Nice Above Fold - Page 917
- More than 20 pubTV stations have aired the gay moms episode of Postcards from Buster, or plan to, producing station WGBH told the press. Included are big ones in Chicago (says the Tribune), Los Angeles (says UPI), San Francisco (says Insidebayarea.com), San Diego (says the Union-Tribune) and Seattle (says the Post-Intelligencer). Also: the Oregon network (press release), the North Carolina’s UNC-TV (says ABC11, Durham), Buffalo (says the gay paper Outcome Buffalo) and Spokane (ABC affiliate KXLY-TV). Some are airing it in daytime hours when kids are watching (S.F., San Diego, Seattle, Buffalo, Spokane). Among those choosing not to air the show, at least for now, are those closest to Capitol Hill: WETA and Maryland PTV (says DC’s gay Blade), as well as stations in Kentucky and Cincinnati (Cincinnati Post) and Moline, Ill.
- Mommygate is prompting a dialogue about tolerance. Columnist Ellen Goodman asks: “… how did acceptance become translated into propaganda? And what on Earth happens if tolerance is defined as intolerable?” (in the Seattle Times and other papers). But some religious figures warn that tolerance is dangerous if it lets schools “brainwash” kids to think every lifestyle is OK, AP reports.
- “I didn’t understand what all the hullabaloo was about,” KQED President and PBS Board member Jeff Clarke told the San Francisco Chronicle after screening cartoon bunny Buster’s visit with children in Vermont. The Boston Globe reports that the controversy over the “Sugartime” episode of Postcards from Buster coincides with talks over whether the PBS Kids series will be renewed for a second season.
- Members of Metafilter discuss Minnesota Public Radio’s new KCMP, with reactions ranging from “Now I can finally listen to music on the radio again” to “I could be unlucky, but every time I turn it on it sucks.” More praise in the Minneapolis Star-Tribune: “The idea that Public Radio would venture beyond All Things Considered and the lesser-known works of Dvorak to offer an alternative to popular music is so sensible, both as a business and cultural decision, it is remarkable it took so long.”
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