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-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of
Charles Jones
Sent: Wednesday, February 08, 2006 8:47 AM
To: South Florida South Florida Black Journalists
Subject: [Norton AntiSpam] [sfbja] BET passes on televising Coretta
Scott King's funeral

Gail Shister | BET passes on televising Coretta Scott King's funeral
By Gail Shister
Inquirer Columnist

Coretta Scott King or Kanye West?

BET went West.

In a shocker, Black Entertainment Television took a pass on live
coverage of
the King funeral yesterday, going instead with its usual lineup of
music-video shows from noon to 3 p.m.

"Was it an easy call? Absolutely not," says Michael Lewellen, BET's
senior
vice president for corporate communications. "We weighed a number of
different options. In the end, we chose to offer a different kind of
experience for BET viewers."

BET streamed live coverage on its Web site. On TV, it ran taped,
60-second
cut-ins from the funeral by BET senior correspondent Andre Showell. A
30-minute taped tribute was shown last night.

TV One and the Black Family Channel, both African American-oriented
cable
networks, carried the live pool feed yesterday.

TV One, based in Silver Spring, Md., reaches 25 million homes. BFC, out
of
Atlanta, 16 million. And Washington's BET - 80 million.

Do the math.

BET received about "two dozen" phone calls and "a handful" of e-mails
from
viewers yesterday, Lewellen says. That's slightly above BET's average,
he
adds.

The network's decision was based on its desire not to replicate live
coverage of the first lady of civil rights' funeral being carried on
CNN,
MSNBC and Fox News Channel, Lewellen says.

"If BET erred, we erred on the side of giving viewers a different
choice...
. We wanted people to have access to this wherever they were - at work,
at
home, traveling, at school. The online experience would give them that."

BET wasn't unique in that venue, however.

ABC, CBS and NBC all streamed live coverage on their Web sites. So did
MSNBC. CNN had it on the subscriber-only Pipeline. (A one-day pass costs
99
cents.) Fox didn't return e-mails seeking comment.

Ratings had no influence on BET's decision, Lewellen says.

The 20-year-old network, owned by media giant Viacom, averages 321,000
viewers from noon to 3 p.m. on Tuesdays thus far in '06. In prime time,
the
number is north of 500,000, Lewellen says.

King's funeral was an A-list event, with four U.S. presidents in
attendance
- George W. Bush, Bill Clinton, George H.W. Bush, and Jimmy Carter.

For MSNBC, going live with coverage was practically a slam dunk, says
Mark
Effron, vice president of daytime and live news programming.

King "was an eyewitness to history and someone who made history. She was
a
seminal figure in the history of the civil rights movement. We went
forward
[with live coverage] from the very beginning."

Had BET wanted live video, it would have had easy access through CBS
Newspath, the network's 24/7 affiliate news service. CBS is also a
Viacom
property.

BET's news division currently has 15 staffers, including freelancers,
Lewellen says. The network has no stand-alone newscast. BET Nightly
News,
anchored by Jacque Reid and coproduced by CBS, had its last showing July
29.

The division produces news briefs and issues-driven specials. Meet the
Faith, an hour-long Sunday roundtable with religious leaders discussing
issues, is scheduled to launch next month.

While acknowledging that BET "has not satisfied what every viewer would
want" in regard to King's funeral, the network provided "an informative,
enriching experience," Lewellen says.

The experience won't hurt BET's image, he insists.

"This is the same network that preempted more than three hours in prime
time
in September and raised more than $12 million for Hurricane Katrina
victims.
We use BET's brand and strength to reach our viewers in different ways."




 
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