Through my eyes
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Ron Davis
Can you imagine a television production company going to the expense
of producing a television show to be broadcast on television, and not
telling the intended audience about the show or when it was to be
broadcast? Wouldn’t that be a waste of the production costs?
Well, that’s what we just did in Huntington Beach. We wasted your
money.
At some expense to you local taxpayers, Huntington Beach city owned
HBTV-3, our very own government cable channel, just produced and aired a
program called “Hot Topics.”
HBTV-3 made virtually no effort to tell the audience -- who paid for
the program and who was supposed to enjoy it -- about “Hot Topics” so you
could watch it. It’s times like these that the words government and waste
seem to go together like a pizza and cheese.
I don’t think I’m the only one who thinks HBTV-3 is a waste of your
money. Recently, HBTV-3 conducted what it considered to be a viewers’
survey. Remember, HBTV-3 has access to over 60,000 homes. After eight
days and 86 hours of displaying a message across your screen begging you
to participate in the survey, the city received about 266 responses.
Remember, that’s not 266 people watching a single program, that’s 266
people who saw a banner during the course of 86 hours of programming.
And get this -- many of those who responded to the survey thought the
programming stunk.
HBTV-3 costs you and I about $515,000 a year. Just so you know,
$515,000 would slurry-seal about 46 miles of residential streets every
year. Rather than slurry-seal your streets with that money, the city opts
to spend your money on programs such as “Hot Topics,” which it doesn’t
promote.
In addition, it also spends your money on self-serving political
shows, which the survey suggests the citizens don’t want and don’t watch.
I am one of those guys who believes that government has enough trouble
running traditional government functions and lacks the skill, money,
imagination, creativeness and expertise to run a television production
company.
It doesn’t cost us much to broadcast programs on HBTV-3. It is
producing the programs, which is costly. To get the difference squared
away in your head, compare the cost and effort of you putting a tape into
your VCR to play it through your television set, versus the cost of
actually producing the content on the tape. Programs produced by other
cities and sponsors cost us very little to air, since we don’t produce
them, we merely broadcast them.
But, we get into trouble in this city when we try to create, or
produce our own programming using HBTV-3 as the production company.
That’s where we spend the lion’s share of the $500,000 HBTV-3 budget.
And, if our survey is heeded, these programs are rarely received, and if
they are, they’re not well-received.
I have no quarrel with continuing to televise City Council meetings,
since this function could be contracted out at a fraction of HBTV-3’s
existing budget. But, given the city’s financial condition, it is time to
rethink the money we spend on HBTV-3 and whether it can be spent more
wisely.
While it will come as a complete shock to me, some of you might
disagree with me on this issue.
I suspect that I might even find a few pockets of disagreement at
HBTV-3. So, I suggest that if the council insists on moving forward with
HBTV-3 as it has in the past, perhaps the subject of the next “Hot
Topics” show should be HBTV-3. I’d be glad to attend as a guest to debate
the subject. Heck, I might even announce the date and the time of the
program in this column. On the other hand, HBTV-3 would probably want to
keep the date and time secret.
* RON DAVIS is a private attorney who lives in Huntington Beach. He
can be reached by e-mail at o7 [email protected]
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