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 Cablecast and web streaming of program in serieS

      "Conversations with Harold Hudson Channer"

            Upcoming Cable Television/Web Show: 

          For details of airing see bottom of page

               Guest For  FRIDAY JUNE 27,  2008 

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                                                         NOTE

       Due to a mix up with the server the site may not display correctly.

                   We sincerely hope the trouble will be corrected soon.

          Below is a much abbreviated notice. Thanks for your patience.

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                                                GUEST:

 

                                  (Originally aired: 03-13-08)

                           EUGENIA DEAN

       

                                 Surviving Wife of

                       

Sidney W. Dean Jr. The Pioneer of Free Expression

                                               &

                     Public Access Cable Television

                                                                           &

                                PETER STANFORD

            Long Time Friend of Sidney W. Dean Jr.

           

                                Editor at Large

              "Sea History" Magazine Quarterly

                         www.vii.org/dean/afsd1c.htm

                                           www.seahistory.org

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  The program can be viewed in its entirety by clicking the you tube link below:

Eugenia Dean & Peter Stanford - Air date: 03-13-O8 - EUGENIA DEAN & PETER STANFORD

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More About: SIDNEY W. DEAN JR.

Biography   SIDNEY W. DEAN JR.
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The son of a newspaper editor, an A.B., Sigma Xi, at Yale with graduate work in science, Mr. Dean conducted educational programs for the Air Force, the American Management Association and various corporations. Mr. Dean served in the O.S.S. and in the Air Force as a combat intelligence officer in Europe, 1942-1945, receiving the Bronze Star Medal for his participation in European heavy bomber operation.

Prior to joining the McCann-Erickson Advertising Agency as vice-president in charge of Marketing Services in December, 1950, Mr. Dean was Executive Vice President of the Telecoin Corporation and developed the Launderette Self-Service Store system. Mr. Dean was also formerly a vice president of the J. Walter Thompson Co from 1927 - 1942.

From 1960 on, Mr. Dean had been the head of his own planning and consulting firm, Ventures Development. He was Chairman of the Advisory Committee of the Office of Telecommunications of the City of New York from 1970-1978. A member of the Communications Media Committee of the American Civil Liberties Union, he presented puiblic interest testimony on policies for broadcast, cable and other communications media on behalf of the National Businessman's Council, the City Club of N.Y., and Americans for Democratic Action (National).

Mr. Dean was a founding trustee of the Metropolitan Education Television Association of New York City and a past director of the Audit Bureau of Circulations. Mr. Dean has also served as a volunteer consultant in cable television and media development to community groups in Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia, Boston, District of Columbia, Tucson and New York City.

*He will doubtless be remembered as longtime trustee, president, and chairman of the City Club of New York, but perhaps as much so as an advocate of using the emerging technology of cable television as a way for those who are poor and ignored to be seen -and heard.

*Long before most others, he saw the potential power of television pressing the city to require cable companies to provide public access channels. He met with some success, though perhaps not exactly what he had envisioned. Few things turn out that way.

*His devotion to free speech was instilled in him by his father, a newspaper editor. A member of the American Civil Liberties Union and Americans for Democratic Action, he took up the cause, helping to keep New York what it has always been: the center of the world of ideas and the free exchange of Information.

*"He was on the forefront of telling us about the privacy and First Amendment issues and teaching us about communications and communications technologies," said Amy Isacs, national president of Americans for Democratic Action.

*In 1970, when cable television franchises were first being proposed for New York City, Mr. Dean began pressing the city to require numerous public access channels and to prevent cable operators from having any financial interest in progams or channels they carry.

*"So long as cable system can control their content they will attempt to deny market access to all other producers and distributors of print and electronic communications," Mr. Dean wrote in a 1973 letter to The New York Times. Such issues persist today as Rupert Murdoch tries to get his new 24-hour news channel onto the cable system operated by Time Warner, his rival in the news and entertainment business and the owner of CNN.

*Today Time Warner owns many of the channels on its system and so does Cablevision, the other cable franchise holder in the city.

*In 1980 Mr. Dean criticized the city's process for awarding cable television franchises as a "blind man's bluff-purchasing agent act" in which the city was "settling for too little from the cable companies." He said that nothing in the city's franchise award plans "holds out any hope of cable reaching out to the poor, ghettoized and handicapped." Today, fewer than half the households in the city subscribe.

*During the debates over awarding cable franchises, Mr. Dean was once invited to a private meeting of city officials and representatives of the franchise seekers, but declined. "I will never go into a backroom discussion,' he told Sally Goodgold, another City Club trustee.

*Mr. Dean was the son of a Boston newspaper editor who constantly preached the First Amendment's virtues to his son. After graduating from Yale University in 1926, Mr. Dean joined Walter Thompson, the advertising agency, and later worked with other marketing companies.

*During World War II, as an Army Air Force officer, he analyzed photographs of bomb damage. He volunteered to fly on some bombing runs because he felt it would make his analysis more accurate, his friend Peter Stanford said.

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  Sidney W. Dean, Jr.  
Saturday, June 21, 2008
Sunday, March 9, 2008
 
  Advocate and Defender of the First Amendment  
1905 - 1997
 
     
  In Memoriam  
Translate this page:
 
  Sidney W. Dean, Jr. spent much of his life defending the right of the public to access the media. This section is dedicated in remembrance of his contributions - to the advancement of the freedom of information, access to communication and the First Amendment guarantee of free speech.

 
 




 
 
  First Amendment Resources   Background Information  
 
"Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances."
-The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution


 
  Biography
U.S. Senate Tribute
Eulogy
Who Was Who in America
Electronic Media Revolution
Sidney W. Dean, Jr. honored
A Photo Retrospective
Sidney W. Dean, Jr.
 
  Sidney W. Dean, Jr. - Published Works   Contributors  
   
" There is no logical reason why cable operators, who control the hardware, should also control the content of the programs carried on their systems. This is like allowing the telephone companies to decide who may use the phone and exactly what they may say."
-Sidney W. Dean, Jr. and Eric Schmuckle
r
 

Cable TV: Omission by Commission
The Public Interest in Broadband Communications
The Cable TV Law Hurts the Public
Unfair Cable TV Prospect
Leased Access: Crucial To First Amendment Rights
Guidelines for Planning a Cable Television Franchise
Grabbing an Electronic Bonanza
The Electronic Media Revolution
Cable Systems and Access
Cable TV: A Curb to Benefit the Public
It Takes a Good Memory to See Cable TV's Future
How to Raise $1.2 Billion for Public Broadcasting
Power to the Cable TV Operators?
A Major Victory for Cable Viewers
Allocation of UHF Television Broadcasting Channels
Authorizing Cable Television Operators to Originate Programs
Guidelines for Advancing Civil Liberties Objectives Governing Regulation of Cable Systems
The Role of Congress in Regulating Cable Television
Regulating Cable TV Systems as Common Carriers
Goals and Guidelines of Public Policy for the Development of Cable TV
City Must Require Every Cable TV System to Provide No-Cost Connections to Every Home
Requirements for Cable Television Franchise Contracts
Communication Presentations
Communications Media and a Free Society
Congress Should Authorize Universal Fiber Optic Communications Systems as Common Carriers
Alternative Constitutional Expressions of the Right to Communicate
ADA Recommendations on CATV to the FCC
Civil Liberty Aspects of CATV Regulation
Empirical Analysis of Access Objectives and Policies for the Communications Media
A General Model of a Broadband Electronic Carrier System
1975 Americans for Democratic Action Convention
The Regulation of Cable Television in the State of NY
The Constitutional Issues of Public Policy for Television and other Electronic Mass Communications
Public Interest Policies for the Communications Media
National Cable Policy: A Travesty
The Communications Media and Democracy
The Communications Media and Democracy (Summary)
Hitches in the Cable
When Cable Comes to Town
Cable TV: What the City Lost
Public Access is a Red Herring
A General Model of a Broadband Electronic Carrier System
Implementing Open Access to Cable Television
 

Advocacy Advertising and the First Ammendment
 

The Communications Media and Society





Testimony
Former Advertising Executive Opposes I T & T Aqcuisition of A.B.C…
 

  The Ex-Admen: Dean
The Electronic Soapbox

 
 
  Audio and Video    
  All about TV
The Telecommunications and Information Revolution
Cityscope
Telecommunications Consumer's Coalition
Free Speech & 1st Amendment Part One Part Two Part Three

 
   

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                                          Friday June 27, 2008

                                 10:30 - 11:30 AM  / (NYC Time)

                 Channel 34 of the Time/Warner & Channel 83 of the RCN 
                       Cable Television Systems in Manhattan, New York.

The Program can now be viewed on the internet at time of cable casting at

                                              www.mnn.org

                  NOTE: You must adjust viewing to reflect NYC time

                                          & click on channel 34 at site

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