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Explore the structure and operations of public broadcasting in the United States, including the roles of CPB, PBS, NPR, and independent stations. Learn about the monitoring and assessment processes, governance priorities, and limitations on content review.
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Public Service BroadcastingMonitoring and Assessment Vincent Curren Senior Vice President, Radio Corporation for Public Broadcasting, U.S.A.
Public Broadcasting in USCPB • Private, not-for-profit company formed by U.S. Congress in 1967. • Board of Directors appointed by President, confirmed by Senate. • Functions: • Facilitate production of programs of “high quality, diversity, creativity, excellence, and innovation….” • Ensure programming is balanced and objective. • Assure maximum freedom from “…interference with, or control of, program content or other activities….”
Public Broadcasting in USNetworks • Public Broadcasting System (PBS) • distributes television programming. • $333 million in revenue, 24% from government. • National Public Radio (NPR) • creates and distributes radio programming • $160 million in revenue • Both are independent non-profit companies, each with its own management and Board of Directors
Public Broadcasting in USStations • Radio - 380 stations operating 700 transmitters • Television - 180 stations operating 300 transmitters • Stations are autonomous, independent of CPB and networks. • They are owned by universities, private non-profit companies, local governments.
Stations: Foundations Business U.S. Public Broadcasting Economics Congress$400 Mil. Total Station Revenue:$2.6 Bil CPB 15% 5% 50% 20% Listeners
Public Service BroadcastingMonitoring and Assessment Vincent Curren Senior Vice President, Radio Corporation for Public Broadcasting 401 Ninth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20004 (202) 879-9733 vcurren@cpb.org
Public Service BroadcastingMonitoring and Assessment Vincent Curren Senior Vice President, Radio Corporation for Public Broadcasting 401 Ninth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20004 (202) 879-9733 vcurren@cpb.org
Thank the Committee on Review of Public Service Broadcasting • Flattered to address International Conference on Public Service Broadcasting • Been meeting w/ Committee and other International broadcasters. • Topic: Monitoring and Assessment of a PSB service. • Unique structure of PSB in US may make me least qualified to comment – but thanks to my colleagues from other countries whom I’ve liberally stolen from. • US is different than most PSBs. Here’s brief background. • SLIDES!
Governance • #1 Priority: Get the Board right. • Composed of influential community leaders who can articulate a public service broadcasting mission and generate support for its activities. • No obvious selection method. • Board roles: • Set priorities for service – pgmming & secondary.. • Demand measurable performance goals. • Maintain relations with legislature and government executives. • US Model: isolate funding from content – 2 boards?
Performance Monitoring • Audience service. • Usage: who, how much, to what? Basic ratings information. De-emphasize personal opinion. • Audience perceptions • Quality • Fairness • Value • Requires ongoing program of custom research. • But not just programming • System financial health (e.g. NPR bankruptcy) • Technology • Board role: openness and accountability. Pperiodic report to legislature and the public.
Controversial Content • Pre-broadcast: • See that editorial standards are in place. • Convene meetings, provide training and resources to journalists. • Post broadcast: • Invite and compile audience feedback • Establish peer review system: “ombudsman” or alternative method.
Summarize • Effective monitoring and assessment requires regular, recurring, planned research program. • Personal opinions are prevalent, and often wrong. It’s rare to meet a producer who thinks his or service is lousy. But there are plenty of lousy programs. • Finally, this is a brave experiment to review and possibly remake PSB in HK. Hippocrates: “Life is short, the art long, opportunity fleeting, experiment treacherous, judgment difficult.” I wish you and PSB in HK a long, artistic life, filled with sound judgment, exciting opportunity and wild success. • Thank you.
Public Service BroadcastingMonitoring and Assessment Vincent Curren Senior Vice President, Radio Corporation for Public Broadcasting 401 Ninth Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20004 (202) 879-9733 vcurren@cpb.org
Limits on Monitoring and Assessment of Programming • CPB Board may not consider individual programming decisions • Funding for producers takes form of grants, not contractual agreements • CPB management may not exercise content editorial role.
Monitoring & Performance Assessment • Qualifications: -- stations certify • They retain non-commercial status • Offer general audience programming • They meet various technical criteria • Provide audited financial statements • Office of Inspector General • Reports to Board Chair and Congressional Committee • Responds to inquiries from internal sources, public, Congress • Audits sample of stations for compliance.
Content Review • Ombudsmen – post-broadcast. • PBS • CPB • NPR • “Open to the Public” – comment line.