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- <text id=90TT3314>
- <title>
- Dec. 10, 1990: The Wisdom Of Ms. Solomon
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1990
- Dec. 10, 1990 What War Would Be Like
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- VIDEO, Page 76
- The Wisdom of Ms. Solomon
- </hdr>
- <body>
- <p>PBS's first programming czar is shaking up public TV
- </p>
- <p>By RICHARD ZOGLIN--Reported by Janice C. Simpson/Washington
- </p>
- <p> Ever since its creation in 1969, the Public Broadcasting
- Service has been an unwieldy, multiheaded beast. Most PBS
- series are initiated and produced under the auspices of
- individual stations, funded by a patchwork of public and
- corporate sources and scheduled (in many cases) according to
- the whims of local program directors. That worked well enough
- in the days when PBS was essentially the only alternative to
- the three commercial networks. But cable has made life more
- complicated. Such channels as the Arts & Entertainment Network
- and Superstation TBS have appropriated the kind of programming
- that was once unique to PBS, from BBC mini-series to Cousteau
- nature specials. As a result, the PBS audience has been eroded
- by nearly 12% in the past four years.
- </p>
- <p> Last week public-TV officials took a decisive step toward
- reversing that trend, as the PBS board of directors gave final
- approval to a major revamping of the network's organizational
- structure. In the new setup, the crucial decisions about which
- programs will receive PBS funding--previously made by a
- majority vote of the local stations--will be in the hands of
- one executive. The plan, first unveiled last summer, has drawn
- objections from officials at several large PBS stations. Says
- William Baker, president of New York's WNET: "The whole world,
- even the Soviet Union, is going from a command economy to a
- democratic one, and we're going the opposite way."
- </p>
- <p> But even the most vocal critics of the new plan have been
- assuaged by the person who will put it into practice. This new
- "programming czar" has more power than any predecessor but also
- a daunting task: maneuvering through the byzantine PBS
- bureaucracy. "What we wanted was a Solomon," says PBS president
- Bruce Christensen. "Someone with extraordinary political skills
- as well as program judgment. And someone who was willing to
- take the heat."
- </p>
- <p> How about a Ms. Solomon? Jennifer Lawson, the former film
- professor and civil rights worker who was named to the job last
- November, has thus far been getting more huzzahs than heat. She
- basked in the glory of PBS's huge success of September, The
- Civil War. (The program was set in motion long before she
- arrived, but Lawson approved its unusual weeklong scheduling.)
- She has won praise for boosting PBS's profile with such ploys
- as running ads on the commercial networks. Most of all, she has
- tamed the ornery PBS bureaucracy with a mix of calm
- decisiveness and careful diplomacy. "In some ways Jennifer is
- the only person who could have done this," says Henry Hampton,
- producer of the documentary series Eyes on the Prize. "She
- really does listen."
- </p>
- <p> Not that Lawson, 44, doesn't have some fairly radical
- programming ideas of her own. Among the shows she is developing
- for PBS are a children's game show and a sitcom about a Soviet
- family adapting to perestroika. She wants to showcase more pop
- music and is looking for a dramatic series that would "explore
- the mood in the country, relationships between people in our
- cities and rural areas."
- </p>
- <p> Also high on her agenda is bringing more ethnic and cultural
- diversity to a network whose audience is often stereotyped as
- "the Chardonnay and Brie crowd." Lawson objects to that
- characterization. "It's as if opera were only for the elite,"
- she says. "But Leontyne Price came from Mississippi, and we
- don't know about all the other Leontyne Prices who are out
- there, who can't afford to get to the Metropolitan Opera but
- can see it on Great Performances."
- </p>
- <p> Lawson herself grew up next door to Mississippi, in a suburb
- of Birmingham. She dropped out of Tuskeegee Institute to work
- for the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Later she
- moved to Washington, then spent two years in Tanzania helping
- bring together Africans and African Americans interested in the
- arts. After getting a master's degree in film from Columbia
- University and making "a few mediocre documentaries that
- definitely will not be shown on public television," Lawson got
- a job teaching film at Brooklyn College. She also served as
- executive director of the Film Fund, which financed independent
- documentaries, and later as head of the Corporation for Public
- Broadcasting's Television Program Fund.
- </p>
- <p> Given the long gestation time for PBS programs, Lawson's
- impact on the schedule will not fully emerge for at least a
- year or two. But an early indication came last month, when
- Lawson made public her list of current PBS series that will be
- funded for next season. Most of the PBS fixtures, from the
- MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour to Nova, will be back, as will
- independently financed series like Mobil's Masterpiece Theatre.
- But Lawson decided to end funding for the children's show
- Newton's Apple and the documentary series American Masters after
- one more season. (Both series are seeking alternative funding,
- in which case they could remain on the schedule.)
- </p>
- <p> Lawson's choices have calmed fears that she is about to make
- drastic changes in PBS's direction. Yet some PBS veterans are
- wary of her plans for sitcoms and other popular programming
- formats, contending that the quest for bigger audiences will
- turn PBS into a clone of the commercial networks. "A perfect
- program to me," she responds, "is one where the viewer never
- questions the value or importance. But it's also engaging and
- compelling, so that you feel you have to watch it.
- Entertainment and intelligence can live well together." Just
- how well, and how often, Lawson can get the two to mesh will
- show how Solomonic she really is.
- </p>
-
- </body>
- </article>
- </text>
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