Chicago, IL (October 15, 2012) -
Tavis Smiley, public radio and television broadcaster, emailed the
following letter Monday to Torey Malatia, President and CEO of Chicago
Public Media, regarding the recent cancellation of Smiley & West from
Public Radio International (PRI) by WBEZ. In the letter Smiley rejects
the claim that his public radio work has become “far less inclusive,” as
Malatia has suggested.
“I am as
‘inclusive’ as I have ever been because I am as curious as I have ever
been. I reject and resent the very suggestion by you in letters to
listeners that I do not demonstrate a willingness to ‘respect and hear
opposing views,’” writes Smiley.
Smiley’s entire letter is included below and can also be read at: www.smileyandwest.com.
Dear Mr. Malatia,
In
my 20 years of being a broadcaster, this letter represents the very
first time I have felt compelled to write a personal note to the head of
a local station.
I was content to
simply move on beyond a cancellation decision I vehemently disagreed
with, because I respect the public media model that stations know best.
That is until I was made privy to the content of your written response
to listeners who have been expressing disappointment about the
cancellation of Smiley & West on Chicago’s WBEZ 91.5 FM. I
must say that the spin found in your letter is beneath you, the station
you work for, and moreover the people you serve. Say nothing of the
fact that to my knowledge, at no point did you or your staff ever
attempt to communicate to me any of the impressions you so freely shared
in your letter to listeners.
The
disregard and disrespect for my work one reads in your letter to
listeners is too extreme to adequately address in this email; but when
you suggest that I have become “far less inclusive” in my work, you
advance a lie. A big lie. I’m about to celebrate 10 years on PBS and
12 years on public radio. As an African American in the
still-too-lacking-in-diversity world of public media, one does not
survive in these environs --- much less thrive --- if one’s
interview style is remotely akin to the intellectual bullying of Bill
O’Reilly. To compare my work to his in your letter to listeners is to
defame me in the worst way. I take pride in being the first African
American in the history of PBS and NPR to simultaneously host his own
signature weekday public television and radio shows, opening the doors
for other persons of color to now host or co-host award-winning programs
over public media.
Furthermore, I have
two public radio programs as you well know. One that I continue to host
solo, the other co-hosted with Cornel West. These
two programs, deliberately and unapologetically, could not be any more
different in content and style. NOTHING has changed about the format of
my solo show which has NONE of my opinion expressed as a part of the
production. You no longer carry that program either, which again, is
absent of my personal opinion and continues to feature guests almost
weekly who express differing opinions on the issues of the day.
Additionally, nightly on my PBS program I provide a national platform to
a variety of guests, including an entire week this past summer
featuring exclusively conservative voices. I am as “inclusive” as I
have ever been because I am as curious as I have ever been. I reject and
resent the very suggestion by you in letters to listeners that I do not
demonstrate a willingness to “respect and hear opposing views.”
IF Smiley & West has
experienced any erosion in listenership, it might have something to do
with being heard over WBEZ on Sundays at 12Noon when most Black
Chicagoans are in worship service. To so blatantly disregard an
obviously critical mass of listeners in the scheduling of this program
suggests one and or two things: that you don’t get it or that you don’t
care. A premier station in a world class city should not be still
struggling with how to truly represent the voices of ALL fellow citizens
in the most multi-cultural, multi-racial and multi-ethnic Chicago
ever. That’s a leadership deficiency. One could argue that it is easier
for an African American to be president of the United States than it is
to host a primetime radio program on Chicago Public Radio. It seems
that WBEZ thinks that just because WVON exists, that it is somehow
exempt from being “inclusive.” Respectfully, Mr. Malatia, it takes brass
for you to accuse me of being less than “inclusive.” Your job is to
program a station that is “reflective of a complex society of varied and
uneven life experiences, backgrounds, races, cultures and economic
circumstances.” Is this the best that WBEZ can do? How does cancelling Smiley & West advance that mission?
When Smiley & West was
rolled out two years ago at the annual PRPD convention, Dr. West and I
made it abundantly clear that we were trying something a bit different
for some public radio stations. A program that would feature our
opinions, but a program that would also have built into every show a
segment called “Take ‘Em to Task,” where everyday people all across
America could call in to do just that --- disagree with us over the
airwaves. It has turned out to be one of the most popular parts of the
program, giving listeners a say, whether their disagreement with us is
cosmetic or monumental. In addition, we heavily promote in each show
our “Speak Out Network” where the conversation continues seven days a
week on-line, and listeners can at anytime register or post their
feedback. Indeed they do. Smiley & West couldn’t be more democratic.
Finally,
since each of my radio shows is produced by a different team of
professionals, I find it curious that you would suggest to listeners in
your letter that my programs were “showing signs of significant declines
in production effectiveness and focus.” It’s hard to imagine that all
of my producers and engineers suddenly just lost their way. That
particular statement in your letter to listeners hurt most. I do not
abide insults to my hard-working and dedicated staff. I would never
insult the fine team at Chicago Public Radio in that way. Besides, have
you paid any attention to our most eclectic guest roster? High caliber
guests keep appearing on my programs week in and week out.
I
have only a First Amendment right to free speech, not to a radio
program that WBEZ is mandated to broadcast. You’re entitled to your
opinions of that program and your executive decisions concerning it, but
you're not entitled to your own set of facts. Particularly when those
“facts” are demeaning, derogatory and dead wrong.
I
appreciate the opportunity to have been heard over Chicago Public Radio
all these years. Even as other stations around the country continue to
add Smiley & West (including stations in Chicago we are in
talks with even now), I regret that you chose to deny the listeners of
WBEZ an opportunity to hear something a little different ONE HOUR a
week. To make room for yet another repeat of a program about cars that
isn’t even in production any longer. Is that what we need right now as
fellow citizens prepare to decide who is best to lead a nation where our
democracy is being threatened by poverty, where schools are failing our
children, where crime is out of control?
At some point, those who steward public media have to stop insulting those who support public media.
All best,
Tavis Smiley