Thursday, February 3, 2011

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/30/al-jazeera-english-us_n_816030.htmlhttp://www.huffingtonpost.com/2011/01/30/al-jazeera-english-us_n_816030.html




Al Jazeera English Blacked Out Across Most Of U.S.

Al Jazeera English
First Posted: 01/30/11 05:00 PM Updated: 02/ 1/11 08:39 AM
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WASHINGTON - Canadian television viewers looking for the most thorough and in-depth coverage of the uprising in Egypt have the option of tuning into Al Jazeera English, whose on-the-ground coverage of the turmoil is unmatched by any other outlet. American viewers, meanwhile, have little choice but to wait until one of the U.S. cable-company-approved networks broadcasts footage from AJE, which the company makes publicly available. What they can't do is watch the network directly.
Other than in a handful of pockets across the U.S. - including Ohio, Vermont and Washington, D.C. - cable carriers do not give viewers the choice of watching Al Jazeera. That corporate censorship comes as American diplomats harshly criticize the Egyptian government for blocking Internet communication inside the country and as Egypt attempts to block Al Jazeera from broadcasting.
The result of the Al Jazeera English blackout in the United States has been a surge in traffic to the media outlet's website, where footage can be seen streaming live. The last 24 hours have seen a two-and-a-half thousand percent increase in web traffic, Tony Burman, head of North American strategies for Al Jazeera English, told HuffPost. Sixty percent of that traffic, he said, has come from the United States.
Al Jazeera English launched in the fall of 2006, opening a large bureau on K Street in downtown Washington, but has made little progress in persuading cable companies to offer the channel to its customers.
The objections from the cable companies have come for both political and commercial reasons, said Burman, the former editor-in-chief of the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation. "In 2006, pre-Obama, the experience was a challenging one. Essentially this was a period when a lot of negative stereotypes were associated with Al Jazeera. The effort was a difficult one," he said, citing the Bush administration's public hostility to the network.
"There was reluctance from these companies to embark in a direction that would perhaps be opposed by the Bush administration. I think that's changed. I think if anything the Obama administration has indicated to Al Jazeera that it sees us as part of the solution, not part of the problem," Burman said.
Cable companies are also worried, said Burman, that they will lose more subscribers than they will gain by granting access to Al Jazeera. The Canadian experience, he said, should put those fears to rest. In Canada, national regulators can require cable companies to provide certain channels and Al Jazeera ran a successful campaign to encourage Canadians to push the government to intervene. There has been extremely little negative reaction over the past year as Canadians have been able to view the channel and decide for themselves. "We had a completely different process and result here in Canada -- a grassroots campaign that was overwhelmingly successful," said Avi Lewis, the former host of Al Jazeera's Frontline USA. (He now freelances for Al Jazeera while working on a documentary project with his wife, Naomi Klein.)
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Media critics have begun to push for Al Jazeera's inclusion. "It is downright un-American to still refuse to carry it," wrote Jeff Jarvis on Sunday. "Vital, world-changing news is occurring in the Middle East and no one-not the xenophobic or celebrity-obsessed or cut-to-the-bone American media-can bring the perspective, insight, and on-the-scene reporting Al Jazeera English can."
Al Jazeera follows a public broadcasting model similar to the BBC, CBC and NPR and is largely funded by the government of Qatar, which Burman said takes a completely hands-off approach to content. Al Jazeera is the scourge of authoritarian governments around the Middle East, which attempt to block it. The network, however, covers much more than the Middle East, and now has more bureaus in Latin America than CNN and the BBC, said Burman. "As proud as we are of our Middle Eastern coverage, we are in other places in the world that are never, never seen on television in American homes," he said.
Burman said that he will use the experience with the Tunisia and Egyptian uprisings in upcoming meetings with cable providers as the network continues its push. Comcast did not respond to requests for comment.
"Why in the most vibrant democracy in the world, where engagement and knowledge of the world is probably the most important, why it's not available is one of these things that would take a PhD scholar to understand," Burman said.
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UPDATE I: A reader emails to say that Al Jazeera programming is also being carried by the satellite channel LinkTV, which can be found on channel 9410 on Dish Network and 375 on DirecTV.
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UPDATE II: Another reader emails to say that Al Jazeera broadcasts over some of the Pacifica stations, including WBAI (New York, 5-6 AM, 99.5 FM), KPFA (Berkeley, 6-7 AM, 94.1 FM) and KPFT (Houston, 5-6 AM, 90.1 FM).
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UPDATE III: Comcast spokesperson Alana Davis responded to a HuffPost request for comment. "We do not offer Al Jazeera English on our video service," said Davis. Asked whether Comcast might reconsider its position, Davis said: "We can't speculate; however, we regularly examine our channel lineups and talk with a wide range of programmers to ensure that we are bringing the content that our customers want the most."
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UPDATE IV: Free Speech TV shows Al Jazeera Headline News and The Riz Khan show on Dish Network channel 9415 and DIRECTV channel 348, according to a reader.
Stephanie Misar, marketing director with MHz Networks, an independent, non-profit public broadcaster, also provided details as to where and how viewers may be able to find Al Jazeera English. "Viewers can watch full time, 24/7 Al Jazeera English via MHz Networks 5 in the Washington, DC metro on channels: Over the air digital broadcast 30.5, Comcast 275, Cox 474, and Verizon FiOS 457," she said in an email.
Misar added: "Weekday daily AJE newscasts (8 AM and 7 PM ET) and weekend (7 PM ET) are available on the national channel of MHz Networks, called MHz Worldview, in over 35 million households across the country through our network of broadcast and cable affiliates in: Los Angeles- KCET; San Bernardino, CA- KVCR; Chicago, IL- WYCC; San Francisco,CA- KCSM; Washington, DC- WNVC/MHz Networks; Tacoma-Seattle, WA- KBTC; Cleveland/Akron/Youngstown, OH- WNEO/WEAO; Minneapolis, MN- MPS Cable; Miami, FL- WLRN; Denver, CO- KBDI; Orlando-Daytona Beach-Melbourne, FL- WCEU; Charlotte, NC- WTVI; Nashville, TN- WNPT; Salt Lake City, UT- UEN (statewide); Grand Rapids/ Kalamazoo/Beaver Creek, MI- WGVU; Spokane/Yakima, WA- KWSU/KTNW; New Orleans, LA- WLAE; Las Vegas, NV- Vegas PBS; Richmond, VA- WCVE; Flint, MI- WDCQ; Charleston, IL- WEIU; Plattsburgh, NY- Mountain Lake PBS (WCFE); Lansing, MI- LCC TV; Moline, IL (Quad Cities)- WQPT; Warrensburg, MO- KMOS; Topeka, KS- KTWU; Rochester-Austin, MN- KSMQ; Charlottesville, VA- WHTJ; St.Paul, MN- St. Paul Neighborhood Network; Stanford, CA- Stanford University Cable.
"The newscasts are also available on MHz Worldview nationally via DirecTV channel 2183. Channel numbers and service providers are available here.
"One on One with Riz Khan from AJE is also available on our national channel on Sundays at 10:30 AM ET and can be watched via the network of affiliates as well. MHz Networks is an independent, non-profit public broadcaster, bringing international perspectives and programming to globally-minded viewers throughout the United States."
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UPDATE V: Paige Austin, a student at the John F. Kennedy School of Government at Harvard University and a former associate producer for Al Jazeera English in Doha, wrote about U.S. cable's refusal to carry the station in a 2010 paper. Austin argues that AJE's willingness to show graphic suffering in the developed world is at odds with the U.S. networks' practice. It's not that American viewers are unaccustomed to seeing violent imagery on the television, but the selection of which mangled corpses to show -- civilians killed by U.S. bombs in Afghanistan or the sons of former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein -- is what makes the difference.
Austin writes:
So why has Al Jazeera English found it so difficult to gain a foothold in the United States? One reason is a perceived lack of audience; the network is not typical American television fare, and cable operators doubt many Americans would embrace the change. During the two years I worked at Al Jazeera English, I was continually amazed by the channel's inversion of conventional U.S. news values--in particular, its willingness to convey suffering in the developing world, like that of the Samouni family, in graphic detail. Far from conspiracy or manipulation, as critics charge, this use of evocative imagery is the natural result of a dynamic process meant to translate news into what Bruce Shapiro, director of the Dart Center on Journalism and Trauma, calls "the visual language of a particular culture." "It's not about a rigid corporate agenda or a rigid imperialist agenda imposed from above," Shapiro explains in an interview with the author. "It's about a much more complex dynamic between sources, journalists, managers, and image-makers."
Unpacking that dynamic is essential to understanding the biases of American news, as well as the difficulties channels like Al Jazeera English have attracting an audience in the United States. Understanding this also gives reason to hope that given a broader range of media options, the media preferences of Americans--and popular sympathies--might change as well.
Preference for Sanitization, or Is it Hypocrisy?
It is well documented that when it comes to war and tragedy abroad, the American media's tendency is to sanitize violence, showing none of the outrage and carnage evident in media accounts outside the United States. During the invasion of Iraq, Philip Kennicott in a 2003 article in the Washington Post attributed this reluctance to a mixture of "taste, ethics, professional standards and responsibility to a complex web of constituents." Yet the outcome of this equation is not always consistent.
"They're hypocrites," Marwan Kraidy, associate professor at the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania, says of the U.S. media in an interview with the author. "They'll say 'we are not going to show mutilated bodies.' They all showed Ceauşescu's body in Romania. Everyone showed the bodies of the two sons of Saddam Hussein when they got killed. It's an indirect way to say we are more civilized but that is not the case." The culling of images, he adds, "is used selectively depending what the prevailing mood is."
The shooting of Iranian protestor Neda Agha-Soltan is a more recent example. In its rush to show the video, CNN did not at first blur her face. The result was one of the most iconic images of the year, recalling photos from the 1970 Kent State shootings or 1968 Vietnam's My Lai massacre with the power to shock viewers and galvanize public opinion against an old American foe.

Readers can demand Al Jazeera English here. Here are the contact pages for Comcast, Time Warner and DirecTV.
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WASHINGTON - Canadian television viewers looking for the most thorough and in-depth coverage of the uprising in Egypt have the option of tuning into Al Jazeera English, whose on-the-ground coverage of...
WASHINGTON - Canadian television viewers looking for the most thorough and in-depth coverage of the uprising in Egypt have the option of tuning into Al Jazeera English, whose on-the-ground coverage of...
more providers (314) 965-0555 1-303-7231000 time warner 1-212-3648200 #WeWantOurAJE
for customers here are numbers to the corp. offices ask for corp customer relations 13109645000 12156651700 #WeWantOurAJE
Al Jazeera English Blacked Out Across Most Of U.S. http://huff.to/fYMXFx via #WeWantOurAJE
12 hours a day is great but let's see Al Jazeera English get it's own channel! #WeWantOurAJE #egypt #jan25
: I would purchase your cable if you supported American ideals by offering superb news coverage from #WeWantOurAJE
RT : call your cable company and tell them you want Al Jazeera English to be available on US tv! #wewantouraje
RT : call your cable company and tell them you want Al Jazeera English to be available on US tv! #wewantouraje
call your cable company and tell them you want Al Jazeera English to be available on US tv! #wewantouraje
Just Add my vote to the cause RT : Blog post: We Want Our Al Jazeera English Now! Pass it on: #WeWantOurAJE http://bit.ly/i4H5MN
Hey and -- if you're counting, please add my vote to #WeWantOurAJE
1 day ago from web
#wewantouraje We have it! On Direct TV 375 we have been watching all AM. It is a very good channel!! I like it a lot! #MSNBC #maddow #AJE
RT : CNN/CNBC talking Halle Berry's custody fight. Al Jazeera Live is crashing on OS X. CNBC anchor called Mubarak Musharraf. :( #WeWantOurAJE
1 day ago from web
RT : Dear : You are my internet prov. I would purchase your cable if you supported American ideals + offered #WeWantOurAJE
1 day ago from web
Dear : You are my internet prov. I would purchase your cable if you supported American ideals + offered #WeWantOurAJE
1 day ago from web
 
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Liberterna   15 hours ago (7:20 PM)
I remember when Al Jazeera couldn't pay their way into Time Warner Cable back in 2005, the official reason Time Warner gave was that there was no room on their roster which was laughable nonsense.

That prompted me to cancel my cable and get faster internet service so I can stream whatever I please, commercial free.

Let the fossils watch fox news on cable, they'll be passing on soon enough anyways.
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Aimee Kligman   17 hours ago (4:48 PM)
Al Jazeera can be seen 24/7 by downloadin­g Livestatio­n to your computer. Simple as that.
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Vipsania Agrippina   18 hours ago (4:23 PM)
I've been watching Al Jazeera over the internet: http://eng­lish.aljaz­eera.net/w­atch_now/ . Great coverage of the protests ... and now impending civil war.
ForConsideration   18 hours ago (3:42 PM)
I'm coming to the conclusion that many (most?) people are more interested in having 'passionat­e' views on various issues at the expense of investing in much analytical effort. We credit or discredit informatio­n based on who's providing it. If it comes from FOX (faux), it's garbage. If it comes from CNN or Huff or Salon or wherever, it's gospel. Or, if you are a conservati­ve, it's the other way around. We're more interested in 'who' is telling the story than the details of the story itself. But that might require dispassion­ately listening to both sides of an argument and thinking independen­tly, which takes much more effort (and intestinal fortitude!­). Much easier to simply have an opinion...
Knisk   10 minutes ago (9:52 AM)
The first intelligen­t post I have read on here in quite a while. Nicely done. Fanned
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Tishana Trainor   19 hours ago (3:31 PM)
Wow, this warrants an article? If you can afford cable, you can afford internet. Watch it on the web like the rest of us...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Dee Amschler   19 hours ago (3:28 PM)
I don't see what they're so afraid of here in the US. If they can carry Fox News, then certainly they can carry Al Jazeera. I've been watching Al Jazeera's coverage online for the past few days. It's been MUCH less inflammato­ry or prone to propaganda - even on this - than Fox News is on the average topic. After all, Fox News carries personalit­ies such as Beck that like to talk of the appropriat­eness or "need" to kill yet they claim to be "fair and balanced" as a network. If we can carry stuff like that on our cable companies, surely we have room for other opinions - no matters whose they are or what they might be. If we would, perhaps our population would learn something - then again it might upset our corporate masters.
endbag   19 hours ago (3:01 PM)
America, you really need to get more news sources than the dominant corporate biased and Empire perpetuati­ng nonsense you are spoon-fed. Try the CBC or BBC for a much more balanced and insightful perspectiv­e.
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Ralphiec88   18 hours ago (3:35 PM)
Gosh I wish I could be so enlightene­d! Then I could spout posts like this, cookie cuttered ad nauseum by numerous similarly "enlighten­ed" posters. You missed a slogan though, couldn't you have fitted in "truth to power" somewhere? Then your post would have been perfect.
endbag   18 hours ago (4:20 PM)
Awww... did I hurt your feelings? If you are going to rebut someones position or ideas try including something useful that actually forms an argument.
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Jomomma1984   20 hours ago (2:29 PM)
I have been watching Al Jazeera on the net, along with CNN and MSNBC on the TV since this thing started.

I don't see where it is any more full of propaganda than any of our pro corporate stations. Is there such a thing as 100% unbiased reporting anywhere anymore?
TymB   12 hours ago (10:03 PM)
Maybe no such thing as 100% unbiased, but Al Jazeera/CB­C/BBC = 70% unbiased, CNN/MSNBC = 30% unbiased, Fox = 1%.
landskroon   20 hours ago (2:21 PM)
Freedom of speach, thats why we have to liberate Iraq, Iran, Afghanista­n etc etc.
Yes, we have to change the world, when we`ve finished the job at home, Yes.
Kill the enemies of free speach !! or, are we just enemies of the truth
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Ken Campbell   20 hours ago (2:15 PM)
Roku has announced that Al Jazeera is available over their digital media boxes.

http://for­ums.roku.c­om/viewtop­ic.php?f=2­8&t=36723
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EcnelisDoogod   20 hours ago (2:11 PM)
"On all sides they are guarded by masses of armed men, cannons, aeroplanes­, fortificat­ions, and the like - they boast and vaunt themselves before the world, yet in their hearts there is unspoken fear. They are afraid of words and thoughts; words spoken abroad, thoughts stirring at home - all the more powerful because forbidden - terrify them. A little mouse of thought appears in the room, and even the mightiest potentates are thrown into panic. They make frantic efforts to bar our thoughts and words; they are afraid of the workings of the human mind."

http://www­.winstonch­urchill.or­g/learn/sp­eeches/spe­eches-of-w­inston-chu­rchill/524­-the-defen­ce-of-free­dom-and-pe­ace
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blessedfrog   21 hours ago (1:27 PM)
I think access to foreign news - from the BBC to AJ to every other country - would be eye opening -

I had an Italian friend and she had satellite ITalian News back in 01 - their coverage of 9/11 was astonishin­gly more thorough imo
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
MalloMel   21 hours ago (1:26 PM)
Hello
JessCostello   21 hours ago (1:24 PM)
Al Jazeera shows quite a bit of gore and propaganda­, I'm not sure why it's being presented as any better than other networks.
middler   21 hours ago (1:12 PM)

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