow inexplicably managed to construct the multi-hour, nationally broadcast public television series about the war without including any interviews with Hispanic-American veterans.
Previously, PBS executives had taken the steadfast position that nothing could be done to address community complaints over the omission because the film was already completed and they did not want to interfere with Burns' artistic independence.
"So what changed?" I asked Wilson. "What's being cut out and what's being added?"
"The film itself is still the film itself," he responded. "It is entirely intact. New content will be incorporated within the footprint of the series without changing the existing film. The footage remains the same. We will be able to incorporate additional material without ruining the core vision."
Pressed for specifics, Wilson admitted, "the details are still unclear," but said that the new plan "allows The War to go out with its emotional experience in place, while still acknowledging the Hispanic contribution."
Pressed further, he referred to a press release stating that Burns, "in consultation with PBS, will assemble a production team, including a Latino producer, to create the additional content, and will work with this team to insure that the new segments are consistent with the production values and sensibilities" of other segments of The War.
"What changed is that we are trying to walk a fine line of balance," Wilson concluded. "Listening to our audience while still respecting the artistic vision of our film makers."
What also changed -- but which he left unsaid -- is that the uproar within the Latino community, and the coordinated response led by an ad hoc coalition called Defend Our Honor, brought so much moral, political and financial pressure to bear on PBS executives that they were ultimately left with no choice but to allow changes to Burns' film.
The leadership of the campaign for inclusion first met with PBS President and CEO Paula Kerger little more than a month ago, at which point Kerger told them nothing could be done to address their concerns. Instead of accepting the decision, the group began involving academics, activists, politicians, veterans' groups and the media in a coordinated campaign to persuade PBS.
To their credit, Kerger, Wilson and other PBS officials finally began to listen. After a month of meetings, media reports, and political intrigue, they moved from rejection to acceptance. As this week's statement puts it, "PBS takes its mission to serve all Americans very seriously. Along with the independent filmmakers who work with us, we are deeply committed to listening to the public we serve."
See more stories tagged with: latinos, ken burns, pbs
Filmmaker and journalist Rory O'Connor writes the Media Is A Plural blog.
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