Pubdate: Tue, 01 Feb 2000 Source: Summit Free Press (CO) Copyright: 2000 Summit Free Press, Inc. Contact: PO Box 8386, Breckenridge, CO 80424 Feedback: http://www.summitfreepress.com/contact_us_page.htm Website: http://www.summitfreepress.com/ Author: Doug Malkan NOTE: Doug Malkan is Vice President, Drug Policy Forum of Colorado. See http://www.drugsense.org/lists/ FREE SPEECH CASUALTY IN WAR ON DRUGS Meddling with TV The national press is accusing White House Drug Czar Barry McCaffrey of attempting to influence the content of television programming by editing and censoring the storylines of TV shows. FOX, ABC, CBS, NBC, UPN and WB have all admitted they allowed the White House Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) to review over a hundred scripts for popular prime-time shows such as ER, Beverly Hills 90210, General Hospital and Chicago Hope in connection with a billion dollar program that began in 1997. Under the 1997 deal, the government receives $1 billion worth of advertising spots from the networks for every $1 billion of anti-drug advertising they pay for - a "two for one" deal for the government. But as part of the billion-dollar deal, the drug czar's office agreed to release the networks from the obligation to provide free commercial spots if the networks included anti-drug messages in the storylines of shows. The situation was first exposed by the online news website Salon.com. At a House appropriations subcommittee, McCaffrey explained the credit system: "An on-strategy storyline that is the main plot of a half-hour show can be valued at three 30-second ads ... If there is an end tag with an 800 number for more information at the end of a half-hour show, it is valued at an additional 15-second ad. A main storyline in an hour-long prime-time show is valued at five 30-second ads, while such a story-line in a one-hour daytime show is valued at four 30-second ads." McCaffrey' office admitted that it received some scripts for credit approval before shows aired and suggested changes, causing critics to claim the drug czar's office was editing the content of television. Salon.com identified two-dozen shows where single or multiple episodes containing anti-drug themes were assigned monetary value by the drug czar's office. For example, to partially meet its "match" and thus recoup some of the ad time owed the government, Fox submitted a two-episode "Beverly Hills 90210" story involving a character's downward spiral into drug addiction. The episodes were valued at between $500,000 and $750,000, said one executive close to the deal. In another example, in return for several episodes with anti-drug subplots, "ER" redeemed $1.4 million worth of time for NBC. "The Practice" recouped $500,000 worth of time for ABC. In one government-endorsed plot on "Chicago Hope," the show featured a drug-induced death, rape, psychosis, a two-car wreck, a broken nose and a doctor's threat to skip life-saving surgery unless the patient agreed to a urine test - along with a canceled flight on the space shuttle. Other drug-czar-approved shows featured a career-devastating, pot-induced freakout ("The Wayans Bros."); drug tests at work ("The Drew Carey Show"); drug tests for a school basketball team (NBC's Saturday morning "Hang Time"); death behind the wheel due to alcohol and pot combined ("Sports Night"); kids caught with marijuana or alcohol pressed to name their supplier ("Cosby" and "Smart Guy"); and a young teen becoming an undercover police drug informant after a minister tells his parents he should ("7th Heaven"). At least one show, "Buffy the Vampire Slayer," was rejected by the drug czar's office, Salon.com reported. "Drugs were an issue, but it wasn't on-strategy... Viewers wouldn't make the link to our message," said a source in the drug-policy office who read the script. Since the story broke and was picked up in the national media, the drug czar's policy has come under fire from free speech activists, media executives and some politicians. Rep. Billy Tauzin (R-LA), chairman of the House Commerce Committee's telecommunications panel, is planning hearings this spring on the policy and its guidelines. He said about the program, "We're not going to allow the federal government to become a censor." In response to the criticism, the ONDCP advertising program has been slightly changed for now. "They've revised their policy to no longer look at scripts or do changes in programming for credit before a program is finished," White House press secretary Joe Lockhart said last month. But ONDCP spokesman Bob Weiner said the office will continue to do "consulting work" for producers who request their assistance. And TV producers are well aware of the ONDCP's "on strategy" guidelines for credits, which are available in a thick binder from the White House. Meddling with Books The US Senate has passed an anti-methamphetamine bill (SB 486), sponsored by Sen. Orrin Hatch (R-UT), that includes language making it a felony to "to distribute by any means information pertaining to, in whole or in part, the manufacture or use of a controlled substance. " If passed, bookstores, magazine sellers and newspapers could be held criminally liable by for having unacceptable content, and major Internet booksellers such as Amazon.com would be in violation of federal law. This provision would make some books, magazines and newspapers illegal. "Drug law reformers, civil libertarians and the general public need to recognize that Sen. Hatch's bill is a blatant attack on Americans' right to free speech," said Keith Stroup, executive director for the National Organization for the Reform of Marijuana Laws (NORML). "Citizens must act soon to amend or kill this terrible federal legislation." The bill has been forwarded to the US House of Representatives (called HR 2987 in the House), where on Jan. 27 it was sent to the Judiciary and Commerce committees for review. If passed by the House and Senate, it would become federal law. - --- MAP posted-by: Don Beck