CPB notes: it had no role in reviewing research, production or content; CPB ombudsmen involved only post-broadcast.
MND NEWSWIRE - The Corporation for Public Broadcasting released a report Tuesday which endorsed the central charges made by fatherhood advocates protesting PBS’s film Breaking the Silence: Children’s Stories. CPB Ombudsman Ken A. Bode declared that there is “no hint of balance in Breaking the Silence.” Bode noted:
“The father’s point of view is ignored as are new strategies for lessening the damage to children in custody battles. There is no mention of the collaborative law movement in which parents and lawyers come to terms without involving the court, nor of the new joint custody living arrangements.
“The producers apparently do not subscribe to the idea that an argument can be made more convincing by giving the other side a fair presentation. To be sure, one comes away from viewing the program with the feeling that custody fights are a special hell, legally, emotionally, psychologically. But this broadcast is so slanted as to raise suspicions that either the family courts of America have gone crazy or there must be another side to the story.”
CPB’s report praised PBS’s decision to put the program under official review, noting that the film “needs to be reviewed for accuracy, fairness and balance.”
The report also criticized the Mary Kay Ash Foundation, which gave $500,000 towards the production of the film and is reportedly “providing a stipend so that every battered women’s organization in the country can put on private screenings of this film for their local judges and legislators.” Bode noted:
“If so, PBS may find it has been the launching pad for a very partisan effort to drive public policy and law.”
Bode’s decision was praised by two of the protest campaign’s leaders, newspaper columnist Glenn Sacks and Ned Holstein, president of Fathers and Families. Sacks noted:
“Breaking the Silence is so flawed and extreme that any fair reviewer will see the merits of our claims. Bode looked at the information objectively, instead of ideologically, and got it right.”
CPB’s full report can be read here. For more information on the campaign against Breaking the Silence: Children’s Stories, click here. To contact Ken A. Bode, click here.

















Denis said,
THIS IS GREAT NEWS!
Mike, thanks you for posting.
November 30, 2005 at 12:47 pm
fourthwire said,
You are correct, Denis - this story is good news. Kudos to Mike for posting it.
Quite a bit of damage to men’s interests has already been done by the feminazis who have twisted PBS’s own mission statement into another misandrist tool though…
Worse yet, we can expect even more damage to men’s rights from “Breaking The Silence”, based on the following quote from the story:
“the Mary Kay Ash Foundation, which gave $500,000 towards the production of the film and is reportedly “providing a stipend so that every battered women’s organization in the country can put on private screenings of this film for their local judges and legislators.”"
Even though “Breaking The Silence” was a flawed piece of openly misandrist journalism, it will likely STILL be used at “private screening” for “local judges and legislators” in the feminazis war against men!
November 30, 2005 at 5:05 pm
chrislf said,
They say every cloud has a silver lining. Maybe not every one does but this one seems to have opened the heavens. Glenn Sacks can be congratulated for opening this can of worms to public exposure. More nefarious ills come out weekly showing the depths and extent of feminist propaganda, usually got away with. But not this time. The noise being made in the wider public forum is becoming deafening. If the pace slows down we will lose the momentum. Sacks again should be congratulated for keeping the fire stoked under these FemoNazis.
November 30, 2005 at 7:10 pm
L Steven said,
This is OUTSTANDING. This report BLASTS the PBS slantumentary and names names.
Also, this is classic “distancing” talk from an organization that is known to promote liberal programmming. Instead of further stonewalling or support they are putting the makers of this hate-fest out on a limb and sawing the branch.
I also hope that Glenn Sacks reads this and knows how much his HARD WORK is appreciated and noticed.
I’m over here fighting for people’s liberties and it’s good to know that someone (many people actually) have got my back back at home.
L. Steven Beene II
November 30, 2005 at 9:43 pm
Denis said,
Glenn Sacks should be awarded the Nobel Prize.
December 1, 2005 at 8:29 am