12 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, September 23, 1998 New generation keeps reruns alive Should we 'trust' media alliances? By Michael Galloway TV/New Media Editor It's tragic in a way. There was a time when you did- n't have to go to "TV Land" or visit "Nick at Night" in order to watch the golden oldies of television. Stations would simply run old reruns of shows to fill in air time. But those days are past. Our generation will prob- ably be the last who wonders why the passengers and crew ofthe S.S. Minnow never killed Gilligan so they could have one escape plan that worked. Someone born in the mid-'80s might have heard of the Fonz, but will they ever have a chance to love him? Finally, who will whistle Re-runs in Syndication Various Networks Various Times that catchy Andy Griffith theme after we're gone? OK, it's not tragic, and thanks to the ubiquitous pres- ence of cable in American households and with six major networks now, air time is no longer something that can be filled with old episodes of"The Flying Nun." Networks are grabbing reruns of shows still popular and having new sea- sons, and where that doesn't work, a catchy slogan doesn't hurt either. The CBS affiliate WWJ (Channel 62) has been a big Courtesy of Wrner Bros. Our good t'Friends" will now appear in reruns five-times per week this fall on WKBD, Channel 14. winner in the early afternoons with their "Big Time TV" line-up. They have the rather odd commercial with the boxing nun punching an oversized remote control and giant TV screens popping up everywhere, As the ads boast, 62-CBS is now the only place to catch "Seinfeld," weekdays at 6 p.m., and bookend- ing that "Must See TV" goliath is another NBC mainstay, "Mad About You" with Paul "I have no future after this show ends" Reiser and Helen "My God, I have an Oscar, and I'm still doing this TV show" Hunt. Of course, everyone knows that 6 p.m. is also when the most loved animated cartoon in history is on. "The Simpsons" has been showing two episodes a day on UPN affiliate WKBD (Channel 14), but now viewers can watch both episodes for a full hour of D'ohs and Woo-hoos to relax to after a busy school day. While many will be watching thisThursday to find out if Ross and Rachel will get back together, now you can see how they first got together, and then broke up, and then got back together, and then broke up, and then got back together and then broke up. (I think that's all of them.) Or you can simply marvel at the hairstyles in the'early episodes. Anyway, WKBD now airs "Friends" five nights per week at 7 p.m. With "Simpsons," "Friends" and the somewhat overappreciated "Frasier," WKBD is almost guaran- teed to be the ratings winner for early evening. In fact, WKBD will have better ratings in these hours then when UPN takes over at primetime. Oh, but not every NBC "Must See TV" show has reruns in syndication. Just half of them. The under- appreciated "Newsradio" will show at 7 and I I p.m. weekdays on WJBK (Channel 2), a treat for all those who love to watch "Kids in the Hall" alum Dave Foley try to keep his sanity while working under Jimmy James, who is half Dogbert and half the pointy-haired manager (from the "Dillbert" joke). Also, Phil Hartman fans get to see this much missed actor in his last role (although I myself will miss him more as Troy McClure and, even more so, as Lionel Hutz on the "Simpsons"). "ER" reruns have been taken up by not one, but two networks. TNT the Superstation (Channel 17). shows this pulse-pounding drama weekdays at 7 p.m., and WDWB, the WB affiliate (Channel 6), shows it on Saturdays at the same time. Maybe it won't be as exciting when you know what is going to happen, but there were no real surprises in "ER" any- way. Everything always seems to go wrong. But if it's good drama you're looking for outside of primetime, A&E (Channel 47) shows the classic "Northern Exposure" at least twice a day, once at 6 p.m., and the second best courtroom drama ever on television (I'm a "Practice" fan myself) "Law & Order" at 7 p.m. and every three to four hours. The FX channel (Channel 61) is also a home of favorite reruns. Mulder and Scully come really close to the truth again and again on "The X-Files," week- nights at 8 and I I p.m. Dennis Franz goes through leading co-stars like pez on "NYPD Blue" at 9 p.m. Trekkies can now see how it all began with the original series of "Star Trek" in "Special Edition" format. Tribbles and Klingons can be seen on restored footage along with interviews of the original cast weekdays at 7:30 p.m. Be warned, though. If you loved this show as a kid, well, you're not a kid any- more. Of course, when you were a kid reruns were used to fill the time between cartoons, news and prime- time. You didn't know that you could ask for more from them. Sure, "M.A.S.H." was good, and we'll forever know Michael J. Fox as Alex P Keaton (and Ricky Schroder will never escape "Silver Spoons). But they have nothing on "Law & Order" or "The Simpsons." The higher level of competition has forced networks to put out or shut down, which means gimmicks with old reruns or running episodes ofshows that are still hot. So even ifyou're upset that we're the last generation who will remember Tutti, you can vegetate those concerns away with the newer. higher quality reruns. Los Angeles Times HOLLY WOOD --People's eyes seem to glaze over when you raise the issue of concentrated media ownership - the fact that a few companies now control the lion's share of what the public sees on Tl radio and in movie theaters. Last week provided a reminder, at least in theory, as to why those glassy eyes should be opened. A New York Times report suggest- ed that Rupert Murdoch, Chair of News Corp., was responsible for cable network FX pulling the plug on a proposed TV movie about the Anita Hill-Clarence Thomas hear- ings. The implication was that the politically conservative Murdoch killed the project because of his sup- port for Thomas, a conservative Supreme Court justice. Senior Fox officials staunchly deied that Murdoch played any role in the decision. In a broader sense, however, one can hardly argue with the premise that Murdoch uses his far-flung media holdings - which include 20th Century Fox and the Fox TV network - to further his political and corporate interests, potentially influencing the content of entertainment and news. The Murdoch-controlled New York Post has made especially point- ed targets of his rivals, ridiculing Ted Turner, Time Warner Vice chair, and his wife, Jane Fonda, in addition to running nasty gossip about other executives at rival networks. News Corp. also owns publisher HarperCollins, which made news in 1994 with a whopping $4.5 million book advance to House Speaker Newt Gingrich, R-Ga., when Murdoch - a naturalized U.S. citi- zen - was seeking Congress' help in gaining approval to acquire TV stations using foreign capital. Gingrich, seeking to defuse the situ- ation, subsequently returned the advance. Fox News Channel, News Corp.'s 24-hour cable service, contends other media outlets harbor a liberal bias, a point made via the tone of its coverage as well as its promotional slogan, "We report. You decide." Even if not directed to pursue Murdoch's agenda, underlings can't help but know where his sympathies lie. Media consolidation has made this threat of corporate interest col- liding with editorial decision-mak- ing increasingly hard to avoid, meaning divisions at these massive communications empires must prac- tice what amounts to "trust me" journalism. In essence, "trust me" journalism involves situations in which a broad- caster or magazine covers a sister company and implicitly asks con- sumers to trust they will report the story as if there were no such ties. Magazines and newspapers usual- ly disclose these potential conflicts by adding a parenthetical note citing the shared corporate parentage. On television, stopping in midsntence to add such qualifiers is understand- ably awkward. As a result, incestuous relation- ships usually go unstated. Time Warner-owned CNN's entertainment news program "Showbiz Today," for example, doesn't refer to its link to Warner Bros. unless a story specifi- cally relates to the corporation. Criticism leveled at the studio for releasing records with explicit rap lyrics would prompt a mention of the connection, but a story about "ER" or a big Warner Bros. film such as "Lethal Weapon 4" would not. "On 'Showbiz,' I've always approached reporting the story with- out regard to corporate affiliations, so it usually isn't necessary to dis- close it, because we would never think like that," said Scott Leon, CNN's vice president of enterta l ment news. "We cover eervones mov ies not just Warner Bros. Indeed, few outlets are that - gent. Other than the show-ending logo, casual x ewers have no reason to suspect ""Entertainment Tonight" 4f keeping things in the family by tout- ing a Paramount mo ie or a seris such as "Frasier," which the studi produces. The same goes for ri al "infotain- ment" shows "Extra" (from Warner Bros.) or "Access Hollywood," partnership of NBC and Fox. "Good Morning America" and "Live With Reg is & Kathie Lee" both flogged the opening of Disney's Animal Kingdom park, just as "The Rosie O'Donnell Show" in- tially booked an inordinate number of guests associated with its studio, Warner Bros. Mary Kellogg-Joslyn, senior vice president of current programm for Disney's Buena Vista Television, stressed that the producers of "Regis & Kathie Lee" recognize the pro- gram will suffer if they allow corpo- rate alliances to undermine them in producing the best show they can. "I am very pro-synergy, but I also know that what must come first is what works for the show," she said. Even America's two most famous thumb-wavers, film critics Gene Siskel and Roger Ebert, don't no within their syndicated movie- review show when they are evaluat- ing films from their employer, Disney. "I don't notice or remember who the distributor is of the films I see," Siskel said in an interview from Chicago. "It's really a nonissue." As to whether fans realize he works for Disney, Siskel added, I expect the average person to kn that? I don't know, but I can tell them they don't have anything to worry about." Disney officials have long stated they get no breaks from the pair. If anything, they say, Siskel and Ebert regularly demonstrate their lack of concern about whose ox they (gore by panning the studio's films. "When we decided we were going to have 'Siskel & Ebert' on our 4 gramming roster, it was very clear it had to be church and state, and that we could never interfere," said Kellogg-Joslyn, who's also responsi- ble for that show. "I've never gotten one call from the movie division asking me why Gene and Roger did what they did." Certainly, news organizations and even fluffier talk and celebr shows generally go about their b ness without fretting about the far- removed entities that own them. Yet when synergy-driven encroachments on their indepen- dence surface, it should fire off a warning flare to everyone that room for impropriety exists - even if it is merely resulting from an employ- ee's overzealousness. Given that risk, wouldn' it be wise simply to lay bare these c tlicts and, to quote Fox, let the vie er decide? Having been around more than 20 years, Siskel and Ebert's show has doubtless built up a reservoir of respectability, but with a handful of media giants owning everything, can less-established programs be relied upon to match that level of integri- ty? Surely, these companies will 4, corporate parentage would never color such judgments - just as a cable news network would never air a major report with unsupportable allegations against the U.S. military, or Boston newspaper columnists would never create fictional charac- ters and crib jokes from George Carlin. Trust us. Courtesy of FOX television Agents Mulder and Scully can be seen searching for the truth in reruns on the FX channel. phone: 663.5800 1140 south university,(above goodtime charleys), AA mon.-thurs.: 9:00a-10:OOp sundays fri. & sat.: 9:00a-11:O0p 11:OOa-8:OOp MtCG AN 4A A - . a S 4 STREEP Continued from Page 11 "That's a perfect example of what I mean," she says. "When I go out and buy books for my kids, and I'm confronted by a vast array of books, as a consumer you tend to go with the winner. So I look for the silver thing on the cover saying the book won the Newbury or Caldecott prize. My quarrel with the AFI has to do with the fact that from now on, when I go to the video store - which has that same vast array - there will be a seal of approval on these films. But of these 100 films, there are only four that have female protagonists. And that's alarming to me, because that sends a signal to girls where they stand in the world and in our own mythic life, in our dreams. These lists are stupid, but they end up being important because they end up being history and that's where I go crazy." Though Streep's 18-year-old son, Henry, is heading to Dartmouth, she still has three daughters at home - Mary Willa (nicknamed Mamie), 15; Grace, 12; and Louisa, 7 - which, Streep says, precludes her from acting in more than a few films a year and always under specific conditions that will not have her away from her family for a long time. She lives most of the year in Los Angeles but still has a Connecticut home. 6 I J o,' : yf , j a ;; , ;Jl. I a real music. I . i I i J'x ' ccvy fe 5ov f)Ads o -the 6)Avzepd, vie ry T 9 0 @ % .~ 3D c~c' W1QV 9 . S. )flv* it Face t4! Staff! Students! Frvs~faledh btFaf f ic congestion? Concerned fihrot the environment? Tf qlin to save moneq? Share your ride to U of M by participating D SINGL s400P corms- trs a b t*r b e E w N N SAL in the AAIA RideShare program. You'll travel more smoothly and easily. You'llhelp to reduce air pollution. And you could save hundreds of dollars a year. Pick up a RideShore application at the Michigan Union information Center, the NOT-th Don't forget about the Daily mass meeting tonight at 7:30 p.m. It's your last chance to join the Daily. If you are at all interested in writing about the arts and entertainment industry - whether locally or nationally - we have a place for you. Stop by 420 Maynard St. tonight. we 1'hi4 ypvht W 2mlhiTY In un Inah~~ktal I I I I 1 I