Miami Herald (Sunday)

Newton Minow, FCC chairman who assailed ‘vast wasteland’ of TV, dies at 97

- BY BY TAMMY WEBBER Associated Press

CHICAGO

Newton N. Minow, who as Federal Communicat­ions Commission chief in the early 1960s famously proclaimed that network television was a

“vast wasteland,” died Saturday. He was 97.

Minow, who received a Presidenti­al Medal of Freedom in 2016, died Saturday at home, surrounded by loved ones, said his daughter, Nell Minow.

“He wanted to be at home,” she told The Associated Press. “He had a good life.”

Though Minow remained in the FCC post just two years, he left a permanent stamp on the broadcasti­ng industry through government steps to foster satellite communicat­ions, the passage of a law mandating UHF reception on TV sets and his outspoken advocacy for quality in television.

”My faith is in the belief that this country needs and can support many voices of television — and that the more voices we hear, the better, the richer, the freer we shall be,” Minow once said. “After all, the airways belong to the people.”

Minow was appointed as FCC chief by President John F. Kennedy in early 1961. He had initially come to know the Kennedys in the 1950s as an aide to Illinois Gov. Adlai Stevenson, the Democrats’ presidenti­al nominee in 1952 and 1956.

Minow laid down his famous challenge to TV executives on May 9,

1961, in a speech to the National Associatio­n of Broadcaste­rs, urging them to sit down and watch their station for a full day, “without a book, magazine, newspaper, profitand-loss sheet or rating book to distract you.”

”I can assure you that you will observe a vast wasteland,” he told them. “You will see a procession of game shows, formula comedies about totally unbelievab­le families, blood and thunder, mayhem, violence, sadism, murder, Western bad men, Western good men, private eyes, gangsters, more violence and cartoons. And, endlessly, commercial­s — many screaming, cajoling and offending.”

As he spoke, the three networks were just about all most viewers had to choose from. Pay television was barely in the planning stage, PBS and “Sesame Street” were several years away, and HBO and niche channels such as Animal Planet were far in the future.

The speech caused a sensation. “Vast wasteland” became a catch phrase. Jimmy Durante opened an NBC special by saying, “Da next hour will be dedicated to upliftin’ da quality of television. … At least, Newt, we’re tryin’.”

Minow became the first government official to get a George Foster Peabody award for excellence in broadcasti­ng. The New York Times critic Jack Gould (himself a Peabody winner) wrote, “At long last there is a man in Washington who proposes to champion the interests of the public in TV matters and is not timid about ruffling the industry’s most august feathers. Tonight some broadcaste­rs were trying to find dark explanatio­ns for Mr. Minow’s attitude. In this matter the viewer possibly can be a little helpful; Mr. Minow has been watching television.”

CBS President Frank Stanton strongly disagreed, calling Minow’s comments a “sensationa­lized and oversimpli­fied approach” that could lead to ill-advised reforms “on the ground that any change is a change for the better.”

For the criticism over his speech, Minow said he didn’t support censorship, preferring exhortatio­n and measures to broaden public choices. But he also said a broadcasti­ng license was “an enormous gift” from the government that brought with it a responsibi­lity to the public.

His daughter, Nell Minow,

Miami, Florida - Marie Josephine McKittrick Rowlee, a loving wife, mother, mother-in-law, grandmothe­r, aunt, and friend, passed away in the comfort of her home, with her children by her side, after a valiant battle with pancreatic cancer. She was 89. The only child of the late William and Rosina McKittrick, she was born at Victoria Hospital, and baptized at Gesú Catholic Church, in historic Miami. Known as “Maria” in her youth, she attended Sts. Peter and Paul Catholic School, where she formed enduring bonds of friendship and learned valuable lessons from the Sisters of St. Joseph of St. Augustine. She was an accomplish­ed classical pianist and enjoyed spending Sunday afternoons at Miami Beach with her parents and friends. When her father, a World War I veteran and Miami Herald pressman, died prematurel­y from cancer, Marie, then 16, took a night job as a long-distance operator with the local telephone company, setting the foundation of her strong lifelong work ethic.

She attended Barry College (B.A. ‘55), where she majored in Spanish, minored in English and Secretaria­l Science, made lifelong friends, and benefitted from the teachings and tutelage of the Adrian Dominican Sisters whose motto she lived by: “first to rise and last to

told The Associated Press in 2011 that her father loved television and wished he would have been remembered for championin­g the public interest in television programmin­g, rather than just a few words in his much broader speech.

“His No. 1 goal was to give people choice,” she said.

Among the new laws during his tenure were the All-Channel Receiver Act of 1962, that required that TV sets pick up UHF as well as VHF broadcasts, which opened up TV channels numbered above 13 for widespread viewing. Congress also passed a bill that provided funds for educationa­l television, and measures to foster communicat­ions satellites.

In a September 2006 interview on National Public Radio, Minow recalled telling Kennedy that such satellites were “more important than sending a man into space. … Communicat­ions satellites will send ideas into space, and ideas live longer than people.” On July 10, 1962, Minow was one of the officials making statements on the first live trans-Atlantic television program, a demonstrat­ion of AT&T’s Telstar satellite.

Children’s programmin­g was a particular interest of Minow, a father of three, who told broadcaste­rs the few good children’s shows were “drowned out in the massive doses of cartoons, violence and more violence. … Search your conscience­s and see if you cannot offer more to your young beneficiar­ies whose future you guide so many hours each and every day.”

Minow resigned in May 1963 to become executive vice president and general counsel for Encycloped­ia Britannica Inc. in Chicago.

Nell Minow said her father also was instrument­al in getting presidenti­al debates televised, starting with Kennedy and Richard N. Nixon, after watching Stevenson struggle to use the new medium during his 1956 presidenti­al run.

“Minow was appalled by … the whole charade of having to image-make on television,” said Craig Allen, a mass communicat­ions professor at Arizona State University who wrote a 2001 book about Minow.

In 1965, Minow returned to his law practice in Chicago, and later served as board member at PBS, CBS Inc. and the advertisin­g company Foote Cone & Belding Communicat­ions Inc. He was director of the Annenberg Washington Program in Communicat­ions Policy Studies of Northweste­rn University.

He also gave Barack Obama a summer job at the law firm, where the future president met his wife, Michelle Robinson. Minow also was one of Obama’s earliest supporters when the then-Illinois senator considered running for president, Nell Minow said.

Television is one of our century’s most important advances “and yet, as a nation, we pay no attention to it,” Minow said in a 1991 Associated Press interview.

He continued to push for reforms such as free airtime for political ads and more quality programmin­g while also praising advances in diversity in U.S. television.

‘‘In 1961, I worried that my children would not benefit much from television. But in 1991 I worry that my grandchild­ren will actually be harmed by it,” he said.

 ?? JAMES K.W. ATHERTON The Washington Post file, 1985 ?? Newton Minow was head of the FCC in the early 1960s before leaving to resume his law practice. ‘In 1961, I worried that my children would not benefit much from television. But in 1991 I worry that my grandchild­ren will actually be harmed by it,’ he once said.
JAMES K.W. ATHERTON The Washington Post file, 1985 Newton Minow was head of the FCC in the early 1960s before leaving to resume his law practice. ‘In 1961, I worried that my children would not benefit much from television. But in 1991 I worry that my grandchild­ren will actually be harmed by it,’ he once said.
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