Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

GMW: Monsanto Takes Over America's Heartland TV Show (Public Television)

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

GMW: Monsanto Takes Over " America's Heartland " TV Show (Public

Television)

" GM WATCH " <info

Wed, 15 Jun 2005 14:59:24 +0100

 

 

 

 

GM WATCH daily

http://www.gmwatch.org

------

Monsanto Takes Over America's Heartland

 

In India they're using a Bollywood star to promote their products. In

America...

 

EXCERPTS: " Heartland " has a two-year financial commitment, station

officials said, from the powerful voice of the nation's farming

establishment, the American Farm Bureau Federation, and St. Louis-based

agribusiness giant Monsanto Co.

 

Though the station retains rights to select its stories, it consults

with a national advisory board that includes groups like the National

Corn Growers Association, National Cattlemen's Beef Association and

International Food Information Council, a Washington industry group that

promotes genetically modified crops along with food safety and nutrition

research. Former U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman of Modesto has

also helped introduce the new national show by talking up " a tremendous

amount of viewers " for the California version.

 

for more on International Food Information Council:

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=64

for more on the National Corn Growers Association:

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=96

for more on the American Farm Bureau Federation:

http://www.gmwatch.org/profile1.asp?PrId=267

for more on Monsanto:

http://www.gmwatch.org/p1temp.asp?pid=25 & page=1

------

(Public television) Farm show goes national

By Jim Wasserman -- Bee Staff Writer

Sacramento Bee, June 13, 2005

 

For nine years a KVIE public TV team roamed California's 27 million

acres of farmland, its kitchens, farmers markets and big city restaurants

to bring one of the state's leading agricultural TV shows to a largely

urban audience.

 

But seven months ago the Sacramento-based station retired " California

Heartland " after 1,000 stories of making ice cream, growing Golden State

boysenberries and profiling celebrity food figures from TV chef Julia

Child to wine mogul Robert Mondavi.

 

It was hardly the end. The distinctive California farm show, retooled

and packing a new 20-show budget of more than $1 million a season, is

going national.

 

Sacramento's KVIE has scheduled " America's Heartland " to begin airing

throughout the United States in September. The aim is to repeat the

program's long run in California by roving across the nation's 2.1

million

farms, " from the rolling fields of the Midwest to the rough and ready

ranches of the High Plains, from the citrus groves of the Deep South to

the fishing fleets of the Far West, " as its promotional video to 305

U.S. public TV licensees attests.

 

Having built its California audience with a typically cheerful tone and

general avoidance of controversies underlying the state's food supply,

the new national " Heartland " has a two-year financial commitment,

station officials said, from the powerful voice of the nation's farming

establishment, the American Farm Bureau Federation, and St. Louis-based

agribusiness giant Monsanto Co.

 

Both sponsors decline, as does KVIE, to say how much they're spending.

But the investment is significant.

 

" It takes seven figures to produce a show like this, " said Jan Tilmon,

KVIE vice president for content and a creator of " California

Heartland. "

 

Don Lipton, spokesman for the Washington-based Farm Bureau, said:

" We're after an urban audience and it's very hard to reach that audience

with a traditional media. Public TV has a very respected brand and a very

respected audience. ... That's one ag groups would be struggling to

reach. "

 

With less than 2 percent of the nation's population earning a living

from farm jobs and no national TV series consistently telling farmers'

and ranchers' stories, agricultural officials have long been in search of

programming that reaches a broader audience.

 

" The sector as a whole feels undercovered and not adequately

represented in today's media, " Lipton said.

 

Already, KVIE video crews and longtime " California Heartland " reporter

Pat McConahay have been to 10 states, chronicling winter's maple syrup

harvest in Vermont, reporting on shrimping along the Gulf Coast and

profiling Maker's Mark, a small Kentucky-based bourbon distillery. Other

first-season stories completed or in the works include a Mitchell, S.D.,

tourist attraction, the Corn Palace with its murals made of grain, and

a revival of the Texas sugar cane industry for cancer research. Another

Texas segment profiles a family growing aloe vera, symbolizing Texas'

status as the nation's leading aloe producer.

 

Such choices reflect the series' traditional gravitation toward the

lifestyles of family operations and stories of " people with sweat on

their

brows and calluses on their hands. "

 

" There really is a tradition of myth of farmers as embodying all the

traits we like as a nation: perseverance, hard work and

entrepreneurship, " said the show's executive producer, Mike Sanford.

 

Federal statistics indicate that small family farms earning less than

$250,000 a year still dominate the U.S. landscape. But 68 percent of

agricultural production now comes from the 8 percent of farms classified

as " large and very large family farms " and corporate farms, according to

the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

 

Though the station retains rights to select its stories, it consults

with a national advisory board that includes groups like the National

Corn Growers Association, National Cattlemen's Beef Association and

International Food Information Council, a Washington industry group that

promotes genetically modified crops along with food safety and nutrition

research. Former U.S. Agriculture Secretary Ann Veneman of Modesto has

also helped introduce the new national show by talking up " a tremendous

amount of viewers " for the California version.

 

At Monsanto Co., U.S. director of grower outreach Julie Doane said, " We

obviously watched tons of shows before we elevated this internally. "

She called the company's eventual sponsorship a " natural fit. "

 

" It's a great opportunity for all of us to get reacquainted with where

our food comes from, the clothes we wear, the roofs over our heads and

now even the fuel in our gas tanks, with ethanol, " Doane said.

 

As KVIE officials wrestle with selecting a host and a permanent

reporting team, they don't know how many U.S. stations will carry the

show.

 

" Public television is not an Indianapolis 500 start, " said director of

program marketing Jim O'Donnell. " This will premiere and will probably

take literally months to start on all the stations. "

 

 

 

---------------------

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...