Tavis Smiley tells Salon why he decided to ditch NPR.
Wednesday, December 22, 2004 at 04:28AM
TheSpook
Thursday marks the last day that
Tavis Smiley will appear on his eponymous show on National Public
Radio. Smiley says he is leaving the network after three years on the
air because the show, the first and only in the history of NPR with an
African-American sensibility, didn't receive enough support. "NPR has
simply failed to meaningfully reach out to a broad spectrum of
Americans," he wrote in a Nov. 29 release. "In the most multicultural,
multiethnic and multiracial America ever -- I believe that NPR can and
must do better in the future." In the weeks since Smiley's
announcement, NPR has refused to fire back. A version of the show
(though, of course, with a different name) will continue -- insiders
say BET's Ed Gordon has the inside track as host -- but no new
minority-themed shows have gotten past "the rough-sketch stage,"
according to NPR public relations manager Chad Campbell. Says NPR
spokesman David Umansky: "We're very lucky and fortunate to have had
Tavis as our founding host, and we agree that more needs to be done." [more]
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