A growing segment of the public wants to be involved with new media. The boom in on-line computer networks and even radio talk shows demonstrates the demand and the need—which the media giants are unlikely to satisfy. Let’s hope that the Congressional watchdogs who are questioning the anti-trust implications of these new monopolies-in-the-making will speak out to preserve public access. In commercial television, everything is slick, but little matters. Its edges may be rough, but public access should matter to us—not only for what it is, but for what it can become."
Schechter joined the start-up staff at CNN as a producer and later was a producer for the ABCnewsmagazine20/20, responsible for 50 segments of the program; he won two Emmy Awards and was nominated for two others including for a 1983 investigation of President Reagan's plans to fight and recover from all-out nuclear war co-produced with Bill Lichtenstein.[9]
After working in corporate media, Schechter decided to found Globalvision, a New York City-based TV and film production company,[1] with Rory O'Connor. There, Schechter created and executive-produced the series South Africa Now. According to O'Connor, the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS) declined to distribute the program because of its anti-apartheid advocacy. However, Globalvision circumnavigated PBS and went directly to individual public television stations where it was carried in over 150 markets. Crew for South Africa Now were banned from South Africa itself, which made production more difficult.[6]
Schechter and O'Connor later co-produced Rights & Wrongs: Human Rights Television, which aired on American public TV stations and in over 60 countries from 1992 to 1996.[10] He was the recipient of the Society of Professional Journalists' 2001 Award for Excellence in Documentary Journalism.[11] Schechter's film WMD: Weapons of Mass Deception won the Austin Film Festival's Documentary Film Award in 2004.[12][13]
From 1999 to 2010, Schechter was also executive editor and "blogger-in-chief" at the now-defunct MediaChannel.org, for which he wrote a nearly-3000-word daily blog on media and society.[14] Known for his sharp criticism of corporate media, Schechter was just as scathing in his opinions of PBS, which rejected several of his ideas for documentaries including an American Masters biography on economist John Kenneth Galbraith.
In a 2002 column for Current, Schechter wrote, "PBS is a land of niches and bailiwicks, a Japanese-style employment system topped with execs who seem to have cushy jobs for life if they play it safe. They are thus very risk-averse and barely accountable to the public in whose name they are paid.”[15]
↑ "Past Winners". brie.hunter.cuny.edu. Hunter College’s Department of Film & Media. Archived from the original on November 3, 2014. Retrieved March 23, 2015.
The African Activist Archive Project website includes a description and documents of the Africa Research Group (ARG) of which Schechter was a founder; some of the ARG documents are from a collection he donated to Michigan State University Libraries. The website also includes a description and material of vision%20%28producer%20of%20South%20Africa%20Now%29 Globalvision (producer of South Africa Now) including documents and video of the television show South Africa Now of which he was the Executive Producer.
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