Article Author:By R. Thomas Umstead
Multichannel News
With Sen. Barack Obama poised to make history as the first African-American presidential nominee of a major political party, BET and TV One will significantly step up their coverage of the Democratic National Convention in August.
BET, which covered the 2004 Republican and Democratic presidential
conventions on a limited basis, will offer more than five hours of
on-air convention coverage from Denver, as well as provide a robust
online offering which will allow users to provide user-generated content
surrounding the convention.
Four-year-old TV One, which is covering its inaugural presidential
campaign, will provide blanket coverage of the four-day convention from
Aug. 25-28, including live primetime coverage and a nightly
post-convention show, said its president, Johnathan Rodgers.
Both networks say the historical presidential run of the U.S. senator
from Illinois is the driving force behind their unprecedented coverage
of the 2008 presidential campaign.
�If Obama were not the presumptive nominee, we would not have covered
the convention at all,� said Rodgers. �This is a huge event in the
history of African-Americans and we are a network that's proud of the
fact that 93% of our audience is black. Not only do we feel an
obligation to cover it well, we feel it is part of our promise to our
viewers.�
While the 43.2 million-subscriber network's live coverage will be hosted
by XM Satellite Radio personality Joe Madison and CN8 anchor Arthur
Fennell, Rodgers said the broadcast will be simple and straightforward.
�We will cover that extensively in a way that C-SPAN or PBS covers it,�
he said. �Our audience will be able to see what's going on at the
convention � we will not overwhelm them with commentary, interviews or
other features. It will be mostly pure convention coverage, with Arthur
and Joe as our guides through the process.�
At the conclusion of each night's convention coverage, Rodgers said the
network will host a live show that will serve as a news/entertainment
recap of the night's events.
The show will be hosted by radio personality Jackie Reid along with
celebrity husband-and-wife team of Michael Eric Dyson and Marcia Dyson.
The show will also feature other personalities such as actor Hill
Harper, comedian Cheryl Underwood, the Rev. Al Sharpton, and TV One
chef/on-air personality G. Garvin.
"The show will be similar to going home after you've been out to the
graduation or to the wedding, going to the kitchen and talking about the
event with your friends and family," Rodgers said.
The 87 million-subscriber BET, which effectively began its coverage of
Obama's march toward the Democratic nomination June 3 with live coverage
of the speech he delivered when he clinched the delegates needed to win,
believes its target audience of 18-to-34-year-old African-Americans will
look for the network to provide thorough, multiplatform coverage of the
presumptive Democratic nominee.
"Beyond the politics of it all, this is historic, and it's the historic
nature of all this that we are focusing on for our core audience,� said
BET vice president of news and public affairs Keith Brown." This is the
first time that this has happened in any of our lifetimes, so we're
devoting additional time to cover [the election].�
While the network is still finalizing its Democratic convention show
details, Brown said BET will offer some five hours of convention
coverage over various dayparts during the four-day event.
The network will also look to create convention elements in several of
its regularly-scheduled shows, such as 106 & Park and Rap City, as well
as news vignettes that would air in primetime.
Online, the network's Decision '08� area on its bet.com Web site will
feature live blogs and opportunities for viewers to upload photographs
and other content about the election, according to BET vice president of
digital content Nick Charles.
"We want people to share their thoughts and experiences as they're
watching this man give his nomination speech," he said. "There are going
to be tons of people gathering and celebrating whether it's at home, at
bars, barber shops and restaurants when he gives his nomination speech
and accepts the nomination. We want to be geared to give people a sense
of how holistic and how national this will be."
Neither BET nor TV One are planning extensive coverage of the Republican
National Convention from Sept. 1-4 in Minneapolis. Rodgers doesn't
apologize for concentrating the network's resources on the Democratic
convention.
"In the cable landscape, there are so many other outlets for seeking
other coverage [of the Presidential race] that I don't feel an
obligation to do it," he said. "We are a network whose mission is to
celebrate the achievement of African-Americans. Barack Obama is the
ultimate African-American and that's why we're there and we're
unapologetic about it."
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With Sen. Barack Obama poised to make history as the first African-American presidential nominee of a major political party, BET and TV One will significantly step up their coverage of the Democratic National Convention in August.
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