Abstract

ABSTRACTBlack public-affairs television programming in New York City between 1967 and 1968 happened because of a convergence of several factors. They include (a) the upheavals in urban America between 1964 and 1967, (b) the release of the Report of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders (a.k.a., the Kerner Commission report) and (c) the assassination of Martin Luther King, the latter two both within months of each other in 1968. Other equally important factors include the organic development of Black American-owned and Black American-oriented media—newspapers and radio outlets buttressed and informed by more than a century of Black Left/Nationalist/Pan-Africanist/integrationist intellectual thought and African-centered/Afrocentric ideology. Using and critiquing the emerging scholarship on such programming, a brief historical review of the creation and development of 4= such shows in 1967 and 1968—WABC-TV's Like It Is, WNEW-TV's Inside Bedford-Stuyvesant, and National Educational Television's two locally produced (but nationally broadcast) programs, Black Journal and Soul!—shows that these programs sought to correct the Kerner Commission's critique that the American mass media show “a White man's world” by attempting to show, for the first time, a Black world to large mainstream broadcast markets.

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