Pubdate: Fri, 14 Jan 2000 Source: Boston Globe (MA) Copyright: 2000 Globe Newspaper Company. Contact: P.O. Box 2378, Boston, MA 02107-2378 Feedback: http://extranet1.globe.com/LettersEditor/ Website: http://www.boston.com/globe/ Authors: Mark Jurkowitz and Don Aucoin, staff writers Related: http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00/n043/a09.html http://www.mapinc.org/drugnews/v00.n046.a04.html US FUNDS FED NETWORK ANTIDRUG ZEAL, REPORT SAYS Prime-time television's role as a combatant in the war on drugs was highlighted yesterday by a story alleging that broadcasters reaped financial gain by including antidrug messages in prime-time programs as part of an arrangement with the federal government. According to the on-line magazine Salon, the six broadcast networks - NBC, ABC, CBS, Fox, the WB, and UPN - have earned nearly $25 million from a complex advertising deal under which government officials and their ''contractors'' approved and sometimes changed scripts ''to conform with the government's antidrug messages.'' All the networks - except the WB network, which had no immediate comment to the Globe - denied that scripts or program content had been altered to accommodate the government. In a typical response, Rosalyn Weinman, NBC executive vice president of broadcast content policy, said the network "never ceded content control of any of our programming" to the government and "at no time did NBC turn over scripts for approval." In addition, Bob Weiner, a spokesman for chief White House drug adviser Barry McCaffrey, insisted, "We don't clear scripts." However, some networks did gain financially by airing programs with antidrug messages that met the approval of the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy. Certain antidrug themes within entertainment programs qualified as virtual public service announcements, allowing the networks to reclaim antidrug advertising time and sell it at higher rates. According to the on-line magazine, episodes of such programs as NBC's "ER," ABC's "The Practice," and CBS's "Cosby" were "assigned a monetary value by the drug czar's office and its two ad buyers." The Associated Press reported that the WB network altered an episode of "The Smart Guy" to make drug-using teens look like "losers" after a government review. Weiner said that more than 100 programs last year did receive credit for antidrug messages, and that roughly a dozen were rejected. But he insisted that those shows were only reviewed after they were completed. Another two dozen shows voluntarily approached the drug office for technical script advice on how to accurately depict drug abuse, but did not accrue any financial benefits for doing so, he added. "The law mandates that we have entertainment industry collaboration to fashion anti-drug messages in television programming," he said. "We plead guilty to using every lawful means to save the lives of America's children." But the extent of television's role in that crusade is at the heart of the explosive charges in Salon. If the government was actually involved in crafting antidrug story lines for television shows' "that's really frightening," said Robert J. Thompson, of Syracuse University's Center for the Study of Popular Television. "The most fundamental issue here is that short of debates and political advertising, has the federal government got any business using the television airwaves in that fashion?" The magazine reported that the arrangement began two years ago when Congress approved $1 billion to buy antidrug commercials on network television, but only if the ad time was sold to the government at half-price. The magazine said that the the Office of National Drug Control Policy offered to relinquish some of that cut-rate commercial time back to the networks "in return for getting anti-drug motifs incorporated within specific prime-time shows." "With the deal in place, government officials and their contractors began approving, and in some cases altering, the scripts of shows before they were aired to conform with the government's anti-drug message," according to Salon. On that point, the networks delivered unequivocal denials. "At no point has the independence or the creative integrity of our programming been compromised," said CBS spokesman Dana McClintock. Fox issued a statement that said that while the network "is proud of its work with ONDCP and remains committed to working with the office in promoting its anti-drug efforts. ... At no time has the ONDCP either sought or been granted creative control over Fox program content." ABC spokeswoman Julie Hoover said the network "never submitted scripts ahead of time." "This has had no impact whatsoever on UPN programming, nor has UPN actively requested any of our writers or producers to provide storylines for ONDCP sponsorship," said UPN spokesman Paul McGuire. Daniel Forbes, the New York freelancer who wrote the article for Salon magazine, said, "We stand by the story 1000 percent. They [the networks] are running as fast as they can. They're lying through their teeth." - --- MAP posted-by: Jo-D