Reposting without commentary: Tonight, the president of the - TopicsExpress



          

Reposting without commentary: Tonight, the president of the United States will address the nation from the Oval Office—to discuss significant and long-anticipated reforms to our broken immigration system. But the network executives would rather not break for 15 minutes from their TV dramas and weight-loss reality programs. By contrast, when President George W. Bush spoke about immigration in 2006, all the major networks aired his address live. This is unacceptable—but we still have time to change it. The CEOs of NBC, CBS, ABC, and FOX need to hear from the public that its shameful for them not to air this Oval Office address. Can you call their offices or call them out on Twitter—and let them know that Americans deserve to hear their president address the nation? Their phone numbers and Twitter handles are: ABC: 212-456-7777; @abcnetwork CBS: 212-975-4321; @cbs NBC: 212-664-4444; @nbc FOX: 310-369-3553; @foxtv If you call, tell them, I believe its the public duty that comes with public airwaves to air a presidential address on important issues—such as the speech on immigration tonight. If youd rather use Twitter, heres a sample tweet: .@nbcnews, youre using our public airwaves. Please air the @BarackObama speech on #immigration tonight. President Obama will speak briefly at 8 p.m. ET tonight about the critical issue of immigration reform. Clearly, the network execs dont think that this warrants public attention. But they are wrong. Heres why: President Obama will speak to an issue that affects millions of people directly, tens of millions of their family members, and all Americans in some way. This is exactly why we have public airwaves. The networks have a history of airing primetime Oval Office addresses by Republican and Democratic presidents. It is part of their public responsibility. Were talking about a 15-minute speech. Cut a few commercial breaks, and the networks wouldnt even have to change their programming schedule. When our elected leader plans to speak to the nation live from the Oval Office, it should be our decision whether to tune in—not the decision of a few executives whose networks profit off of our public airwaves. You can call the networks now—or use Twitter to call them out—and demand that the networks push back their programming 15 minutes so Americans can listen to this message from their president. (thanks Herb)
Posted on: Thu, 20 Nov 2014 20:29:04 +0000

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