Free Newsletter Subscription
        BNC All Access

Buster's Mail Will Go Through

By John Eggerton -- Broadcasting & Cable, 11/22/2005 12:09:00 PM

Looks like we'll continue to get postcards from Buster after all.

No longer eligible for government funds, Noncommercial WGBH-TV Boston's Postcards From Buster children's show has secured funding for a second season from a variety of other sources, including The Arthur Vining Davis Foundations, the Gill Foundation, the Annenberg Foundation, the Small Change Foundation, the Community Technology Foundation of California, the California Endowment, The Gordon and Llura Gund Foundation, the David Bohnett Foundation, and PBS.

For a time it looked like those postcards might be coming from the edge, with the show no longer eligible for funding under new Department of Education rules regarding its Ready to Learn grants for kids TV shows.

Buster hopped afoul of then new DOE Secretary Margaret Spellings with a storyline featuring a visit to a same-sex couple who tapped maple syrup. PBS also publicly expressed some reservations about the appropriateness of that plotline. DOE funds the Ready to Learn grants that provided the majority of money for the show's first season of 40 episodes.

But DOE has since overhauled its rules for the grants to target them to preschoolers, with an emphasis on teaching reading to low-income kids and accompanying outreach programs. Buster, targetted to an older child, features an animated bunny who visits real families to sample their cultures and community.

The Buster storyline likely contributed to DOE's re-writing of the grants, but it also squares with the Bush administration's general "basics and standards" approach to education.

Timothy Wu, from the Small change Foundation, said he had joined with other gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender community leaders to fund the show. "We are deeply committed to the series' editorial independence, free from attempts by funders to influence content," he said.

Even so, station spokeswoman Lucy Sholley said that there are no plans to include a same sex couple in the second season, though she said the show "would never exclude any family."

Buster is distributed by PBS to 59 stations covering 50% of the country.

Talkback
Related Content

No related content found.

Also by John Eggerton

Most Popular Pages
    No Top Articles
Newbay Business Information Resource Center

Featured Company


Most Recent Resources

Advertisement
More Content
  • Blogs
  • Photos
  • Podcasts

Sorry, no blogs are active for this topic.

Free Streaming panel_Grossman_Graboff_Rosenblum_Tellem_Wells_vertical

Free Streaming: Killing or Saving the Television Business

Photos from the B&C/Multichannel News panel discussion and networking breakfast held Nov. 17, 2009, at the Academy Television Arts & Sciences. (Photos by credit: Craig T. Mathew/Mathew Imaging)



Advertisement
About Us   |   Advertising Info   |   Site Map   |   Contact Us   |   Affiliate Links   |   RSS
© 2011 NewBay Media, LLC. 28 East 28th Street, 12th floor, New York, NY 10016 T (212) 378-0400 F (212) 378-0470
Use of this website is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy