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-Caveat Lector-

Folks,

MoveOn has made it as painless as possible to participate in this
patriotic national exercise this Super Bowl Sunday. Even the
most deeply couched potatoes can click their remotes for Freedom! God
Bless America!    -Evan


Date: Fri, 30 Jan 2004 10:47:57 -0800
From: "Eli Pariser, MoveOn.org Voter Fund" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Join the One-Minute Boycott of CBS

Dear MoveOn member,

The CBS network still refuses to run our winning ad in the Bush in 30
Seconds ad contest during the Super Bowl.  The MoveOn.org non-partisan
campaign to get CBS to air issue ads continues, but we're not going to
let CBS's censorship stop us in the mean time.  That's why we're
spending over $1 million to air the ad in our swing states and
nation-wide on other channels -- starting with two spots on CNN that
will air during the Super Bowl half time.

This Sunday, during the Super Bowl half time show, join us in changing
channels on CBS.  At 8:10pm and 8:35pm EST, switch over to CNN to
watch "Child's Pay" on a channel which doesn't censor its ads.  We'd
like to keep a tally of the number of people who participate -- you
can sign up here:
http://www.moveonvoterfund.org/boycott/?id=2293-578216-xJyrcktyCFXmDhMJMQjfPg

The number of groups, individuals, and newspapers that have called on
CBS to run our ad is remarkable.  The National Organization for Women
and the American Civil Liberties Union have asked their own members to
call CBS.(1)  Senator Dick Durbin (D-IL) gave a powerful speech about
CBS on the floor of the Senate, saying, "Maybe network executives at
CBS are so afraid of political pressure from the right wing and their
business advertisers who are in league with the right wing politics of
America that they are afraid to put anything on the air that might in
fact make things uncomfortable. If that is the case, it is time for
CBS to announce the name of their network is the 'Conservative
Broadcasting System' and come clean with American viewers."(2)

28 members of the House of Representatives wrote a letter to CBS which
stated, "The choice not to run this paid advertisement appears to be
part of a disturbing pattern on CBS's part to bow to the wishes of the
Republican National Committee.  We remember well CBS's remarkable
decision this fall to self-censor at the direction of GOP pressure.
The network shamefully cancelled a broadcast about former President
Ronald Reagan which Republican partisans considered insufficiently
flattering." (3) Senator Ron Wyden (D-OR) wrote a separate letter to
CBS urging them to reconsider their decision.(4)

Today, the L.A. Times printed an Op-Ed piece of ours which lays out
the case against CBS's censorship.  That's attached below.  But the
editorial pages of the Boston Globe, San Francisco Chronicle, and many
other papers came out in our favor as well. As the Globe wrote,
"MoveOn.org's 30-second ad, which has aired on CNN, is a gentle yet
powerful depiction of how hard today's children will have to work to
pay off the country's mounting deficit. That's a vital message that
might get lost in a year of campaign rhetoric, and it deserves a
response from the White House in its own 30 seconds of imagery.
America, sitting on the couch, junk food in hand, just might sit up
and want to know more."(6)

Luckily, there are still some networks that do allow the free exchange
of ideas.  Please join the one-minute boycott: at Super Bowl halftime,
switch to CNN and watch "Child's Pay," and let us know at:
http://www.moveonvoterfund.org/boycott/?id=2293-578216-xJyrcktyCFXmDhMJMQjfPg

Thanks for all you do,
--Adam, Carrie, Eli, James, Joan, Laura, Noah, Peter, Wes, and Zack
  The MoveOn.org Team
  January 30th, 2003

P.S. Here's the L.A. Times' Op-Ed piece, which ran in today's paper:

One Thing That Won't Be Tackled on Sunday: Issues
By Eli Pariser
Campaigns Director, MoveOn.org Voter Fund
http://www.moveon.org/r?484

When the Super Bowl is beamed into living rooms around the world
Sunday, you can expect to see TV spots hyping cars, beer, razor
blades, three different erectile dysfunction cures, toilet paper and
snack foods.

The ads will be slick and clever, lavishly produced, brilliant in
their marketing. Some, no doubt, will be sexually suggestive or
violent. Most will cost $2 million to $3 million to produce and
broadcast.

But here's what you won't see: a single ad about the big issues that
face our country today.

Outrageous as it may sound, CBS has decided that ads selling erectile
dysfunction medicines and toilet paper are appropriate for Americans,
but serious discussion should be banned. An ad about our country, our
war, our president, the state of our schools or the size of our budget
deficit? That, in the eyes of CBS officialdom, would be too
controversial.

We know, because we tried. We thought that the Super Bowl, with 130
million viewers, would be a great place to get our message out. So we
held a contest on the Internet to select the best ad we could possibly
run. The ad we selected — from 1,500 submissions — shows children
cleaning offices, washing dishes and hauling trash. It ends with the
question: "Guess who's going to pay off President Bush's $1-trillion
deficit?" (It's viewable at http://www.MoveOn.org ).

But even though we were willing to pony up the $1.6 million to pay for
it, CBS refused to sell us the time, citing what it says is a
50-year-old policy prohibiting ads that take stands on controversial
public policy issues.

CBS claims its policy is designed to keep the Citibanks and Microsofts
of the world from buying time to tell Americans how to think. "It is
designed to prevent those with means to produce and purchase network
advertising from having undue influence on 'controversial issues of
public importance,' " the network said this week.

Sounds fair, doesn't it? But what it really means is that if
McDonald's buys an ad promoting its tasty Big Mac, no one can run an
ad that says Big Macs are full of fat and unhealthful. Pfizer can run
a spot saying it's "helping people in need" get medicine, but we can't
air an ad saying that Pfizer lobbied to weaken the new Medicare bill
to prop up drug prices. Halliburton has slick ads that stress its role
supporting the troops in Iraq. But CBS would reject an ad that pointed
to Halliburton's profiteering.

The fewer issue ads run, the more time there is for ads with
mud-wrestling women selling beer and leggy models peddling fast cars.
CBS execs think Americans love mindless consumerism more than anything
else and that it's their duty to pander to this.

But with "fairness" doctrines no longer governing the airwaves and the
media more concentrated each day, it's getting harder and harder to
engage regular people in political discourse. Even the town square has
been replaced, in most communities, by private malls, where politics
is not encouraged.

Instead of taking every opportunity to promote civic discussion,
commercial broadcasters like CBS shrink away. The airwaves are, more
than ever, private enterprises. And for that we pay a price: As public
political speech becomes more difficult and infrequent, the public
becomes less engaged in the policies, processes and laws that govern
us.

"Controversy" isn't the real problem. Network front offices love it
when one group or another protests sexy babes in bikinis peddling beer
brands, or violent video games in which the highest body count wins.
That builds buzz.

The CBS policy represents the triumph of corporate self-interest over
the public interest. This is the same CBS, after all, that yanked the
Ronald Reagan miniseries recently when Republican bigwigs complained.
As Sen. Richard Durbin (D-Ill.) noted this week, "These are the same
executives at CBS who successfully lobbied this Congress to change the
FCC rules on TV station ownership to their corporate advantage." CBS
simply would rather not risk offending powerful people in Washington
who decide such critical regulatory matters.

But try getting that issue into a 30-second spot for Super Bowl
audiences.

----------

Footnotes:

1. ACLU's message to its members is at:
http://www.aclu.org/FreeSpeech/FreeSpeech.cfm?ID=14812&c=84

NOW's message to its members is at:
http://www.capwiz.com/now/issues/alert/?alertid=4917801&type=CU

2. The full text of Senator Durbin's statement is online at:
http://www.moveon.org/cbs/durbin.html

3. The Sanders/Hinchey/Schakowsky letter to CBS, signed by 28 members of Congress, is 
online at:
http://bernie.house.gov/documents/cbs_letter.pdf

4. Senator Wyden's letter to CBS is online at:
http://www.moveon.org/cbs/Wyden-letter.pdf

5. The Boston Globe's editorial is at:
http://www.boston.com/news/globe/editorial_opinion/editorials/articles/2004/01/29/political_football/

The San Francisco Chronicle editorial is at:
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2004/01/29/EDGH14JB5E1.DTL

For other editorials and news articles on this topic, go to:
http://www.moveon.org/r?485


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Evan Ravitz     303 440 6838     [EMAIL PROTECTED]
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Kucinich: the ONLY candidate to vote against the
"Patriot" Act and the Iraq war:  www.kucinich.us
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