May 1, 2024

Greek Broadcaster Fights Closure

The administrative court, the Council of State, is expected to rule on the appeal Monday.

A decision in favor of the workers, who have been operating underground broadcasts of Greek news through satellite streams since ERT was pulled off the air in a surprise government decision on Tuesday, could lead to ERT’s signal being restored temporarily, until the decision could be reviewed in a hearing by the Council of State that would be scheduled for September.

Meanwhile, a Greek prosecutor, acting at the behest of the country’s finance minister, has begun an investigation into ERT’s finances, looking for signs of mismanaged funds.

Whatever the court verdict on the workers’ appeal, Monday will be a critical day for the country’s conservative prime minister, Antonis Samaras. He is to meet in the afternoon with the leaders of the two junior partners in his increasingly fragile coalition, socialist Pasok and the moderate Democratic Left. They have vehemently opposed his decision to shut down ERT as part of a broader cost-cutting drive imposed by Greece’s international creditors, the European Commission, the European Central Bank and the International Monetary Fund.

Although a court decision vindicating the laid-off ERT employees might be considered an embarrassment for Mr. Samaras, political analysis on Greek blogs and news Web sites on Friday suggested that such an outcome might less damaging to his image than if he were forced to reverse his decision under political pressure.

In a speech before members of his conservative New Democracy party’s youth arm on Friday, Mr. Samaras suggested a compomise in an apparent bid to head off a government crisis. His proposal — for the “immediate creation of a cross-party committee to hire a small number of staff so that public television can immediately resume broadcasting” — was rejected within minutes by Pasok, which said the proposal “does not constitute a response to what Pasok has said.”

The political upheaval came amid reports from Brussels that the disbursement of the next tranche of rescue funding for Greece, a sum of about $4.4 billion, was expected to be released next week.

Earlier on Friday, a Greek Finance Ministry official said that European officials had approved the disbursement, subject to a final endorsement by euro zone finance ministers. That decision, the official said, had been largely influenced by the government’s decision to save money by closing ERT.

The state broadcaster, condemned by Mr. Samaras earlier this week as ‘’an emblem of lack of transparency and waste,’’ is to be the focus of a criminal investigation ordered on Thursday by the finance minister, Yannis Stournaras. Greece’s corruption prosecutor, Eleni Raikou, on Friday assigned two deputies to review all the employment and procurement contracts issued by ERT over the past decade for signs of mismanagement and waste.

The scale of suspected misuse of money within ERT over the years remains unclear. But, addressing Parliament on Friday, Mr Stournaras said the broadcaster’s ‘‘finances and viewing figures were very poor.’’

‘’I don’t want to raise tensions in the current climate,’’ he said, ‘’but when the time comes I will present the statistics.’’

Dismissed ERT workers, who have occupied the broadcaster’s headquarters in a suburb of Athens since ERT’s signal was cut on Tuesday night, continued to operate underground broadcasts of Greek news on Friday. Those streams were picked up Thursday evening by the the European Broadcasting Union, an alliance of public service media organizations in 56 countries, and re-transmitted via satellite link to Greece. The move had symbolic, rather than practical, value as only a few hundred thousand out of some 11 million Greeks have satellite connections; most have been following ERT’s pirate broadcast via online news Web sites.

The head of the European Broadcasting Union, Jean-Paul Philippot, who was in Athens on Friday, said he would ask the Greek government to restore the ERT signal. ‘’The reason we are here is because this has never happened before,’’ he told a media conference in the old headquarters of ERT. ‘’No European country has ever cut its broadcaster’s signal.’’

Mr. Stournaras had warned Thursday that any other television channel retransmitting the pirate broadcast of former ERT employees would be prosecuted. The announcement was apparently aimed at the Communist Party’s channel, called 902 TV, which had been carrying the underground broadcast but reverted to normal programming after the ministry’s warning. ‘’This is not a country where everyone does whatever they want,’’ Mr. Stournaras said.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/06/15/world/europe/greek-broadcaster-fights-closure.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

William Miles, Maker of Documentaries About Black History, Dies at 82

The cause was uncertain, but Mr. Miles had myriad health problems, including Parkinson’s disease and dementia, said his wife of 61 years, Gloria.

Mr. Miles was part historical sleuth, part preservationist, part bard. His films, which combined archival footage, still photographs and fresh interviews, were triumphs of curiosity and persistence in unearthing lost material about forgotten subjects.

His first important film, “Men of Bronze” (1977), was about the 369th Infantry Regiment, an all-black combat unit that the Army shipped overseas during World War I but, because of segregationist policies, fought under the flag of France. Serving with great distinction, the unit spent more time in the front-line trenches than any other American unit. Collectively, it was awarded the Croix de Guerre and came to be known as the Harlem Hellfighters and also the Black Rattlers.

The 369th began as the 15th New York National Guard Infantry Regiment, and decades later, after Mr. Miles had himself joined a National Guard unit in Harlem, he stumbled on a dusty storage room containing flags, helmets photographs and other relics from the 369th.

He subsequently found well-preserved film footage of the regiment at the National Archives, and he tracked down living members of the unit using a technique he often employed to generate information about the past: He walked the streets of Harlem, stopping where groups of elderly residents gathered to talk and started asking questions.

The film, which was shown on public television, depicted the black soldiers as fiercely patriotic and courageous while offering an oddly good-natured — and moving — critique of American racism.

Mr. Miles’s best-known work was “I Remember Harlem,” a four-hour historical portrait of the neighborhood that had its premiere on public television over four consecutive nights in 1981.

“I was walking around Harlem, where I grew up, and noticed how many of the old theaters and familiar buildings were missing,” Mr. Miles said in an interview in The New York Times, talking about his inspiration for the film. “I went back to my old elementary school, and on the next corner there was another man standing and looking at the building, too.”

The man, he realized, was an old classmate.

“He said to me, ‘I remember Harlem,’ and I thought: I remember Harlem, you remember Harlem, a lot of people remember Harlem.”

Born in Harlem on April 18, 1931, Mr. Miles grew up on West 126th Street, behind the Apollo Theater, where, as a teenager, he occasionally ran the film projector. He graduated from Benjamin Franklin High School and for a while attended City College.

As a young man, he worked downtown as a shipping clerk for a distributor of educational films and then at Killian Shows, a company that restored silent films; there, Mr. Miles learned mechanical skills like repairing film and clipping segments for use in commercials. During this time he met Richard Adams, who also worked at Killian, and who became a cameraman and film editor for several of Mr. Miles’s films, including “Men of Bronze.”

“Bill had collaborators of all kinds,” Mr. Adams wrote in an e-mail on Thursday, “but only he had the vision and the persistence, and a genius for spotting archival images.”

One of Mr. Miles’s films, “Liberators” (1992), about black army units that helped to free Nazi concentration camps at the end of World War II, was partly inspired by a letter he spotted in The Times from Benjamin Bender, a Jewish survivor of Buchenwald. “The recollections are still vivid — ” Mr. Bender wrote of the day of liberation, April 11, 1945, “black soldiers of the Third Army, tall and strong, crying like babies, carrying the emaciated bodies of the liberated prisoners.”

The film, produced and directed by Mr. Miles and Nina Rosenblum, was nominated for an Academy Award, but its accuracy was subsequently questioned. Its overall point of the film — that blacks who fought racism at home to be allowed to serve their country, then witnessed the discriminatory horrors of the Holocaust — was not in dispute, but critics said that the film went awry in giving credit to a particular unit, the 761st Tank Battalion, part of Gen. George S. Patton’s Third Army, for the liberation of Dachau and Buchenwald. (The 761st was present at the liberation of the Gunskirchen camp in Austria.) Public television stations ceased showing the film.

In an interview on Wednesday, Ms. Rosenblum said they had discovered, too late, that one of the interviewees in the film had lied about being a liberator, but she defended the film as essentially accurate, saying that Army records were inconclusive and that Mr. Miles was a scrupulous documentarian who was shattered by the controversy. “It was the only film he ever made that had its veracity questioned,” Ms. Rosenblum said. “And I can tell you he tried everything to make the research complete. He was putting black history on the map in a way it hadn’t been, and this was such a terrible blow. We still feel like the film, except for one guy, is valid. If the Army records are so good, tell me: Who liberated Benjamin Bender at Buchenwald?”

Mr. Miles married the former Gloria Darlington in 1952, after having known her since they were classmates in elementary school. His other survivors include two daughters, Brenda Moore and Deborah Jones, and three grandchildren.

Last fall, the veteran Democratic Congressman Charles B. Rangel, whose district includes Harlem, entered a testimonial to Mr. Miles in the Congressional Record. Speaking on the House floor, Mr. Rangel gave a summary of Mr. Miles’s work, which includes films about black athletes, black astronauts, black cowboys, and the writer James Baldwin.

“Join me in a very special congressional salute to Harlem’s historian and black filmmaker, William ‘Bill’ Miles,” Mr. Rangel said, “a titan of a man who has documented the history and contributions of African-Americans and the black American experience with film, camera and a lens.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/05/19/movies/william-miles-maker-of-documentaries-about-black-history-dies-at-82.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

BBC to Sell Lonely Planet Guidebooks to a U.S. Billionaire

SERRAVAL, France — In 2007, when the British Broadcasting Corporation bought the Lonely Planet travel guidebooks, it drew criticism from rival media organizations in the private sector, which argued that a public television company had no business expanding into areas like book publishing.

On Tuesday, when the BBC confirmed plans to sell Lonely Planet to a reclusive American billionaire, it drew internal scrutiny — this time for losing money on the sale.

BBC Worldwide, an arm of the public broadcaster that runs many of its international and profit-making operations, said on Tuesday that it had agreed to sell the series to NC2 Media, a company controlled by Brad M. Kelley, a businessman from Kentucky who made a fortune in tobacco and later turned his attention to real estate and other interests.

The price, £51.5 million, or $77.8 million, was nearly £80 million below the £130 million that the BBC paid for Lonely Planet, in two stages.

The BBC insisted that no public money was lost because BBC Worldwide used its own money rather than the main BBC budget, derived largely from a license fee on British television-owning households, to pay for Lonely Planet. Still, because BBC Worldwide returns any profit it earns to the BBC, any shortfall affects the BBC’s overall funding.

The scale of the loss on the sale of Lonely Planet prompted the BBC Trust, a panel that oversees the broadcaster, to call on the executive arm of the BBC to begin a review of the investment and report its conclusions.

“Although this did not prove to be a good commercial investment, Worldwide is a very successful business, and at the time of purchase there was a credible rationale for this deal,” Diane Coyle, vice chairwoman of the trust, said in a statement.

At the time of the purchase, the BBC — headed then by Mark Thompson, who is now chief executive of The New York Times Company — talked about extending the Lonely Planet brand into new areas, including digital outlets. But publishers of traditional travel guidebooks have struggled to compete with travel sites on the Web, like TripAdvisor.

And rivals of the BBC complained that the broadcaster had no business moving into new areas at a time when some commercial media companies had struggled with the challenge of the Internet.

In 2009, James Murdoch, then the head of the European and Asian operations of News Corporation, described the BBC’s purchase as a “particularly egregious example of the expansion of the state.” In addition to its other media holdings, News Corporation is the largest shareholder in British Sky Broadcasting, a pay-TV company that competes with the BBC.

The BBC has been scaling back since it agreed to a reduction in its public financing in 2010.

“Lonely Planet has increased its presence in digital, magazine publishing and emerging markets whilst also growing its global market share, despite difficult economic conditions,” said Paul Dempsey, interim chief executive of BBC Worldwide, in a statement. “However, we have also recognized that it no longer fits with our plans to put BBC brands at the heart of our business and have decided to sell the company.”

Despite the challenges facing travel publishers, the BBC said Lonely Planet was the biggest travel guidebook series in the United States, Britain and Australia, where the guides were founded in 1973 as a bible for backpackers. It said 120 million books had been published in 11 languages, and 120 million people visited its Web sites annually.

“The challenge and promise before us is to marry the world’s greatest travel information and guidebook company with the limitless potential of 21st century digital technology,” Daniel Houghton, executive director of NC2 Media, said in a statement. “If we can do this, and I believe we can, we can build a business that, while remaining true to the things that made Lonely Planet great in the past, promises to make it even greater in the future.”

The purchase is a big expansion of Mr. Kelley’s media holdings; he also has an investment in OutWild TV, a Web site that shows travel videos. Mr. Kelley is said to be one of the largest private landowners in the United States, with millions of acres of land in Texas and other states.

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/03/20/business/media/bbc-to-sell-lonely-planet-travel-guidebooks.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Amazon to Investigate Claims of Worker Intimidation in Germany

On Friday, Amazon said it was investigating claims made in a documentary that a subcontractor employed security guards with neo-Nazi ties to oversee the immigrant workers.

The documentary, broadcast Wednesday on the ARD public television network, showed guards in black uniforms with H.E.S.S., after Hensel European Security Services, but also the last name of Hitler’s deputy, Rudolf Hess, emblazoned on their chests.

According to the film, security guards employed by the subcontractor scared and intimidated hundreds of temporary workers from Hungary, Poland, Spain and other European countries.

The accusations ignited an outcry on social media and calls for consumers to think twice about placing their next order on Amazon. The company responded by pledging to investigate the claims, saying that it was in its own interest to provide a safe and secure working environment for all of its employees, temporary as well as permanent.

“Amazon does not tolerate discrimination or intimidation, and we will act swiftly to eliminate any such behavior,” Ulrike Stöcker, a spokeswoman for the company in Germany, said in a statement.

Germany is Amazon’s most important market after the United States. It recorded revenues of $8.7 billion here last year, part of the $61 billion it generated worldwide. The company, based in Seattle, employs tens of thousands of people around the world.

Heiner Reimann of the Ver.di union, which represents employee interests at a plant in Bad Hersfeld in central Germany where the filmmakers recorded the security guards, said that the young men, sporting black bomber jackets, jackboots and short, military-style haircuts, made invasive spot-checks at the temporary residences where the workers were stayed.

In the documentary, a woman from Spain who gave her name only as Silvinia, told the filmmakers that the guards kept them under constant observation.

“They go into the house when the people are not there,” she said. “And also when they are there, sleeping or taking a shower.”

Mr. Reimann said some of the men were wearing clothing made by the company Thor Steinar, a brand popular among Germany’s far-right extremists, whose clothes have been banned from the country’s Parliament building, and several German soccer stadiums.

Patrick Hensel, who heads the security company, rejected the claims that its employees had intimidated immigrant workers, as shown in the documentary. He said the security guards in question would be confronted about the accusations and that appropriate action would be taken.

Mr. Reimann said Amazon should seek to set a good example in Germany of how to combine the use of temporary workers with high standards, and should be aware of certain historical sensitivities.

“We are talking about Polish workers who were kept in a holiday camp with a fence around it and were being watched by guards,” Mr. Reimann said in a telephone interview.

“We are in Germany,” he said. “We have a certain history to respect.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/02/16/world/europe/amazon-to-investigate-claims-of-worker-intimidation-at-german-centers.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Huell Howser, Folksy Public TV Host, Is Dead at 67

There was the beauty parlor owner who won a whistling championship; the woman who picked roses every day and delivered them to her local post office; the artist who made portraits out of clothes-dryer lint.

Huell Howser, who roamed the highways of the Golden State as the folksy host of “California’s Gold,” perhaps the most popular public television show in the state, died on Monday at his home in Palm Springs, Calif. He was 67.

Ryan Morris, his assistant at Huell Howser Productions, said he died of natural causes.

Over 27 years, Mr. Howser, a barrel-chested former Marine who spoke with a Tennessee-bred twang, hosted more than 2,000 travelogue-type shows for public television in his adopted state. Besides “California’s Gold,” his series over the years bore titles like “Videolog,” “Road Trip with Huell Howser” and “Visiting with Huell Howser.”

He interviewed orchid growers, steelworkers, sky divers and regulars at the weekly Friday night vintage car show in the City of Garden Grove, along Route 22 in Orange County, Calif.

“Look at this!” he would exclaim, or, “That’s amazing!”

Mr. Howser’s homespun ebullience resonated with viewers and interviewees.

“He paid attention to the California of farms, ranches, small businesses — the California of ordinary Americans,” Kevin Starr, a former state librarian and the author of a seven-volume history, “Americans and the California Dream,” said Wednesday.

“He had an almost ministerial or rabbinical effect on people,” Mr. Starr continued. “They would hug him, touch him. People forgot that the camera was there.”

Mr. Howser achieved a measure of national fame when he was parodied on “The Simpsons” in 2005. A character named Howell Huser, after visiting the Simpsons’ hometown, Springfield, went on television to declare it the “Worst Town Ever.”

Huell Burnley Howser was born in Gallatin, Tenn., on Oct. 18, 1945, to Harold and Jewel Howser. (Huell is a combination of their first names.). His father was a lawyer. He graduated from the University of Tennessee with a degree in history and served in the Marines. After working as an aide to Howard H. Baker Jr., who was then a Republican senator from Tennessee, Mr. Howser was hired as a reporter by WSM-TV, the NBC affiliate in Nashville.

He joined WCBS-TV in New York in 1979 as host of “Real Life,” a weekly magazine show in which he interviewed plain folks, like a window washer at the Empire State Building. KCBS, the CBS station in Los Angeles, hired him as a feature reporter in 1980. But several years later, frustrated at doing two-minute segments, he moved on to KCET and came up with the concept for “Videolog” — the predecessor to “California’s Gold” and his other series.

Mr. Howser is survived by a sister.

“TV ain’t brain surgery,” Mr. Howser told The New York Times in 2001. “I attribute any success I may have in television to the fact that I never took any courses in it.”

In 1988, in one of his most famous segments, Mr. Howser reunited an 80-year-old animal trainer, Charlie Franks, with Nita, the prized elephant he had turned over to the San Diego Wild Animal Park upon his retirement 15 years earlier.

Despite the long separation, Nita followed Mr. Franks’s orders: sitting with her front legs raised and picking up his cane with her trunk. He fed her jelly beans.

Closing the segment, Mr. Howser intoned: “What a glorious day when two old friends, Charlie and Nita, were reunited, spent some time together reliving the good old days and then said their last goodbyes.”

Article source: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/01/11/arts/television/huell-howser-folksy-public-tv-host-is-dead-at-67.html?partner=rss&emc=rss

Media Decoder Blog: Martha Stewart Living C.E.O. to Resign

8:53 a.m. | Updated

Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia announced on Wednesday that its chief executive, Lisa Gersh, a co-founder of Oxygen Media who joined the company last year, will resign.

The company said it would start the search for a new chief executive who would concentrate on building the company’s merchandising business. Ms. Gersh will remain in her role until a new chief is found.

“It has been an honor to lead this company with its iconic brands, loyal following and wealth of creative talent,” Ms. Gersh said in a statement. “There is an exciting future ahead for Martha Stewart Living Omnimedia and I am committed to working with the board to ensure a smooth transition.”

The announcement follows months of financial troubles for the company, which has been struggling to find profits in the financially troubled publishing industry.

In November, Ms. Gersh announced that she planned to cut back two of its four magazines and lay off about 70 employees, or 12 percent of the nearly 600-person company.

Earlier this year, the company cut $12.5 million in broadcasting costs by not renewing its daily programming deal with the Hallmark Channel, breaking its lease on its television production studio and ending its live audience for “The Martha Stewart Show.” In April, it was announced that a new weekly show, “Martha Stewart’s Cooking School,” would be distributed on public television.

While the company hopes that merchandising will help save the company, the latest earnings report showed a decline in income in all three of its divisions: publishing, merchandising and broadcasting.

Article source: http://mediadecoder.blogs.nytimes.com/2012/12/19/martha-stewart-living-c-e-o-is-expected-to-resign/?partner=rss&emc=rss