Czech TV
for Simon Kos
7.
and now for the evening
poem about events in the
listen you
think you
we interrupt this poem
to bring you this
know about
free speech
news broadcast composed
entirely by scabs
we had
soviet television
after this
political message
6.
Yes, that is exactly the problem with government-run television:
it is apt to become a propaganda tool of the ruling party. That is
why you must privatize the television station as you have so many
other government functions, to free it from political control.
Funny you should say that, given that your public television is sponsored
by Exxon. PBS ran a program on the global economy and human
rights. On some stations. At 11 PM Sunday evening.
My point exactly: government-run television is apt to reflect the
opinions of the ruling party. Wait, that wasn't my point.
You have never obtained freedom of speech, so you do not fear losing
it. You think the interests of the government are separate from those
of the media companies. Television is entertainment to you.
Well, now, that's not true: we can say anything we want in America.
Well, now, that's not true: we can say anything we want in America.
We see government as a bulwark against a flood. Whereas you are not
aware you are underwater.
5.
back
on
the
zz
zz
4.
the new
director is
the man who
was guilty of
CASE DISMISSED
he's NOT
affiliated with
our party
3.
So let me get this straight: Czech Public TV Director General Dusan
Chmelicek called for a forensic audit of the office of the Brno regional
television station, and, when indeed the audit revealed that Brno
Regional Director Zdenek Drahos and his people in management rented
out facilities or plots of the station without the consent of the
Czech Television Council, had close connections to Brno businesses
receiving commissions from the TV station without a prior public call
for candidates (and without a contract), and were broadcasting hidden
advertising, director Chmelicek recommended that the Czech Television
Council fire Drahos, to which suggestion the Council responded by
firing instead Chmelicek, quickly replacing him with Civic
Democratic Party affiliate Jiri Hodak, who then promoted (the
accused) Drahos to Program Director of the central Prague station.
Then the reporters at the Prague station, refusing to recognize the
new management, staged a sit-in strike and barricaded themselves in
the production studio, where there was no restroom, no water, no food;
and then (and this is just unbelievable to me), the police did not
go in and drag them out, but simply surrounded the station so nobody
who left could get back in, and the public brought the striking television
workers baskets of food and jugs of water and tied them to ropes
the workers lowered from the windows of the studio. And the workers
continued to produce broadcasts, and the management jammed those transmissions
and substituted programming of their own.
It's just politics as usual. I'm too tired to think about it.
And the ensuing protests were larger than any Prague had seen since
the fall of Communism in 1989 (a euphoric time when limousines converged
on prisons to escort the dissidents to political office). Even members
of the lower house of Parliament, president Havel, and numerous prominent
artists and scientists called for the resignation of the director,
the board, and a set of new laws (already drafted) to protect more
effectively the public television from influence by the ruling elite,
until finally Hodak collapsed from exhaustion and resigned for health
reasons.
2.
zz
on
1.
the air