FROM VTR TO CYBERSPACE: Jefferson, Gramsci & the
Electronic Commons by Mark Surman (msurman@io.org)
************************************ 3. UNCLE GRAMSCI AND THE
ACTIVIST VIDEO MAKERS After a year with the Klan and
right-wing preachers knocking at her door, Wendy O'Flaherty
decided to institute a limited access policy at her Calgary
community channel. She stated that "...a policy of restricted
public access to the community channel is preferred to
unrestricted access, with access being given to disadvantaged
and emerging groups and to individuals and peoples with
alternate material." This January 1973 statement marked the
end of the open electronic commons in Calgary, and reflects
the approach to community access television that has been
taken throughout Canada. It is an approach that is in theory
committed to alternative programming but which does not
guarantee free access to the community channel. This idea of
creating media spaces that are open only to those who are
shut out by other media can be linked to the thinking of
Italian communist Antonio Gramsci. Gramsci argued that the
power of dominant forces in a capitalist democracy is
maintained by cultural means _ by elaborate and unconscious
transfers of common sense that lead most people to accept our
economic and political systems as "the way things are", as
the natural order of things. [SIDEBAR -- This is Gramsci's
theory of hegemony. For more on this, see Appendix One: What
Is A Hegemony Anyways?] The only way to create a social
transformation in a society where culture is power, is to
fight back with culture. Thus, Gramsci envisioned
counter-cultural' projects created by people who had come
together in coalitions opposed to "the way things are". Such
projects would emphasize the ideas and perceptions of average
people, and would be specifically open to those who wanted to
take an oppositional stance. Gramsci, in his belief that
social transformation must happen at the grassroots, stressed
the importance of popular media in the struggle for cultural
change. >From his prison cell in the 1930's, he argued
that a "new literature" could not ignore popular forms like
the serial novel or the detective novel. Although very few of
the early access advocates would have gone so far as to
associate themselves with an Italian communist, those who
argued for "limited access" were talking about very Gramscian
ideas. As opposed to the Jeffersonian electronic commons
approach _ which implied that open access would automatically
equalize society on its own _ the limited access approach saw
the community channel as something that would specifically
serve counter-cultural movements. It also stressed that media
should be produced by the grassroots rather than about the
grassroots _ that the marginalized should make their own
images. This approach to community television saw itself in
direct opposition to the way the major TV networks were
constructing our imaginary worlds. The link between these
Gramsci-style ideas and the development of community
television is the National Film Board of Canada's Challenge
for Change program. Between 1966 and 1975, Challenge for
Change attempted to use film and video to "... help eradicate
the causes of poverty by provoking basic social change." To
do this, the NFB put film and video cameras in the hands of
social activists and marginalized communities, made films
showing people how video could be used for social
intervention, sponsored access television pilot projects and
published a newsletter that served as a philosophical focal
point for people interested in media as activist project.
Challenge for Change emphasized two points throughout its
existence _ that people who wanted social change needed a
media culture that was just for them and that these people
should be making their own media. This social change media
philosophy was a major contributing factor to the development
of grassroots-oriented, limited access policies at Canadian
community channels. Following the lead of Challenge for
Change and grassroots-minded community channel staff like
O'Flaherty, both the cable industry and government regulators
embedded social change catch phrases like "citizen
participation" and "community self expression" into documents
relating to community television. With these impressive
philosophical and regulatory underpinnings, it is hard to
imagine how the Canadian community channel could have gone
wrong as an outlet for social change media. But, in many
ways, it has gone very wrong. With the limited access
approach, the power to decide what is alternative, what is
community and what gets on the channel all lie in the hands
of the cable company staff. >From the perspective of some
social change access advocates, putting decisions about "what
gets on" into the hands of community TV staff was the
original strength of limited access. Most of the people who
ran Canadian community channels in the early seventies came
either from social activism or from Challenge for Change, or
at least were people who had been caught up in the grassroots
rhetoric of the time. These people were able to use limited
access to keep conservative or well established groups out
and bring marginalized groups in. But many early staffers
eventually left community television, or they started to
become more conscious of what would offend their employers.
George Stoney, the original head of the Challenge for Change
program, saw a direct link between this "employee
consciousness" and the move towards more conservative
programming. "I went up there in 1982 for a panel at a
Canadian cable television conference, and when I screened all
of the programs entered for awards I was appalled at how
uncontroversial and essentially dull most of it was. It could
have been made in the Queen's parlor. I divined that this was
because it was all made or facilitated by cable company
employees. Although most of the coordinators came out of a
good Canadian tradition of social animation they couldn't
help but look over their shoulders to see how the company
that was providing their salaries was responding." In
addition to the drift away from Challenge for Change idealism
and towards "employee consciousness", the type of people who
cable companies hire has also changed over the years. Early
community channel staff tended to be people with activist or
social science backgrounds, whose training was primarily in
people and ideas skills. Television technical skills were
often picked up along the way. This bias was stated in the
CCTA's New Communicators: "When cable managers advertise a
program staff position they would be wise to stress people
skills. They would of course say 'a knowledge of television
would be an asset'. That is not intended to play down
television skills. It is to stress that television skills are
more readily accessible than the community skills or human
qualities the job demands." The importance of people skills
over technical skills for programming staff was also
mentioned in the CRTC's 1975 brief outlining its new
community channel regulations. But this bias didn't last
long. The Canadian community channel today is looked upon as
an easy first job for people just out of broadcasting
college. These people have brought with them the aesthetics,
values and working styles of broadcast television. They have
also brought ideas about "professionalism" and "technical
quality" which are not very compatible with putting TV into
the hands of "the people". These "professional" broadcast
values have had a profound effect on the day to day operation
of community channels, and on the nature of access itself.
Some of the traditional myths surrounding TV are: (1)
television production equipment is hard to use and breaks
easily; and (2) only professionals should be making TV. These
are exactly the myths that community television tried to
undermine from the beginning. But any undermining that had
occurred was quickly undone by the new cadre of "community TV
broadcasting professionals". Many community channels have
rebuilt myth number one _ "this stuff is tricky" _ by
instituting long, drawn out, hierarchical training programs
that frame the technical end of TV production as a secret
art. As these courses are often mandatory, a group wanting
access may have to spend a year and a half learning how to
use studio equipment before they are able to touch the
portable camera and editing system that they wanted access to
in the first place. Also, these mandatory courses mean that
activist media makers with years of previous training or
experience have to spend valuable time jumping through
training hoops. Myth number two _ "professionals only" _ has
been brought back to life by cable companies who have
introduced "paid volunteers". Community channels who use this
system put new volunteers on boring, low profile productions
until they are "good enough" to work on higher profile shows,
for which they are paid. Such professional hierarchies
totally destroy any fiction of grassroots TV production that
may have been left over from old community channel rhetoric.
This move towards the "professionalized" community channel _
especially the introduction of paid volunteers _ was helped
along by the introduction of sponsorship by the CRTC. Since
1986, community channels have been able to sell PBS style
advertising billboards at the beginning and end of each
program. On an obvious level, this development has flushed
the non-commercial nature of community access down the drain.
On a subtler level, it has led to the professionalization of
production mentioned above, as well as aesthetic uniformity
and censorship. Rogers Community 10 in Toronto is rumored to
bring in more than $100,000 a year in sponsorship revenues.
With that kind of money flowing in, it is essential that they
provide "high quality" programming for the sponsors. In
community TV land, "high quality" is usually a euphemism for
traditional broadcast aesthetics, boring topics and a ban on
controversy. As sponsorship revenue must stay within the
community channel, Rogers pumps the money right back into
professionalization projects like the purchase of high tech,
hard to use equipment and the payment of "volunteers". Such
"professionalism" is a guarantee of "high quality". Another
factor which has contributed to the Canadian community
channel's shift away from its social change roots is an
overemphasis on the mandate for local programming. When the
CRTC defined the role of community television, it put local
community programming on par with the ideas of access and
citizen participation. This made sense at the time, as most
media images reflected the metropolitan location of the
people who made them. Except for local news, most of the
programming that Canadians saw in the early 1970's came from
Toronto, Montreal, New York or Los Angeles. The local aspect
of the community channel was intended to counter-balance
these dominant metropolitan images. But, as Raymond Williams
argues, there are dangers to this local focus of community
television. "The community emphasis is so right, in its own
terms, and could so notably contribute to solving the
problems of urban information flow, democratic discussion and
decision-making and community identity, that it is easy to
overlook the dimension that is inevitably there, beyond the
community _ the nation and the world with which it is
inevitably involved." E This overlooking of that which is
beyond the community is exactly what has happened in Canadian
community television. The local aspect of the CRTC mandate is
stressed by some community channel staff to the point that
geographically-generic, yet underrepresented ideas _ like
feminism, peace, environmentalism _ are often denied access
because they don't specifically identify themselves as
"local". Although the shift in staff, the opening up of
sponsorship and the overemphasis on the local aspects of
programming are key factors in the erosion of the social
change focus at community channels in Canada, the central
problem is still who ultimately controls "what gets on" _
privately owned cable companies . "A fundamental problem has
always dogged community access television (in Canada): It is
a democratic concept with a democratic structure. The
community channel is and always has been under the direct
control of the licensee." This is unlikely to change soon, as
cable regulations put the responsibility for community
channel content in the hands of the cable operators. It is
the cable company that will be sued or lose their license if
libelous, obscene or copyrighted material makes it to air,
not the community member who produced the show. This means
two things. Cable companies are very conservative about
programs that push any of these boundaries, shutting out
people who want to criticize the corporate media by
"sampling" copyrighted images and people who want to explore
sexuality through their programming. The cable companies are
also unlikely to give up control over the content as long as
they are held responsible _ meaning that a totally open
access channel is almost an impossibility without regulatory
changes. Strict cable company control of community TV in
Canada has been linked both to the blandness of the channel
and the disappearance of "citizen access". In Dot Tuer's
recent article on the Canadian community TV landscape, she
describes a boring and uncontroversial evening of programming
from the highly professionalized Rogers Community 10 Toronto.
It included: "...the Canadian Club Speakers Series, the
Cancer Society Fashion Show, Festival of Festivals Trade
forums ... and the Lemon-Aid phone-in show on cars." Hardly
the radical programming advocated by early access prophets!
Frank Spiller, one of the architects of the CRTC's 1975
community channel policy, talks about the disappearance of
access in a 1982 report entitled Community Programming in
Canada. "One has the sense, after looking at what has
actually happened, that while a genuine effort was actually
made to provide citizen "hands-on" access in the early years,
this has progressively declined so that today such a form of
access is the exception rather than the rule." Spiller's
comments describe the central problem of community television
in Canada _ it was set up as a Gramscian activist project to
promote social change, but it has become as timid, and often
as inaccessible, as other privately controlled media. Of
course the Canadian community channel is not a complete
wasteland. There are people in the cable industry who live
out the original ideals of Challenge for Change and access,
but they are far from the dominant voice in how community TV
is run. One must remember that the limited access approach of
Canadian community television originally offered itself up as
a solution to the problems of the American electronic
commons. As such a solution, it has not fared well. It has
not been able to sustain itself as a "social change media
space", as a place totally dedicated to the media empowerment
of marginalized communities. The reason for this may have
something to do with the total abandonment of the electronic
commons and guaranteed open access. A mix of free speech and
social change ideals may have proven a better approach. To
see how such a mix is possible, we should take quick and
creative walk with Gramsci on the electronic commons.
************************************************** For a
complete version of this paper -- including pictures, sidebar
commentary and a full bibliography -- contact Mark Surman
(msurman@io.org) This paper is COPYRIGHT MARK SURMAN (1994).
Permission is granted to duplicate, print or repost this
paper as long as it is done on a non-commercial (ie. keep it
free)and as long as the whole paper is kept intact.
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