Los Angeles Times

A bright beacon of success in TV

KCET head is credited with putting Bill Moyers and Huell Howser on the air.

- By Nardine Saad

William H. Kobin, the broadcast journalism pioneer who served as president and chief executive of KCET during its glory days by turning the debt- ridden public television station into an essential educationa­l and cultural institutio­n in Southern California, has died. He was 91.

Kobin died Friday at his Brentwood home of complicati­ons from Parkinson’s disease, according to his former communicat­ions executive and longtime friend Barbara Goen.

Kobin, who worked in public television for 50 years, served as KCET’s president from 1983 to 1996 and made important contributi­ons to the local station during his tenure. He is credited with “discoverin­g” broadcast legend Bill Moyers — his proudest accomplish­ment — and putting Tennessee native Huell Howser and the Loud family of Santa Barbara on the small screen in “California’s Gold” and the reality TV series “An American Family,” respective­ly.

Other notable programs he helped launch included

“Puzzle Place,” “Storytime,” “The Astronomer­s” and the public- affairs program “Life & Times,” all enabled by major commitment­s and large production grants from local companies and charities.

An Indianapol­is native who studied English and psychology at UC Berkeley, Kobin establishe­d himself in broadcast journalism as a news producer for CBS News and ABC before leaving network news for the f ledgling not- for- profit TV startup NET in New York, a precursor to the PBS system. When he joined KCETTV Channel 28 in 1983, he turned a poorly managed station with a $ 3.6 million debt into one of the country’s largest public television stations.

“I read the newspaper articles on an airplane coming west and almost jumped out of the plane,” Kobin told Goen. “When I saw the f inancial statements, I thought ‘ Where are the real statements?’ ”

Kobin, who prided himself on topical and sometimes controvers­ial news programs, was also contending with larger stations that were scrambling to find new sources of revenue and ways to distinguis­h themselves from scores of new television channels, many of which were biting into traditiona­l PBS program genres. He then nudged KCET to show enterprise, believing that “the more broad- based the sources of support are, the better off a public institutio­n like KCET is.”

By 1986, four years after staring bankruptcy in the face, the board of directors at KCET Channel 28 was able to pay off its debts four months ahead of schedule. At the worst of its f inancial crisis in 1982, the station was $ 5.5 million in the red, forcing it to make drastic reductions in personnel and programmin­g and to consider selling its 4 1/ 2- acre studios in Hollywood, according to previous Times reporting.

His best days at the station involved the receipt of production grants, he told The Times. His worst: sparring with the Catholic Church and former Los Angeles Archbishop Roger Mahony over the 1991 documentar­y “Stop the Church,” which chronicled AIDS activists disrupting a Mass in New York’s St. Patrick’s Cathedral. Airing the documentar­y led to calls for boycotting the station.

“It was an experience, the worst experience I’ve ever had in broadcasti­ng,” he told The Times. “It was being called a bigot ... just having people think that I personally was a bigot. Having the cardinal [ Mahony] hold a news conference and telling Catholics to stop supporting KCET. Having people think that I was antiCathol­ic. And having my board at the time split on the wisdom of having run it.”

The issue resolved over time, but Kobin held his position that “airing the f ilm was the correct decision journalist­ically.” In 2013, Mahony was relieved of all public duties over his mishandlin­g of clergy sex abuse of children decades ago.

When Kobin retired in 1996, he left the station as the third- largest public television station in the U. S., with a doubled weekly audience of nearly 3 million households and an annual budget of $ 43 million — three times larger than it was upon his arrival, according to KCET.

He was succeeded by veteran network TV executive Albert D. Jerome, then rejoined KCET in 2011 as a member of the station’s board of directors.

Kobin worked with news veterans Edward R. Murrow, Charles Collingwoo­d, Walter Cronkite, Howard K. Smith, Harry Reasoner, Andy Rooney and Eric Sevareid, among others.

“I worked with the best,” Kobin said. “I learned never to call a news program a ‘ show’ — that was for those entertainm­ent guys over there. The news division did serious programs, and we weren’t allowed to forget it.”

Moyers, President Lyndon B. Johnson’s former chief of staff and press secretary, was a young newspaper publisher when Kobin persuaded him to try television. Moyers’ f irst series, “This Week,” was the beginning of his long, illustriou­s career at PBS.

“He was instantly excellent on- air and the series was a considerab­le success — to everyone but Bill,” Kobin had said. “Shortly after the season ended, I received a letter from him apologizin­g for letting me down and saying he really didn’t think he was right for television and should leave the series. Fortunatel­y, after much discussion, he didn’t.”

In 1963, Kobin became the head of public affairs programmin­g at National Educationa­l Television ( NET), then a center for national production and distributi­on funded by the Ford Foundation, ultimately becoming the vice president of programmin­g.

He launched “Black Journal” in 1967. It was the first regularly scheduled series on network television handled by Black producers. The program incited a firestorm of protest for its candid discussion­s of racial disparitie­s and the plight of urban communitie­s. He also brought the distinctiv­e British series “The Forsyte Saga” and “Civilizati­on” to American audiences and launched public TV’s hit series “The Adams Chronicles.”

In 1977, Kobin became president of KTCA/ KTCI in Minneapoli­s- St. Paul, known as Twin Cities Public Television, and worked there for six years. He was also vice president at Children’s Television Workshop in the 1970s. That workshop ultimately became Sesame Workshop, the nonprofit behind “Sesame Street.”

Kobin is survived by his wife, Frances Goodman-Kobin; four children, Melissa, Matt, Chris and Jenny; six grandchild­ren, six greatgrand­children, and two stepdaught­ers, Jonna and Jessica.

 ?? Barbara Goen OUT OF THE RED ?? William H. Kobin pulled public TV station KCET out of debt.
Barbara Goen OUT OF THE RED William H. Kobin pulled public TV station KCET out of debt.

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