Adding Al Jazeera: how the Qatar-based news channel
made its way onto the airwaves of Burlington,
Vermont.
by Rao, Shakuntala
Cobbled Church Street in Burlington, Vermont, with its eclectic mix
of cafes, art studios and boutiques, is worlds away from the dusty and
chaotic streets of Damascus or Cairo. It seems an unlikely place to find
Al Jazeera English on the local cable-channel lineup. Yet Burlington was
the first American city to offer cable access to the Qatar-based news
channel, joined months later only by Toledo, Ohio.
While Toledo has a sizable Arabic-speaking population, Burlington
is predominantly white, with a tiny Muslim population, a handful of
resettled refugee families from Bosnia and Somalia who have little
interest in Middle Eastern politics.
Few on Church Street know that Al Jazeera has arrived in their
city, and fewer still subscribe to Burlington Telecom, a city-chartered
and privately financed cable company. Known locally as BT, its small,
experimental operations launched last year to compete with cable giant
Adelphia (which has since been acquired by Comcast). Why--and how--Al
Jazeera came to Burlington is less about Al Jazeera than about a city
that has always defied norms, even in its media.
A few blocks from Church Street stands a modest, two-story brick
building, BT's nerve center. When you enter, you are greeted by a
giant poster with an apropos logo, "Act Locally, Connect
Globally." BT's origins help explain Al Jazeera's journey
to the heart of New England.
In the early 1980s, many city residents were frustrated by
Adelphia's monopoly and the ever-increasing costs of cable. As
mayor of Burlington for eight years in the '80s, Bernie Sanders, a
self-proclaimed Socialist, set the stage for visionary change: a
municipal fiber-optics information roadway that would connect every
local household, library, school, government and business.
But it was Sanders' successor, Peter Clavelle, a Progressive,
who, following two referenda, decided to turn that dream into reality.
After surmounting several financial and regulatory hitches and
Adelphia's many attempted roadblocks, BT went on air in February
2006. It has grown quickly, providing residents with Internet, phone and
cable services for some of the lowest costs in the country.
BT's mere existence, some claim, has allowed Al Jazeera to
enter the city's media landscape. "A publicly owned cable
company like BT does not have to answer to shareholders," says
Lauren-Glenn Davitian, executive director of the Burlington-based Center
for Media and Democracy. "They are simply fulfilling their
public-interest obligation by providing the community a range of
views."
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Burlington has "an educated elite who are aware that local and
global issues are connected," Davitian adds. "They are more
tolerant of different points of view."
Al Jazeera's arrival also can be attributed to the fiercely
independent and free-thinking spirit of the state and to the
left-leaning sentiments of its citizens. At last count, about 40
communities in Vermont had passed resolutions demanding President
Bush's impeachment. The Vermont State Senate also approved a
resolution asking Congress to initiate impeachment hearings against the
president and vice president--the only state legislative body to have
done so.
Such politics are coupled with a deep resentment among many
Vermonters toward global media giants perceived as unchecked behemoths.
Sanders, now an Independent U.S. senator, has organized two town-hall
meetings focusing on media consolidation and cross-ownership. These
gatherings are often standing-room-only affairs in which people lament
media monopolies and their adverse effects on journalism and democracy.
Perhaps it is not surprising, then, that Al Jazeera's arrival
on BT's cable lineup generated little controversy. While
unavailable in most of the United States (see Broadcast Views,
February/March), the news channel has attracted large audiences in Asia,
Australia, Africa, Europe and Israel.
"At first it was a simple competitive decision," says
Richard Donnelly, BT's sales and marketing director. "When we
heard that Comcast and Al Jazeera's talks had failed, we decided to
look into getting the channel."
Jenni Moyer, senior director of corporate communications for
Comcast, which has 24 million subscribers nationwide to BT's 1,800,
wrote in
an e-mail to AJR: "While Comcast had preliminary discussions
with [Al Jazeera English] about local carriage opportunities, we did not
reach an agreement." According to Moyer, Comcast looks "at a
variety of factors when considering new channel additions, including
local channel capacity and alternative programming that's already
carried."
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BT staff downlinked Al Jazeera in November 2006 and previewed it
internally for three weeks. "I was just stunned at the quality of
the coverage," Donnelly says. "It was fantastic. There were
some amazing, eye-opening news stories about world affairs, women's
issues and stories about what we call the 'Third World.'"
The content also dovetailed with BT's mission: countering the
trend toward media consolidation and creating more diversity in news and
information. Al Jazeera English was added to BT's standard cable
lineup on December 6.
Donnelly says several BT customers have thanked him for adding Al
Jazeera. Among them was longtime Burlington resident Jan Schultz, a
software developer who admits he's never had much patience with
television news because it's "all sound bites." Yet he
gradually found himself drawn to Al Jazeera. "The stereotype of Al
Jazeera that they are a pipeline for Middle East terrorists to get their
message out is wrong," Schultz says. Impressed with its coverage of
world news, particularly its focus on Africa, he enthusiastically
recommends it to others.
Not everyone is a fan. Republican City Councilor Paul Decelles has
written to Donnelly and others expressing his anger that Al Jazeera is
in the mix. "Some of my constituents are Iraq war veterans and men
and women in the armed forces," Decelles says. "Like me, they
are patriots." Decelles, who says he "will not subscribe to
Burlington Telecom for this reason alone," has not watched many of
Al Jazeera's broadcasts.
But Nigel Parsons, managing director of Al Jazeera English, hopes
that cable providers in other U.S. cities will decide to carry the
channel, which also is available online through live-streaming and on
YouTube. He says it has gotten "tremendous feedback" in the
U.S. "We firmly believe that the more consumers see Al Jazeera
English, the more demand there will be for cable operators to provide
viewers with the opportunity to watch us."
Says Donnelly: "Ultimately, it is about giving consumers a
diverse choice in news and letting them decide what they want to
watch."
Rao (raos@plattsburgh.edu) is an associate professor of
communication and journalism at the State University of New York in
Plattsburgh.
"What I do think is interesting is that some of the comedy news programs
are so frequently more successful than the established news programs in
presenting some of the more provocative--dare I say inconvenient--truths
that emerge from the daily narrative of American democracy. Just as the
court jester was sometimes the only truth sayer who could avoid having
his head off in medieval feudal courts, a similar phenomenon appears to
have emerged in our culture."
--Al Gore, in an interview with the Politico's John Harris
"It's a bad time for me, and a bad time for the paper, but most
importantly, I think it's a bad time for the democracy."
--John Curley, deputy managing editor of the San Francisco Chronicle,
who was laid off--along with many of his colleagues--after 25 years at
the paper
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