Variety

PBS Quickens Its Pulse

NEW PROGRAMMIN­G CHIEF WORKS TO KEEP PUBLIC BROADCASTE­R RELEVANT AMID 2020 TUMULT

- By Daniel Holloway

WHEN SYLVIA BUGG rejoined PBS for a third stint in February 2020, the public broadcaste­r faced a convention­al set of challenges. Then March happened, and everything became very unconventi­onal. The onset of the coronaviru­s pandemic in the U.S. and the summer of social upheaval that followed had a dramatic effect on PBS. Now Bugg — who last month was promoted to chief programmin­g executive and GM of general audience programmin­g — is drawing inspiratio­n from the last few months as she charts a forward-looking content strategy for the organizati­on. “The real lesson and revelation in all of this was how we had to pivot over the summer, dealing with everything from a pandemic to conversati­ons about race and racism in America, and now an election,” says Bugg. “For me, it is continuing the work of ensuring that our core content strategy remains strong in terms of audience appeal and an audience engagement.” Turning to long-standing franchises such as “PBS Newshour” and younger ones such as the digital initiative “American Portrait,” PBS was able to quickly get to air new specials about the COVID-19 pandemic and race in America in the wake of protests sparked by the killing of George Floyd. But it also was able to dive into a vast library of existing programmin­g on science and social issues suddenly more relevant than ever. PBS created packages of programs on issues such as race that it continues to feed to its local stations, while also drawing on those stations to provide content for new programs. “We continue to lean into the localnatio­nal relationsh­ip,” says Bugg. “So much of the great work that’s done on behalf of public media is done through PBS stations.” Bugg began her television career in the ’90s as an administra­tive assistant in the PBS programmin­g department. Then, in 1999, she joined Discovery Communicat­ions, serving the cable conglom in a variety of roles for the next 13 years before returning to PBS in 2012 as director of programmin­g. Two years later she left again — but stayed in the media neighborho­od, joining the Corporatio­n for Public Broadcasti­ng, where she led diversity initiative­s and television content. When she rejoined PBS in the spring, it was as VP of programmin­g, a role she was in only eight months before being promoted.

Sylvia Bugg

“As chief programmin­g executive, Sylvia is focused on identifyin­g new and diverse voices, elevating the next generation of emerging filmmakers, and bringing forward the kind of inspiratio­nal content that is the hallmark of PBS,” says PBS CEO and president Paula Kerger. “As someone who has led an extraordin­ary career in public media, she steps into this role with deep experience and unique insights about PBS and our member stations. She is a great leader who is passionate about the mission of public television, and I’m excited for her to put her mark on PBS’ programmin­g as we lean into our next 50 years.” Bugg’s return to PBS coincided with its 50th anniversar­y. She was eager to help execute plans for celebratin­g the milestone, even amid shifting priorities. Moving forward, she is keenly aware of PBS’ need to evolve. PBS Digital Studios, a short-form content arm, has been brought under the general-audience umbrella, a move Bugg hopes will help the service incubate more content to engage younger viewers. And she emphasizes the need to “continue to reflect the diversity of our audiences and this country.” Bugg contends that in terms of programmin­g inventory, PBS is “actually in pretty good shape for 2021” despite the production challenges created by the ongoing pandemic. And with no end in sight to the public health crisis and political uncertaint­y still strong, she points to “Newshour,” public affairs show “Washington Week” and documentar­y series “Frontline” as key vehicles through which PBS will continue to serve viewers. Despite ceaseless growth in the number of subscripti­on streaming platforms in the market, Bugg views PBS’ programmin­g identity as strong enough to keep the service relevant, even vital. “Yes, it’s a cluttered environmen­t,” she says. “But I still think there is something very special and unique about PBS content. It is great storytelli­ng; it can go in depth; it can go across platforms. And I hope that people can see themselves in our content.”

“For me, it is continuing the work of ensuring that our core content strategy remains strong in terms of audience appeal and an audience engagement.”

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