The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

PBS chief: Diversity efforts not all ‘our best,’ changes set

- By Lynn Elber

LOS ANGELES >> PBS has fallen short on some aspects of diversity and is taking steps toward comprehens­ive change to be overseen by a new executive hired for the task, CEO and President Paula Kerger said.

While the measures took into account allegation­s that PBS favors white male filmmaker Ken Burns (“The Civil War,” “Baseball”) and slights viewers of color, Kerger said, they emerged from a deeper reappraisa­l prompted by the murder of George Floyd by a Minneapoli­s police officer in 2020.

“I think these are important moments to pause and to look at ourselves very carefully,” Kerger said. While public broadcasti­ng has a “long legacy of attempting to reflect our country and the diversity of it, I think we don’t always look as carefully in the mirror and recognize that there may be areas where we are not doing our best.”

Cecilia Loving joined PBS on Monday as senior vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion, reporting to Kerger. Loving has been serving as a deputy commission­er and chief diversity officer for the New York City Fire Department.

“My goal is to build upon PBS’s strong foundation through transparen­cy, trust, and ongoing collaborat­ion with employees and key stakeholde­rs across the public media system,” Loving said in a statement.

Kerger also announced a “multi-year, multimilli­on-dollar commitment” to support the work of “underrepre­sented” filmmakers PBS Paula the PBS President Kerger Executive speaks and Session CEO during at the Television Critics Associatio­n Winter Press Tour in 2019, in Pasadena, Calif. PBS is taking steps toward increased diversity to be overseen by a new executive hired for the task. Cecilia Loving is joining PBS as senior vice president for diversity, equity and inclusion, reporting to Kerger. through the nonprofit Firelight Media and its Groundwork Regional Lab. According to the group’s website, the lab supports “diverse, emerging documentar­y filmmakers living and working” in the U.S and U.S.-controlled territorie­s.

The effort will put 40 fledgling filmmakers in partnershi­p with local PBS stations, Kerger said during a virtual Q&A session Tuesday with TV critics Last year, Kerger said she “respectful­ly disagreed” with criticism from filmmaker Grace Lee, who had argued in an essay for the Ford Foundation that public TV’s deep attachment to Burns represents one white man’s “lens on America” at the expense of people of color. Other filmmakers built on Lee’s criticism after Kerger’s response.

On Tuesday, Kerger said her understand­ing of how PBS approaches diversity has grown since those remarks, based on conversati­ons with the filmmakers and what she called a variety of stakeholde­rs.

Under criteria to be applied across PBS broadcast and digital platforms, producers now must provide a “diversity, equity and inclusion” plan for every agreement and series renewal, with diverse representa­tion in all aspects of hiring, the service said. There will be mandated accountabi­lity reporting.

PBS highlighte­d the intended effect on PBS Kids’ programmin­g and its mission. Creators will be asked to describe how their shows will give all American children the chance to “see their lived experience­s reflected and celebrated through authentic stories and smart, funny characters.”

 ?? PHOTO BY WILLY SANJUAN/INVISION/ AP, FILE ??
PHOTO BY WILLY SANJUAN/INVISION/ AP, FILE

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