Peter Dreier, a professor at Occidental College and fervent advocate for public education, asks why public education continues to lavish so much favorable attention in the leaders of the privatization movement while disregarding dissenting voices or–worse–treating our nation’s public schools shabbily.
He suggests that the Republican attack of public funding of PBS may have made the network dependent on the billionaires who favor privatization and view public schools with contempt.
With the sole exception of Bill Moyers, who has run programs about ALEC’s efforts to destroy every public service, and who recently interviewed me about the profit motive in the privatization movement, PBS has made no effort to investigate the assault on public education across the nation.
Dreier contrasts the lavish attention devoted to the privatization propaganda film “Waiting for ‘Superman,'” with the absence of attention to a remarkable new film celebrating the daily struggles of public schools in Pasadena, California. This film, “Go Public,” tells the true story of life in a public school. Will it appear on public television? That’s up to you.
The same might be said of “Rise Above the Mark,” another well-produced film that tells the story of real life in schools today and the insidious efforts to destroy public education by the powerful and complicit politicians.
David Sirota recently compelled PBS to return $3.5 million to billionaire John Arnold, who had underwritten a series on the “pension crisis,” an issue dear to him as a critic of defined benefit pensions.
Maybe Dreier’s critique will encourage PBS to give equal time to our nation’s public schools, not just their critics.
PS: I mistakenly attributed the article to another wonderful Paul–Paul Horton. Wrong! My bad!

In fact Rafael Pi Roman on PBS’ Metro Focus had a segment about resistance on Common Core last night. The guests were a math teacher and a woman who was a founder of Inside School. Segment showed a clip of Cuomo stating there was overwhelming support among teachers etc for Common Core. Then Rafael Pi Roman asked the guests what the problems were. Responses were basically one of adequate training, lack of proper curriculum materials, too quick implementation. Nothing was stated about the validity of the Common Core. Appears to be an effort to support Common Core and blame the way it was introduced.
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The first line should have read “public television” instead of “public education”.
Meanwhile, when we get requests to renew support for our local PBS station, we should mention this problem.
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Bill and Melinda Gates foundation and the Walton Family Foundation for education sponsor almost every story I hear on NPR in the morning. That is why NPR and PBS have a ‘reformer’ friendly tilt to many of their stories.
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BTW I have stopped sending contributions to both (as should all teachers who support public education).
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More…the woman chosen to replace Kathleen Sebelius at HHS has held leadership positions at both the Gates Foundation and the Walmart Foundation.
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Thank you for this information. I noticed the “tilt” too.
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Also the Eli and Edyte Broad Foundations
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PBS and NPR have turned into cheerleaders for the billionaires. There have been so many bs charter stories. You would think they would make an effort to tell what teachers go through day in and day out. So depressing
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Too true. The yahoos have been trying to shutdown PBS for years.
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I listen to public radio all the time, and I am disgusted with the ‘news’ which pushes all the agendas that enable the destruction of public education.
And speaking of the film, how about this one : GRASSROOTS AN INCONVENIENT TRUTH WAITING FOR SUPERMAN: http://gemnyc.org/2012/05/20/the-inconvenient-truth-behind-waiting-for-superman-now-online/
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I think David Sirota gave PBS, the moniker, Plutocratic Broadcasting System.
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Liberty Media owns a majority stake in PBS’s NewsHour
http://pando.com/2014/03/07/after-pledging-transparency-pbs-hides-details-of-new-deal-with-billionaire-owner-of-newshour/
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NPR has very progressive and leftist programs on things like income distribution and so forth, but they keep these segments in the northeast, at least, for the off peak listening hours of 7:30 pm to 10:00 pm. . . . . They would never dream of putting it on when people are going to work in the morning or are returning between 5 and 6 pm.
NPR is a mixed bag, but the tainted plutocratic lead pieces (“lead” should be pronounced two different ways here) outweigh whatever populist stories part of their staff puts on the air.
So, I have not, for 3 years now, been contributing ANYTHING to NPR. NPR belongs with other things floating around in one’s toilet.
For those of you in NY, listen only to WBAI Pacifica Radio, and for those of you in the rest of the country, you can google WBAI and listen top it online if not live, then archived for free . . . . . WBAI is the anti-NPR for the most point.
Amy Goodman is one the hosts of “Democracy Now: The War and Peace Report”, and she as well as others there are brilliant. The ever controversial Gary Null also contributes great reporting on nutrition and tying food to the larger scene of politics. If you listened to what Gary has to say about the federal government alone, even if he is not talking about nutrition, you would stand to grow enormously in your knowledge base.
As far as my all-time favorite, Bill Moyers: it will only be a matter of time before PBS cancels his contract and puts him out to pasture . . . .
PBS: Polluting, Bent, Sickening . . . . . .
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