Alabama Senator Richard Shelby could safely be described as a pro-business
Republican.

But if nothing else, Shelby believes in constituent service, and one of
his constituents is Jim Metrock, another pro-business Alabaman who tends
to vote Republican.

As CEO of Metrock Wire and Steel, a family business, and founder of the
Business Council of Alabama, the state's largest business association, Jim
Metrock had dealings with Senator Shelby. A couple of years ago, Metrock
decided to get out of the steel business and do some community service.

Metrock was concerned with commercial television's assault on children.

After Pat Ellis, a fellow Alabaman, told Metrock about Channel One, he
began to research the problem. Metrock was surprised by what he learned --
a marketing company was assaulting eight million children across the
country with ads for junk food among other items.

Channel One Network, now owned by Primedia, Inc., is the company that
loans televisions to public schools, in exchange for the schools agreeing
to give Channel One access to schoolchildren for 12 minutes every day. The
marketers use this opportunity to pump the children with a 10 minute
"news" program, generally aired during home room, and two minutes of
commercials pushing such nutritious staples as Pepsi, Mountain Dew,
Snickers, M&M's, Twix, Bubble Yum bubble gum, Extra bubble gum and Fruit
Loops, among other consumer items.

The advertisers pay a hefty price for the ads, a reported $200,000 for a
30-second spot.

Metrock asked his 18-year-old son if he had ever heard of Channel One.
Yes, the son said, I've been watching it for three years.

Flabbergasted, Metrock launched his campaign. Early last year, Metrock and
Ellis traveled to Washington, D.C. to meet with Senator Shelby's staff
about the problem. In April 1998, Senator Shelby issued a news release
expressing his concerns about Channel One and calling for Congressional
hearings.

Channel One was not pleased. Executives pulled out their check books and
began writing $120,000 worth of checks to lobbyists in an effort to derail
the hearings.

First, they put on retainer an inside-the-beltway power law firm --
Preston, Gates. Then they brought on Ralph Reed, the former executive
director of the Christian Coalition turned corporate lobbyist. And then
they hired a lobbyist in Alabama to keep an eye on things.

Well, the months rolled by, and the lobbyists lobbied, and the hearing
date was delayed and delayed and delayed. Until this spring, when the
hearing was set in stone for May 20, 1999.

Then, all of the sudden, radio spots started airing in Alabama attacking
Senator Shelby, implying that he was part of a left-wing plot to put the
kibosh on the pro-Christian values of Channel One. We kid you not.

Here is the text of one of the ads that ran:

"Tragedies like Littleton, Colorado show how vital it is to teach our
children the values of faith and family. One bright spot is Channel One.
Channel One reaches 8 million students every school day, 250,000 here in
Alabama, with a television program that tells children to turn their backs
on drugs, reject violence and abstain from sex before marriage. And it's
working. The Partnership for a Drug-Free America found that children are
more aware of the risks of using marijuana because they are watching
Channel One. But some on the radical left want Congress to ban such
programming. Call Senator Shelby ... and tell him to stand up for Channel
One's right to teach our kids to say 'no' to drugs and 'no' to sex before
marriage. ..."

The ad was sponsored by an unknown group called the Coalition to Protect
Our Children. The group has a Montgomery, Alabama post office box. But it
has no listed phone number. And Metrock says he knows of no organization
in Alabama that endorses Channel One.

Channel One's lobbyist in Alabama is a man named Martin Christie. Metrock
spoke with Christie on May 17 and Christie told him that he knew nothing
about the campaign against Senator Shelby.

"I asked Ralph Reed if he knew anything about this advertising campaign in
Alabama," Metrock says. "He didn't say he didn't. He said that he just
wasn't keeping up with that."

He asked a Channel One executive if the company had anything to do with
the ad, and the executive said no.

In any event, the campaign to derail the hearing failed. It was held on
May 20. Ralph Nader and Phyllis Schlafly spoke against Channel One, while
a Channel One executive and a priest from a religious school in
Washington, D.C. spoke in favor of Channel One. The hearing gained very
little press attention -- an article in the Birmingham News, a spot on
National Public Radio's Morning Edition.

But the hearing has reinvigorated Metrock's determination to defeat
commercialism in the schools. He wants to start with Channel One in home
rooms -- which he calls "a two-by-four to the head" -- and then proceed on
to Coke and Pepsi in the hallways.

Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter. Robert Weissman is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based
Multinational Monitor. They are co-authors of Corporate Predators: The
Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Common Courage Press,
1999; see http://www.corporatepredators.org).

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

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