Archived entries for Television

The Money Channel

Self-explanatory. Watching TV in Rome, January 31st.

(De)Programming the Middle East

Deprogramming

If you live in the US and need to follow events in the Middle East closely, Mosaic is absolutely indispensable. A thirty-minute long aggregation of regional television news programming broadcast on Link TV, the show is the brainchild of award-winning producer Jamal Dajani.

A Jerusalem native, and a resident of the San Francisco Bay Area, I spoke to Dajani about his work on Mosaic for the March issue of Zeek. What transpires is a fascinating conversation about the state of Middle Eastern media today, and its increasing importance for Americans.

If you enjoy this piece, check out Covering the Coverage, and Left of the Middle East. Short excerpts from my book, they cover much of the same topical ground as my conversation with Dajani, but focus on US and otherwise progressive Western news media instead.

Changing Channels

Speaking of Al Jazeera English, if you get the chance, check out  Roger Cohen‘s excellent op-ed on the Qatari broadcaster in today’s New York Times.

Discussing the difficulties that the service has had trying to find national distribution from America’s cable and satellite providers, the TimesInternational-Writer-at-Large extols the network’s virtues, noting, in reference to the same polarized context invoked in Friday‘s posting, that Al Jazeera is carried (by Yes) in Israel, where it replaced the BBC last winter.

Incidentally (and much discussed as of late) Al Jazeera English was also slated to replace CNN on Israel’s largest cable service, Hot, but was outbid at the last minute by Fox News.

This is the Modern World

For anyone who watches BBC America with any degree of regularity, I’m sure you’ve seen the New York Times ad that runs towards the end of every week. A pitch for The Weekender, a Friday-Sunday discount subscription package, the presentation is truly seductive. Featuring a multiethnic array of attractive, hip adults (ages 27-40, I’d wager), even though the background music is annoying, the commercial makes an excellent case for buying a three day subscription to the ‘Times.  Despite the fact that I’ve seen it over a hundred times, it still leaves me feeling positively predisposed towards the newspaper.

That is, until I read the Saturday edition. As Jennifer has noted time and time again, its always a little too thin. Nine times out of ten, compared to the rest of the week,  there’s rarely a feature story that holds our interest. Looking over today’s paper, I had to agree with her. Even though there was one or two pieces that briefly caught my eye, nothing quite grabbed my attention as compared to the Sunday edition, which while like any news periodical, can be inconsistent, is always a bit more compelling.

Part of this I chalk up to the fact that there’s only so many days in a week that a daily newspaper can be half-way reasonable. And, part of this I attribute to the fact that American news media tends to focus on Sunday as its "big" day, when, as someone who has lived a fair amount of their life abroad, I am used to Friday and Saturday newspapers being the Sunday-equivalent for said periodical mass. Thus, for example, if I could buy the print edition of Friday’s Haaretz here in the US, I probably would. I’d read that well into Saturday, and likewise follow it up with Saturday’s edition of The Guardian. Sunday would be ‘Times day.

Though I could seek my fix out online every Saturday morning, my solution to this problem is to mix things up. Drinking my first cup of coffee, I watch a half-hour’s broadcast of the BBC news, followed by another thirty minutes of Mosaic, the daily aggregation of Middle Eastern television news offered by Link TV. Then, I follow it up with an initial perusal of the new issue of The Economist, which we receive in the mail every Friday afternoon. Between these media, I get the equivalent of a foreign weekend paper, and, for all intents and purposes, a respectable alternative to Saturday’s New York Times.

This is why, when fellow editors bemoan the falling circulation rates of established periodicals like the ‘Times, ("They’re all fleeing for the web!" or so the refrain goes) I tend to bristle. People aren’t necessarily fleeing any specific medium. For one reason or another (think of my rather exaggerated example here), they’re simply diversifying how they get their news and culture. With so many new choices, online, on TV, and in print (like the  increasing US availability of UK periodicals), can you blame them?

I Heart Ms. Dynamite: Illa State Records Presents A Little Darker

Turn on the News

, AlbTwo years ago, I saw a colleague of mine on the German news program, Journal.  A frequent guest on the show, he always provided the Israeli view whenever there was an important event to comment on in the Middle East. After sending Robert an email to let him know I’d seen him on TV, surprised, he asked what I was doing watching German television. “Television news stinks here in the US,” I remember writing back to him. “The offerings are nowhere near as good as what you get in Israel. We try and watch as many European news programs as we can.”

Eating dinner last night, I recalled my conversation with Robert as I watched our latest local news import, Russia Today. Hosted by local public television station Channel 32, RT provides an amusing Russian take on international news. Viewing two segments – one on the debate about the establishment of US anti-missile bases in the Czech Republic, the other, the Venezuelan government’s granting of sweeping new powers to President Hugo Chavez – I was immediately struck by how nostalgic RT was for the Cold War. Speaking to Czech opponents of the American initiative and Venezuelan supporters of Chavez, Russia Today’s reporters made no bones about their biases. Anything that irritated the US was fine by them.

As someone who spent their teens in the US during the 1980s, to have imagined watching a Russian program on American television would have been unthinkable. Let alone, a Russian news broadcaster supportively reporting on the progress an arch-enemy was making in consolidating their revolution. By no means a politically progressive show, (witness RT’s endless profiles of successful Russian entrepeneurs) it was still a hoot taking this aspect of Russia’s political temperature as I switched back and forth between RT, Larry King Live, and yet another annoying Benny Hill rerun on the BBC.

“I hear that we’re going to be getting better programming in the near future,” I remember telling Robert in Tel Aviv as we sat together in his apartment watching live footage of Saddam Hussein’s trial. ” I sure hope so,” he replied, pointing to his TV and laughing. “Imagine if you could watch events like this. Its totally unprecedented to see such things, even here, in Israel.”

Given the eclecticism of contemporary Israeli media consumption, that, I’m sure of. For example, in December, the Guardian reported that Israel’s largest sattelite TV provider, Yes, had dropped BBC World from its roster in favor of the new al-Jazeera English network. Say what? Despite all of the criticisms levelled at the BBC’s Israeli coverage in recent years,  an Arab broadcaster beat out a longstanding British news outlet for sattelite television subscribers. How’s that for counter-intuitive.

When asked to comment on this, an Israeli relative of mine told me, “All the right-wingers are saying its Arab Israelis who demanded this change. Honestly, I think it was Jews. How else would the Ashkenazim who don’t speak Arabic know what the Arab world is thinking?”

Back on the home front in San Francisco, our viewing preference remains BBC World. Every morning, Jennifer and I sit in bed and watch a full hour’s broadcast while we drink our coffee and read the newspaper. Even though its only an hour long (and only in the morning,) between this, Deutsche Welle, and even Russia Today, its still a hell of a lot better than relying solely on CNN. Nevertheless, we hear from our cable provider that they’ll be adding a dedicated BBC World news channel very soon.



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