Dictionary of Meaning
<<Back
Please select a letter:
A |
B |
C |
D |
E |
F |
G |
H |
I |
J |
K |
L |
M |
N |
O |
P |
Q |
R |
S |
T |
U |
V |
W |
X |
Y |
Z |
0-9
Click here for Shopping
Public broadcasting service
*** Shopping-Tip: Public broadcasting service
{{redirect|PBS}}
{{Infobox Network |
network_name = Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) |
network_logo =
Image:Pbs logo low.png none|180px|PBS logo |
country =
United States |
network_type =
Terrestrial television Broadcast television network|
available = National |
owner = Public Broadcasting Service |
launch_date =
1969 |
website = [http://www.pbs.org/ www.pbs.org] |
past_names = |
key_people = |
}}
The '''Public Broadcasting Service''' ('''PBS''') is a
non-profit public broadcasting television service with 349 member
TV stations in the
United States. PBS headquarters are in
Alexandria, Virginia Alexandria,
Virginia. PBS was founded in
1969, at which time it took over many of the functions of its predecessor,
National Educational Television (NET). PBScr commenced broadcasting in October
1970. {{see|PBS idents}}
Stations that produce a significant amount of PBS network programming include:
*
WGBH WGBH-TV 2/19/43/44
Boston, Massachusetts Boston, MA
*
WNET 13/61
Newark, New Jersey/
New York City New York, New York
*
WETA-TV 26/27
Washington, DC
*
KCET 28/59
Los Angeles, California Los Angeles, CA
*
WQED (TV) WQED 13/38
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania Pittsburgh, PA
*
WPBT 2/18
Miami, Florida Miami, FL
*
KQED 9/30
San Francisco, California San Francisco, CA
*
WHYY-TV WHYY 12
Wilmington, Delaware/
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Philadelphia, PA
*
WTTW-TV WTTW 11
Chicago, Illinois Chicago, IL
*
WFYI 20
Indianapolis, Indiana Indianapolis, IN
*
KLRU 18
Austin, Texas Austin, TX
*
KPBS 11/15
San Diego, California San Diego, CA
*
Oklahoma Educational Television Authority
Kentucky Educational Television (KET) is the largest member broadcaster in the country (geographically) with 16 stations servicing all of
Kentucky, and parts of
Arkansas,
Illinois,
Indiana,
Missouri,
Ohio,
Tennessee and
West Virginia.
Introduction
PBS is not a broadcast network in the sense in which that term is usually used in the
United States. Unlike the commercial television broadcast model of American networks such as
NBC,
CBS, and
American Broadcasting Company ABC, in which affiliates give up portions of their local advertising airtime in exchange for network programming, PBS member stations pay substantial fees for the shows acquired and distributed by the national organization.
This relationship means that PBS member stations have greater latitude in local scheduling than their commercial counterparts. Scheduling of PBS-distributed series may vary wildly from market to market. This can be a source of tension as stations seek to preserve their localism and PBS strives to market a consistent national lineup. However, PBS has a policy of "common carriage" requiring most stations to clear the national prime time programs on a common schedule, so that they can be more effectively marketed on a national basis.
Unlike its radio counterpart,
National Public Radio, PBS has no central program production arm or news department. All of the programming carried by PBS, whether news, documentary, or entertainment, is created by (or in most cases produced under contract with) individual member stations. WGBH is one of the largest producers of educational programming; news programs are produced by WETA-TV and WPBT, and the ''
Charlie Rose (show) Charlie Rose'' interview show and ''
Nature (television) Nature'' come from WNET. Once a program is distributed to PBS, the network (and not the member station that supplied it) retains all rights for rebroadcasts; the suppliers do maintain the right to sell the program in non-broadcast media such as
DVDs, books, and
merchandising licensed merchandise.
{{further|
List of PBS member stations}}
Sources of funding
Image:Tv sesame street viewers like you.jpg right|250px|thumb|"...and by contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you. Thank you." is a common phrase heard on PBS, regarding member's fees.
The largest source of
revenue for U.S. public television stations comes from donations by individual viewers. In addition to these member fees, PBS receives federal government money through the
Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB). PBS-distributed programs may be funded in part by corporate
sponsors and non-profit groups such as the
Annenberg Foundation. Other shows are presented exclusively with funding from PBS stations and their members (without corporate funding) — as a result, the quality of such shows varies, and thereby either motivates the viewer to continue contributing to PBS or the station to find local corporate sponsors to insure its continued airing.
Depending upon their location and licensee, local stations may also be funded in part by state governments, colleges, and universities. They can sell small portions of their airtime in the form of
underwriting, which differs from traditional advertising in terms of restrictions on language and product usage.
Organizational structure
PBS stations are commonly operated by
non-profit organizations or
university universities in their community of license. In some states, PBS stations throughout the entire state may be organized into a single regional "subnetwork". Unlike the
CBC Television CBC-
Télévision de Radio-Canada SRC state broadcaster in
Canada, PBS does not directly own any of the stations that broadcast its programming. This is partly due to the origins of the PBS stations themselves, and partly due to historical license issues.
In the modern broadcast marketplace, this organizational structure is considered outmoded by some media critics. A common restructuring proposal is to reorganize the network so that each state would have one PBS affiliate which broadcast state-wide. However, this proposal is controversial, as it would reduce local community input into PBS programming.
Programming
PBS's evening schedule emphasizes
fine arts (''
Great Performances''),
drama (''
Mystery!'' and ''
Masterpiece Theatre''),
science (''
Nova (series) Nova'' and ''
Scientific American Frontiers''),
public affairs (''
Frontline (American television series) Frontline'', ''
The Newshour with Jim Lehrer'') and
independent films (''P.O.V.'' and ''Independent Lens'').
PBS has distributed a number of highly regarded
children's shows such as ''
Sesame Street'', ''
The Electric Company'', ''
Villa Alegre'', ''
Zoom (Television Series) Zoom!'', ''
3-2-1 Contact'', ''
The Letter People'', ''
Barney & Friends'', ''
Shining Time Station'', ''
Thomas & Friends'', ''
Ghostwriter (television series) Ghostwriter'', ''
Reading Rainbow'', and ''
Mister Rogers' Neighborhood''. Popular
animation animated series have included ''
Clifford the Big Red Dog'', ''
Arthur (cartoon) Arthur'', ''
Liberty's Kids'', and ''
The Magic School Bus''. The service has also imported British kids' series including ''
Teletubbies'' and ''
Boohbah''. Some of these programs have since migrated to commercial television, including ''Ghostwriter'' and ''The Magic School Bus''.
However, PBS is not the only distributor of public television programming to the member stations. Other distributors have emerged from the roots of the old companies that had loosely held regional public television stations in the
1960s.
Boston, Massachusetts Boston-based American Public Television (former names include Eastern Educational Network and American Program Service) is second only to PBS for distributing programs to U.S. non-commercial stations. Another distributor is NETA (formerly SECA), whose properties have included
The Shapies and
Jerry Yarnell School of Fine Art. In addition, the member stations themselves also produce a variety of local shows, some of which subsequently receive national distribution through PBS or the other
television syndication distributors.
PBS stations are known for rebroadcasting
United Kingdom British television dramas and comedies (acquired from the
BBC and other sources) — these shows are generally seen on Saturday evenings, generally regarded as the least-watched evening of the week due to viewers doing outside activities such as going to a movie, a concert, or other functions; so much of the exposure (or lack thereof) of American audiences to British television (particularly
Britcom comedies) comes through PBS it has been joked that PBS means "Primarily British Series." However, a significant amount of sharing takes place. The BBC and other media outlets in the region such as
Channel 4 often cooperate with PBS stations, producing material that is shown on both sides of the
Atlantic Ocean Atlantic. Also, though less frequently, Canadian and Australian, among other international, programming appears on PBS stations (such as ''
The Red Green Show'', currently distributed by syndicator Executive Program Services); the public-broadcasting syndicators are more likely to offer this programming to the U.S. public stations.
Other shows (which are broadcast by PBS)
Among the currently airing series
*''
American Experience''
*''
American Masters''
*''
Antiques Roadshow'' (
BBC,
CBC, PBS)
*''
Arthur_(TV_series) Arthur
*''
Austin City Limits (television) Austin City Limits''
*''
Between the Lions''
*''
Charlie Rose (show) Charlie Rose''
*''
Frontline (PBS TV series) Frontline''
*''
Live from Lincoln Center''
*''
Masterpiece Theatre''
*''
Maya & Miguel''
*''
The McLaughlin Group distributed by syndicator American Public Television''
*''
Monty Python's Flying Circus'' in reruns
*''
Mustard Pancakes distributed by syndicator American Public Television''
*''
Nature (television) Nature''
*''
The New Yankee Workshop''
*''
The NewsHour with Jim Lehrer'' (previously known as ''The MacNeil/Lehrer Report'' and ''MacNeil/Lehrer Newshour'')
*''
Nightly Business Report''
*''
Nova (TV series) NOVA''
*''
NOW (series) NOW''
*''
Postcards from Buster''
*''
Religion & Ethics Newsweekly''
*''
Tavis Smiley (TV series) Tavis Smiley''
*''
This Old House''
*''
Tony Brown's Journal''
*''
The Victory Garden (television program) The Victory Garden''
*''
Washington Week in Review'', now simply ''Washington Week''
Originally aired
*''
Adventures From The Book of Virtues''
*''
Bill Moyers' Journal''
*''
Carrasolendas''
*''
Feeling Good''
*''
The Joy of Painting''
*''
Lamb Chop's Play-Along''
*''
Meeting of Minds''
*''
Once Upon A Classic''
*''
Over Easy''
*''
The Pallisers''
*''
The Power of Myth''
*''
Puzzle Place''
*''
Say Brother''
*''
Square One TV''
*''
Trying Times''
*''
Wall $treet Week''
*''
Wishbone (television show) Wishbone''
Criticism
{{POV-section}}
PBS has been the subject of some
controversy.
* '''Public Broadcasting as Censorship:''' "Public" broadcasting is, in part, funded involuntarily by taxpayers who may not approve of its content. As with all liberties, forcing someone to do something is the same kind of violation as forcing them to not do it. Mandatory abortions would be perhaps even more wrong than banning abortions, for example. Likewise forcing someone to pay for speech they do not agree with is the same violation of their freedom of expression as censoring them. What's more, it can be argued that they might have chosen to use that money, given the opportunity, for some other kind of expression...but now it's unavailable, therefore censoring them.
* '''Outdated Justifications:''' It was founded to provide diversity in programming at a time when all television was
Broadcasting broadcast (as opposed to today's
coaxial cable cable or
satellite transmission methods) and most communities received only three or four signals. Today most households subscribe to
cable TV or have
satellite dishes that receive tens or hundreds of signals, including varied educational and children's programs. However, public television proponents insist that the service be intended to provide universal access, particularly to poor and rural viewers. It is also argued that many cable and satellite productions are of lower quality.
* '''Unresponsive or Irresponsible to Viewers:''' Most stations solicit individual donations by methods including
fundraising pledge drives or
telethons which can disrupt regularly scheduled programming. Some viewers find this a source of annoyance since they replace the normal programs with specials aimed at a wider audience.
* '''Needless Expense and Fearmongering:''' Federal funding of PBS has been criticized as unnecessary, and its proponents of fearmongering tactics like "they want to cancel Big Bird", when in fact merchandising of Big Bird's
Sesame Street, alone, brings in over a billion dollars a year, several times all Federal funding combined, and therefore even if all funding were cut is in no danger, whatsoever, of being "cancelled", or even effected in any way.[http://www.ButNowYouKnow.com/public.broadcasting.html]
Political and ideological bias
* The Public Broadcasting Act of 1967 [http://www.cpb.org/aboutpb/act/text.html] required a "strict adherence to objectivity and balance in all programs or series of programs of a controversial nature." It also prohibited the federal government from interfering or controlling what is broadcast. This set up an obvious tension where the government that created the CPB would not be able to do anything about a perceived failure to meet its obligation for objectivity and balance without interfering in some way.
*At a more basic and problematic level is how and who should determine what constitutes objectivity and balance when there are massive disagreements over what that would be. There seems to be no consensus or even attempts at forming a consensus to resolve this dilemma.
* Some
conservatives perceive it to have a
liberal bias and criticize its
tax-based revenue and have periodically but unsuccessfully attempted to discontinue funding of
Corporation for Public Broadcasting CPB. Although state and federal sources account for a minority percentage of public television funding, the system remains vulnerable to political pressure.
Kenneth Tomlinson, chairman of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, in November
2004 in Baltimore, told PBS officials, "They should make sure their programming better reflected the Republican mandate." Tomlinson later said that his comment was in jest and that he could not imagine how remarks at a fun occasion were taken the wrong way. A report whose results were publicized in November 2005 sharply criticized Tomlinson for the way he used CPB resources to "go after" this perceived liberal bias.[http://www.nytimes.com/2005/05/02/arts/television/02public.html?pagewanted=3&ei=5094&en=1085de148e09623c&hp&ex=1115092800&partner=homepage]
* Left-wing critics dislike PBS affiliates' dependence on corporate sponsorships and some are uncomfortable with shows such as ''
Wall $treet Week'' which they see as promoting a
corporate outlook without any corresponding series featuring opposing views from
trade union labor unions. For example, one of PBS' documentaries,
Commanding Heights, strongly supports
globalization while painting labor unions as
socialist organizations.
* Some of its documentaries on
Islam and the
Arab world, such as ''Empire of Faith'', have been attacked as either fawning or factually challenged.
* Individual programs, particularly those dealing with the subject of
homosexuality, have been the targets of organized campaigns by those with opposing views including
United States Secretary of Education Margaret Spellings.
* Kenneth Tomlinson, who took over in 2003, began his tenure by asking for
Karl Rove's assistance in overturning a regulation that half the CPB board have practical experience in radio or television. Later he appointed an outside consultant to monitor the regular PBS program ''
NOW (series) NOW with Bill Moyers''. Told that the show had "liberal" leanings,
Bill Moyers Moyers eventually resigned after more than three decades as a PBS regular, saying Tomlinson had mounted a "vendetta" against him. Subsequently, PBS [http://www.newstatesman.com/Life/200505160011 made room] for conservative commentator
Tucker Carlson (now of
MSNBC, a former co-host of
CNN's
Crossfire (TV series) Crossfire), and ''
Journal Editorial Report'' with
Paul Gigot, an editor of the ''
Wall Street Journal'' editorial page (this show has since moved to
FOX News Channel). On November 3, 2005 PBS announced the resignation of Tomlinson and the investigations of improper financial dealings with consultants.
New networks
PBS has also spun off a number of
TV networks, often in partnership with other media companies:
PBS YOU (ended January 2006),
PBS Kids PBS KIDS (ended
October 1,
2005),
PBS Kids Sprout PBS KIDS Sprout, and
PBS DT2 (a feed of
High-definition television HDTV and
letterboxed programming for digitally equipped member stations), along with packages of PBS programs that are similar to local stations' programming, the
PBS-X feeds. (See
List of United States broadcast television networks.) Some or all are available on many
digital cable systems, on
free-to-air TV via
communications satellites [http://www.lyngsat.com/amc3.html], as well as via
DirecTV direct broadcast satellite.
With the transition to terrestrial
digital television broadcasts, many are also often now available as "multiplexed" channels on some local stations' standard-definition digital signals, while DT2 is found on the HD signals.
Further reading
*B. J. Bullert, ''Public Television: Politics and the Battle over Documentary Film'', Rutgers Univ Press 1997
*Barry Dornfeld, ''Producing Public Television, Producing Public Culture'', Princeton University Press 1998
*Ralph Engelman, ''Public Radio and Television in America: A Political History'', Sage Publications 1996
*James Ledbetter, ''Made Possible by: The Death of Public Broadcasting in the United States'', Verso 1998
See also
*
Instructional television
*
List of PBS member stations
*
List of United States television networks
*
National Public Radio
*
PBS idents
*
Television in the United States
External links
-
Official website
-
Early '90s PBS
-
Cancel Big Bird? The Public Broadcasting Controversy
{{U.S. broadcast television}}
Category:1969 establishments
Category:PBS television network
Category:Publicly-funded broadcasters
de:Public Broadcasting Service
fr:Public Broadcasting Service
nl:Public Broadcasting Service
ja:PBS
sv:Public Broadcasting Service
tr:PBS
see
Public_Broadcasting_Service
*** Shopping-Tip: Public broadcasting service