During last week's presidential debate, Republican Mitt
Romney horrified some fans of "Sesame Street" when he said he was
going to stop federal subsidies of PBS even though he likes Big Bird. Many
pundits seemed to think the beloved children's character was headed for the
barbecue.
However, according to a story at money.msn.com, Sesame
Workshop, the nonprofit that produces "Sesame Street," gets very
little direct support from the government. The Corporation for Public Broadcasting
awarded the show $1.25 million in funding through a National Program Service
grant to PBS in fiscal 2011 and $1.4 million under the same program a year
later, according to a CPB spokesperson. Those funds represent about 2% of
Sesame Workshop's annual budget.
Sesame depends on PBS to distribute its shows and would be
hurt if government funding for public television ended, as Romney and others
have advocated. But PBS is just a gnat on the elephant of federal spending.
Zeroing it out would not do squat to alleviate the deficit. A scaled-back PBS
would prompt Sesame Workshop to find alternative routes to distribute its show,
which might be more expensive and may not reach the low-income viewers the
organization tries to reach.
Dark clouds have been forming for a while over "Sesame
Street," where the sun is always supposed to shine. Competition for the
preschool market is tough and getting harder. Sesame Workshop reported a loss
of more than $10.8 million in 2011. Early this year, the organization announced
plans to lay off about a dozen workers, its second staff reduction since 2009.
Like for-profit media companies, Sesame needs to pay top
dollar to attract talent. Carroll Spinney, who has played Big Bird and Oscar
the Grouch since the show's inception, earned more than $314,000 in
compensation in 2011, according to the organization's 990 form. Former Sesame
Workshop head Gary Knell earned $988,456, including $270,000 in bonus and
incentive compensation. Knell became the head of National Public Radio last
year.
No comments:
Post a Comment