| Page 2 of 2 < |
That Sputtering Sound You Hear? Another Press Tour Revs Up
|
Discussion Policy
Comments that include profanity or personal attacks or other inappropriate comments or material will be removed from the site. Additionally, entries that are unsigned or contain "signatures" by someone other than the actual author will be removed. Finally, we will take steps to block users who violate any of our posting standards, terms of use or privacy policies or any other policies governing this site. Please review the full rules governing commentaries and discussions. You are fully responsible for the content that you post.
|
TV One CEO Johnathan Rodgers's tepid answer on why Sharpton was a no-show -- "I think Reverend Sharpton is in New York" and "We had invited him to come and he wasn't available" -- did nothing to soothe ruffled critics.
Only ages later, Jacque Reid, an anchor for TV One's upcoming coverage of the Democratic National Convention, told the critics she'd interviewed Sharpton the day before on Tom Joyner's radio show and he had to change his plans at the last minute when "a very close friend," the Rev. Timothy Wright, was critically injured in a holiday weekend car crash that killed Wright's wife and grandson. Why hadn't Rodgers just said so?
And how interesting that a show purporting to foster discussion and debate about topics relevant to black men is hosted by a man who says absolutely he will not change his mind on any subject because he's "strong in my convictions about how I feel about everything."
That's Ryan Stewart, who is one of the stars of the nationally syndicated radio program "2 Live Stews" and one of the new co-hosts of the returning "Black Men Revealed." He's also the guy who said if TV One were to hire the gay man who was a guest on the show in one of the clips shown to critics, "I probably would leave the set." He did not elaborate; on the other hand, he was not asked to.
Critics also did not seem altogether pleased that TV One plans to cover the Democratic convention but not the Republican convention.
"This is a huge deal for TV One, as it is for the African American community," Rodgers said of Sen. Barack Obama's impending nomination on the Democratic ticket. "African Americans have fallen in love with Barack Obama's . . . candidacy. . . . We will be covering the Democratic convention all the time."
When asked why TV One wasn't covering the GOP convention as well, Rodgers said, "We are not a news organization.
"We are a television network designed to celebrate African American achievement. If Hillary . . . was the nominee, we would not be covering this year's Democratic convention."
Rodgers noted that Federal Communications Commission rules requiring broadcast networks to give equal time to all presidential candidates do not apply to a cable entertainment network like TV One.
"And you think that's okay, though?" one critic pressed.
"My audience is 93 percent black. I serve my audience," Rodgers said.
Comedian Sheryl Underwood, a contributor to "TV One Live: DNC Afterparty," said she was that show's only Republican bit of on-air talent, and that she's voting for Obama. When one critic asked whether African American Republicans should feel slighted by the decision to cover just the Democrats' confab, Underwood shot back, "I speak for all eight of us -- we are not slighted."
* * * Ted Koppel is back!
Yes, we know, he's managing editor of Discovery Channel, but it's not the same. "Back" is more along the lines of joining BBC America and BBC World News as contributing analyst, which Koppel will do, BBC Worldwide America President Garth Ancier announced at Thank God We're Working Summer TV Press Tour 2008.
Koppel, who took a break from plugging his upcoming Discovery documentary on China to participate in the announcement via satellite, noted how very appropriate this was because he was born in the U.K. and spent his formative years there, including watching at least one British TV show.
And, in a ringing endorsement, Koppel said in a statement: "To the degree that our future in this country is dependent to any extent on what's happening in the rest of the of the world -- which you won't hear about a great deal on the American networks -- then the BBC can be very, very helpful."




