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...scandals can happen to anyone, Democrat or Republican. We also know that scandals can happen to anyone, Democrat or Republican. We knew this before we became active in the party. We believed then and continue to belive that politics, despite its shortcomings, was the best way for us to channel our progressive energies and to effectuate widespread, positive change in our communities. And despite the attempts of many of define politics in terms of scandal or corruption, we still believe that politics is ultimately about effecting this type of change...

Author: By Eric S. Olney, | Title: Why Americans Don't Care | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

Muhammad Ali, a puffy and nearly immobile promoter for a new cable channel called American Sports Classics, sat in a director's chair as a line of people trooped up, one by one, to sit next to him, shake his hand and get a Polaroid memento of the occasion. Comedy Central enlivened the floor at the cable-TV industry's national convention two weeks ago with an array of carnival games, like Skee Ball. CBS, pushing its new cable channel, Eye on People, took a more subdued approach, with a booth featuring plush blue carpeting, comfortable seating and lots...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: DOES THE EYE HAVE IT? | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

Starting new channels has never been easy, but CBS's much belated entry into the cable sweepstakes, which debuts this week, is facing tougher odds than most. The network, to a great extent, has only itself to blame. While its broadcast rivals were busily getting into the cable business (ABC with ESPN; NBC with CNBC and America's Talking; Fox with FX and the Fox News Channel), CBS sat on its hands--or rather, on chairman Laurence Tisch's tight fists. That finally changed in 1995, when the company was sold to Westinghouse, which already owned a piece...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: DOES THE EYE HAVE IT? | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

...People is far from the only case in which major resources and talent are being lavished on cable channels watched by almost no one. espnews, a 24-hour sports-news channel launched in November, is available in only about 1 million cable homes. Its chief competitor, CNN/SI (which is owned by Time Warner, also the parent of TIME), has managed to corral just 4 million. The Fox News Channel and MSNBC, two network-backed news channels launched last year to compete with CNN, have passed the 20 million and 30 million marks, respectively. Yet their average audience, according to preliminary...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: DOES THE EYE HAVE IT? | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

With more focused channels like America's Health Network and the Sundance Channel competing for scarce channel space, why should Eye on People survive? Geoffrey Darby, a former top executive at Nickelodeon who was named president of the channel two months ago, makes a game effort to define its niche: "When you want to see stories about people, this is where you'll go." Yet Lloyd Werner, executive vice president of sales and marketing, admits that cable operators have so far reacted with "skepticism." Says he: "I've been doing this for 15 years, and it's never been...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: TELEVISION: DOES THE EYE HAVE IT? | 4/7/1997 | See Source »

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