RADAR ALERT: It's Baaa...aack! "Breaking the Silence" re-aired by PBS affiliate!

Last Sunday, KVCR in San Bernardino, CA aired Breaking the Silence: Children's Stories.

Many of you will remember that when this film was aired last October, its blatant bias resulted in a veritable firestorm of criticism for PBS, and condemnation from both the PBS and the CPB ombudsmen.

For those who need a reminder, a history of the controversy is included below and also found on RADAR's site here.

Last December, the CPB ombudsman found that the producer's attempt to justify excluding certain interviewees, "amounts to a plea of guilty to violating the fairness and balance standards of PBS."

Considering this, one wonders why a PBS station would choose to air this film now? Three possible explanations come to mind:

  • Cluelessness?
    Perhaps the management at KVCR is so clued out that they managed to remain blissfully unaware of the universal condemnation of this film's bias.
  • Arrogance?
    Could it be that the management at KVCR consists entirely of true-believers who intend to push this bias onto an unsuspecting public, regardless of whether or not it violates PBS' editorial standards?
  • A harbinger of things to come?
    Could it be that PBS has a real doozy planned for this October, and their stations are re-airing "Breaking the Silence" to soften up their viewership in advance?

This week please write to KVCR. Tell them:

  • The bias in "Breaking the Silence: Children's Stories" has been condemned by both the PBS ombudsman and the CPB ombudsman.
  • The CPB ombudsman has stated, "It might be difficult to find a clearer breach of PBS editorial standards," in regard to producer Lasseur's admission that the film's suppression of alternative views was intentional.
  • PBS affiliates should require that any material they broadcast must rigorously adhere to standards of objectivity and honesty. The taxpayers and PBS' donors deserve no less.

Address your letters to:

KVCR General Manager: Larry Ciecalone
and
KVCR TV Program Director: Don Leiffer, Jr.

You may email them at:
hometeam-at-kvcr.pbs.org or send snail mail
to:
KVCR TV
701 South Mount Vernon Avenue
San Bernardino, CA 92410

We also recommend you send a copy of the letter to PBS headquarters. If emailing, CC to the following addresses: pkerger-at-pbs.org, rnrauer-at-pbs.org, and jmcnamara-at-pbs.org.

If sending via U.S. mail, address the copy to:

Paula Kerger
President and Chief Executive Officer
Public Broadcasting Service
1320 Braddock Place
Alexandria, VA 22314

------------------------------

History of the controversy caused by the bias in "Breaking the Silence: Children's Stories":

  • Production of this film was paid for by the non-profit arm of Mary Kay cosmetics. The non-profit has a demonstrated history of one-sided portrayals of domestic violence.
  • The film's producers, Dominique Lasseur and Catherine Tatge, cherry-picked their interviewees, outright rejecting anyone whose story might call their biased premise into question.
  • Furthermore, although they knew that one of the mothers in their film had been found by the court to have committed child abuse, Lasseur and Tatge portrayed her in the film as a sympathetic victim.
  • In one of the very first analyses of the film, RADAR worried that it would be used by women's rights activists to stampede legislators into passing ill considered laws. It was! The Mother's Research and Reference Center organized screenings and demonstrations at courthouses nationwide. They even announced that one PBS affiliate planned to help them advertise and promote a special screening of the film for judges and other officials.
  • When one commentator suggested that the PBS station's willingness to provide special favors for this lobbying effort may be considered evidence of partisanship, which would violate PBS' own mission statement as well as their Congressional mandate, the evidence was quickly removed from the web.
  • This is a film that was so biased that it was roundly criticized by both the PBS and the CPB ombudsmen. PBS' own ombudsman said the program "had almost no balance".

    And echoing RADAR's prediction, CPB ombudsman Ken Bode opined, "PBS may find it has been the launching pad for a very partisan effort to drive public policy and law."

    But Bode went even further. He quoted producer Dominique Lasseur as stating that the lack of balance and fairness was intentional, and concluded, "It might be difficult to find a clearer breach of PBS editorial standards".

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
Date of RADAR Release: August 21, 2006

Register now for the National Family Law Reform Conference, to be held September 15-16 in Alexandria, Virginia (near Washington, DC). The conference will address the crisis of family law, including biased family courts, false allegations of domestic violence, child abuse, and much more. For more information: http://www.acfc.org/site/Calendar?view=Detail&id=100021

R.A.D.A.R. – Respecting Accuracy in Domestic Abuse Reporting – is a network of concerned men and women working to assure that the problem of domestic violence is treated in a balanced and effective manner. http://www.mediaradar.org/.

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Comments

I clicked on the Breaking the Silence link above, then did a search on PBS's web site on the same string. Part of what I read follows:

"PBS has received a substantial body of analysis and documentation from both supporters of the documentary and its critics.

"It is clear to us that this complex and important issue would benefit from further examination. To that end, PBS will commission an hour-long documentary for that purpose. Plans call for the documentary to be produced and broadcast in Spring 2006. We expect that the hour-long treatment of the subject will allow ample opportunity for doctors, psychologists, judges, parent advocates and victims of abuse to have their perspectives shared, challenged and debated."

Does anybody know what happened with the supposed new documentary? Is that the one they never showed??

-Axolotl

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That's the one alright. They promised a rebuttal documentary to silence the critics (no one but hardcore feminists and the beureaucrats that have their heads burried in the feminists asses thought that peice of crap excuse for a documentary was based on any legitamite research)

But PBS never actually made the fact based documentary to contradict the lies told in Breaking the Silence.

Now it's time to get on their case again and hold them to those statements. Breaking the silence is fear mongoring crap and should never be shown to anyone without a big red warning that 'what you are about to see is based on an ideology that seeks to paint all males with the same brush of fear and distust and not in any way based on fact'

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Thanks for the update, Paragon. If for no other reason, they will not show the new one because they are scared of looking bad (i.e. people would see they were 'wrong' the first time around. I know PBS is not supposed to take sides, but I'm sure that some will realize that in this case, they were towing the party line).

-Axolotl

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more and more like PBS (and MKAF) got away with this one to me.

Apparently, the show they promised is the one just out. Here is a link to a page for children to discuss the piece. The new production apparently focuses on the kids.

In my opinion, the only honest program would have been one that systematically went through every point in the original (and attributed each point to the original). For each point, a rebuttal would have been filmed. It doesn't appear that that is what has happened.

Looks like PBS has saved both its faces.

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