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By: Rupeshi Shah Bhat, June Thiele, Peter Miller and Jill Cozza-Turner

In the first of a multi-part series on protecting free speech in media, public television writers Rupeshi Shah BhatJune ThielePeter Miller and Jill Cozza-Turner discuss the state of public broadcasting in the face of ongoing threats like the loss of federal funding, and why it’s so critical to fight back to protect both public broadcasting specifically and free speech overall.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat is a preschool TV writer who has written for PBS KIDS programs like Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood and is a member of the WGAE Animation Caucus.

Peter Miller is a Emmy and Peabody Award-winning documentary filmmaker who has been working in the public television documentary industry for over 30 years, including for programs like American Experience.

June Thiele is a writer and actor known for their Emmy-nominated writing on the PBS KIDS program Molly of Denali.

Jill Cozza-Turner is a children’s television writer who has spent over 20 years working in children’s media. She is currently the head writer of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood and has also written for Donkey Hodie.

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OnWriting is a production of The Writers Guild of America East. The series is produced by WGA East staff members Jason Gordon, Tiana Timmerberg, and Molly Beer. Production, editing, and mix are by Giulia Hjort. Original music is by Taylor Bradshaw. Artwork is designed by Molly Beer.

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Transcript

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: You are listening to OnWriting, a podcast from the Writers Guild of America East. In each episode, you’ll hear from the union members who create the film, TV series, podcasts, and news stories that define our culture. We’ll discuss everything from inspirations and creative process to what it takes to build a successful career in media and entertainment.

I’m Rupeshi Bhat. I’m a preschool TV writer and a member of the guild’s Animation Caucus. I’m joined by fellow public broadcast TV writers, June Thiele, Peter Miller, and Jill Cozza-Turner. Today, we’ll discuss the current state of public broadcast following threats, like the loss of federal funding. You’ll hear from industry professionals on why it’s so critical to fight back, to protect both public broadcasting specifically and free speech overarchingly.

Hey, June. Hey, Peter. Hey, Jill. I think it would be helpful to have you all introduce yourselves before we get into it. Peter, if you want to start.

Peter Miller: Yeah. I’m so happy to be here. I’m a documentary film director, writer, producer. I’ve been working on public television documentaries for 30-something years, and I am proud to be part of the Writers Guild.

June Thiele: Hi, my name is June Thiele. I use they/them pronouns. I was a writer for Molly of Denali since the first year they started, and I went over to one other episode on HBO. I’m relatively new, technically, to children’s writing, but I am a writer and an actor and have been in the world for a while.

Jill Cozza-Turner: Hi. I’m also very, very happy to be here. My name is Jill Cozza-Turner. I have been a children’s television writer for a very long time, over 20 years, in the kids’ media space. I’m the head writer of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, and I’m also a very proud member of the Writers Guild.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Amazing. It’s so nice to speak with you guys, though these circumstances are not the best. For me, public media means programs that are research-backed, relevant to communities, and available for free. How do you all think about public media, and what do you see as its value?

June Thiele: For me, I think my biggest thing, especially working… and it’s always been a major core value of public media, is the diversity and including diversity and showcasing diversity when a whole lot of other media wasn’t. For me, writing for Molly of Denali was just another way that they proved they were really dedicated to the mission. Also, choosing indigenous writers to be brought into and not be necessarily only in front of the camera really kind of proved to me that that quality is solid in PBS, and I think that’s a huge… Such an incredible thing is you watch old clips of PBS and you’re just like, “Wow.” Even back in the ’60s and ’70s, it’s like, “Cool. Damn, that’s pretty awesome.”

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: I recently watched the first episode of Sesame Street because we were reading Street Gang for the Children’s Media Association book club. Even that, you knew it was a PBS program. You knew what they had thought about coming in to all of that. So I agree with you on the diversity being important on and off the screen, behind the camera too. Jill, Peter, what is the value of public media to you both?

Jill Cozza-Turner: Well, writing for PBS, I’ve probably written more shows for PBS than any other broadcaster, and it really has been a training ground in how to create those engaging, age-appropriate stories that also weave in a very strong curriculum. They’ve always been so intentional about who they partner with for their kids’ shows. They research episodes. They bring their scripts to actual children, so we get to see how children are reacting to them. And if I’m being super honest, because we always work with… I’ve been able to work with so many child development experts on these shows that it’s really informed how I parent my own children. It’s just given me so many tools personally, behind the scenes, so it makes a huge impact. Like June was saying, behind the screen and on the screen.

Peter Miller: Yeah. For me, I work in the history space, so most of the films I’ve worked on are about historical subjects. PBS is the one place where we can get honest, in-depth, incredibly well-researched films about where we’ve been as a country. When we make history films for PBS, the level of detail, the level of research, the way we work with scholars, the way that our work is vetted and fact-checked is the most intensive of anything I’ve ever experienced. But beyond that, we get to tell stories that matter. In a time now when we’re going through so much complicated stuff, knowing our history, the way of knowing where we are now and how we got here, provides tremendous amounts of insight into what we’re about. The way in which PBS has presented history is part of a national conversation that makes democracy possible, and I’ve just been so pleased to be able to share stories that matter with PBS audiences for free to every household in America.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Clearly, we are all proud of the programming that we’ve worked on, and it makes me very happy coming into the industry that Daniel Tiger, with Jill, was the first show that I got to write on. I love thinking about what you said, Jill, about it being a training ground. I want to hear more about the PBS programs that each of you have worked on. Maybe we can start with Daniel. Jill, would you be able to talk about the show and your experiences? Not biased, but-

Jill Cozza-Turner: Daniel Tiger’s neighborhood is just a joy. And for those who aren’t familiar, it is based on Mr. Rogers’… it’s a legacy project of Mr. Rogers’ Neighborhood. It’s created with the Fred Rogers Productions who are wonderful partners in this and really taking those lessons, those socio-emotional lessons, and bringing them into a new audience. It’s just one of the best things I’ve ever had the privilege of being a part of. And like I always say, I get more… Whenever I tell somebody I’ve worked on the show, parents will repeat the strategies that they have learned that have helped them parent their own children, it really has made a big impact and it models diversity. We’ve got different family structures on the show. We are modeling how a preschool classroom works. We’re just giving kids and their caregivers tools on how to manage their emotions. Fred Rogers said, “When feelings are mentionable, they can be manageable.” So we’re trying to label emotions as much as we possibly can and carry on that legacy of Fred.

But like Peter was saying, the amount of research and care and thoughtfulness that goes into every single episode with our advisors, with the folks from Fred Rogers Productions, with the PBS executives, just to make sure that we are delivering these messages in the most careful, thoughtful way possible. I’ve written for Carl the Collector, Nature Cat, Donkey Hodie, WordWorld, lots of other shows on PBS, and it’s the same thing. If we’re putting out a lesson on cicadas in Nature Cat, we’re going to have those environmental advisors, people who are telling us, making sure that we’re getting all of our facts straight, that we are delivering it in an age-appropriate way. But of course, all the stories have to be engaging and they have to be for that little audience. We want kids to watch and giggle, and lean in and love these characters. So combining those two is truly the mission that we have on every PBS show I’ve ever worked on.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: It feels like the research is so important because it makes what you’re writing feel relatable, because… It’s fiction that you’re writing, but it makes it feel relatable. And then, also, it works the other way where then kids and their parents can take it out into the real world and apply it as well.

Jill Cozza-Turner: Exactly, yeah. Kids are brutally, brutally honest. They will tell you if a story isn’t working or if they’ve lost interest in something. So being able to discover that in the scripting process before all the time and talent goes into making it into an animated show or a puppeted show, it really helps tremendously.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: It’s such care and regard for the audience which means a lot. June, in terms of Molly of Denali, I think this is a good lead-in to that, talking about children’s television. Would love to hear your experiences on the show.

June Thiele: Yeah. I think a lot of the experiences are probably going to be similar to Jill’s, but I was brought in to the writing program for a fellowship. We were brought out to Vancouver and we did a week of intensive scriptwriting fellowship, and we were all Alaska-native writers. Before that, I was like an actor. And then I got into writing and then I was just kind of like, “Oh, I’m going to do this crazy thing, and it’s going to be great.” And then it really changed the course of my life, which is great. Molly of Denali, at the beginning, we didn’t quite know or understand the whole dynamic of the show. But as it came along with the delicate nature that they go into these processes of creating these shows, and they’re so specific and so thoughtful.

For this show, it was a little harder because everybody was like, “Okay. We have to get Alaska-native voices into the room. We have to have Alaska-native advisors. We are going to bring a lot of people in to make authentic characters and look at the culture, and make sure that everyone who’s writing knows what they’re doing. So not only with a whole group of native writers, there were advisors and producers on the show as well and… It was really beautiful. It was the first time I’d ever seen all natives in a room writing, and I was just like, “Wow, this is a new experience for me.” So it’s sad to see it’s not being continued into the future, but it was an incredible opportunity and that’s kind of how I got into all of it.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: What is the writing process like for an episode of Molly as much as you can share and, in general, what the show is about as well? We’ll keep it alive on this podcast.

June Thiele: Molly of Denali, I guess, I’ll go into what it’s about. It’s about an Alaska-native girl and all her friends going on adventures in their day-to-day live living in their village of Qyah in Alaska. It’s a fictional village up by Denali. And then we have learning goals, a lot of learning goals, a lot of cultural goals, and every episode has to hit at least one and you have to do it by season. So they’re very conscious about the seasonal aspects about it as well, because all seasons are important when it comes to native life and indigenous life living out in a rural area. The process of writing was pitching and then they chose something, and you developed that in a group. We did usually like writers rooms virtually, at that point, because we were thinking that it would happen more in person occasionally. But I think the way that everything was working out, everything was turning more virtual.

It was a first, second, and maybe sometimes a third draft. We were all relatively new. So I think they were taking a little more time with each episode, especially if we were newer to children’s television writing, and then they did the final draft. So it was a process. It was a bit of process, but it was a good one to learn on because I remember one of our head writers was like, “This is going to be one of the more intense ones you’ll be writing for, ever. The rest of them are as difficult because it’s like they took such care on each episode, so that’s why it was more intense.” But I was like, “Well, at least, now we can just go into another room and be okay.”

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Doing something new and doing it for the first time. And it’s kind of an experiment, but it’s an experiment that you really want to go well so that it can happen again. Peter, shifting into nonfiction, what does writing for documentaries like?

Peter Miller: Probably the most important part of the documentary process is listening and learning, and realizing that every story that we tell is built on the shoulders of those who came before us who studied this stuff. Every film I work on is I do in collaboration with scholars and with participants in that history, and that informs how we tell our stories. I made a film that was on American Masters on PBS this summer called Marcella, which is about the great Italian cookbook writer Marcella Hazan. She died a decade before the film went on the air, but her voice and her way of looking at the world is throughout the film. I spent six years making this film, immersing myself in her story, getting to know members of her family, getting to know people that she worked with, reading everything I could possibly find, speaking with scholars, speaking with experts, digging through thousands of photographs. And then taking this person’s extraordinary story, which is a story of disability, a story of immigration, a story of being a woman in mid-20th century America, trying to be a strong presence in the culinary culture.

And then take all of this material that I’ve gathered and say, “What’s the narrative throughline? How do we make this compelling? How do we make it as compelling as it is in real life? How do we keep an audience engaged?” It’s really just about taking a massive amount of stuff and putting it into 86 compelling minutes of broadcast television. I can’t imagine anything more thrilling than doing that and then taking people on this journey along with this person whose voice is at the front of telling her own story, but is supported by amazing human beings. Part of the trick on that film was it’s a film about history and about biography, but it’s also about cooking. So we brought people who were influenced by her, who are great chefs, into their kitchens and interviewed them while they’re stirring tomato sauce. The level of emotional connection that happens when you listen to what your story’s about, realize this is a story about… which contains a great deal of drama and emotion and content, but told while you’re using a wooden spoon on a pan full of risotto. I mean, it changes the dynamic.

Every film I work on is about a different topic and a different time in history. It could be from 100 years ago or a couple of hundred years ago, or it could be from last year. But it’s all about combining scholarly knowledge with really engaging storytelling, and finding a way to take things that are complicated and trust your audience to embrace that complexity. This is what we get to do. This last fall, I worked on a film that was broadcast on American Experience called American Coup: Wilmington 1898, which was about a racial massacre in coup d’etat that happened. That basically took a multiracial democracy that was flourishing in North Carolina and white supremacists went on a rampage carefully planned and removed a multiracial democratic government, killed dozens, possibly hundreds of Black people, and took over the government at gunpoint.

It’s a story that nobody had known. I hadn’t heard of it until colleagues had said, “Let’s tell this story.” And the goal is how do you take this 120-something-year-old history, bring it alive, and engage with an audience in a respectful way that brings them to this history and makes them think about what our country’s story has been.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: For these projects that you worked on with PBS, were they involved from the start or did any of them start out indie? How did that all go?

Peter Miller: Every project is different. So many projects begin indie. I’ve had the privilege of working with a part of PBS called the Independent Television Service on three different films. ITVS, their whole purpose is to get independent filmmakers, people like me, to tell stories of underrepresented audiences in engaging ways and put them into the PBS schedule. I’ve had the honor of making three movies that ITVS supported. Sadly, with the cutbacks to public broadcasting into CPB, ITVS isn’t going to be able to do that in the same way that they used to be able to do. But it enabled us to tell stories. I co-directed a film about the Latino Civil Rights Movement, the Mexican-American Civil Rights Movement of the 1950s, a story that would never be told on any other network.

We started this as an independent project. We raised some grant funding. We found people to tell. We shot some footage. We created a show reel. We brought it eventually to American Experience, and they said, “Yes, we need this show.” PBS was able to put up the money we needed to finish doing it, give it a prominent air slot, and now… This is 15 years ago, we made this film. There’s like three screenings going on now during the Hispanic Heritage Month where they’re showing this film. It continues. It has a life that goes on and on and on because this history really matters. We independent filmmakers bring it to PBS, PBS brings it to the public, and this is an incredibly important act made possible by our Public Broadcasting Service.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: With that in mind, with indie docs, what makes PBS different than other distributors? Or what do you feel like its role is in the doc world?

Peter Miller: Well, one of the things that PBS lets us do is make films that are not aimed at a commercial market. They’re aimed at telling the truth, at telling stories that matter, at exploring American history, exploring social issues that matter. We’re not looking and saying, “Is this going to be financially successful?” We’re saying, “Is this going to be intellectually rewarding? Is it going to reach an audience? Is it going to tell stories people need to hear?”

And then the other thing that I think is astonishing about PBS is that all the executives I’ve worked with, on all the shows I’ve worked with, let you tell the story that you know how to tell and respect independent filmmakers. Nobody’s saying, “You got to change this.” You might get very good notes from people we’re working with, but they respect independent filmmaking in a way that I don’t think any other network does. They let us do what we’re good at, which is to tell these stories the way that we know how. And oftentimes, these are stories coming from the communities that are represented in these films. And the people at PBS who I work with have this remarkable wisdom at working with us to make our films the best they can be, but still honoring our independent spirit.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Do you feel that as well, June and Jill?

Jill Cozza-Turner: I would say yes. I think that that’s one… PBS truly trusts their creators and trusts their producers. They’re very intentional about who they partner with. So just what Peter said, we will get some thoughtful notes. But when PBS green-lights a show, they know why they’ve greenlit the show. They know who they’re working with. There’s already so much trust built in there, so they’re great partners to have in the kids space as well.

Peter Miller: Can I just add something, speaking of the kids space-

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Yeah.

Peter Miller: … because I grew up with Mr. Rogers. I was there when, I think, that show probably was fairly young still. I was very young and I watched it, and the sense of trust… This television set across the room is full of good intentions that respects me as a human being. I wonder whether or not watching Fred Rogers, when I was a tiny kid, put me on the path to wanting to tell stories on PBS. I don’t think I’m alone in that regard.

Jill Cozza-Turner: You are not alone in that regard at all. When I was a kid, I didn’t know that writing for television was a thing, that that was a job you could do. But I did watch Mr. Rogers and Sesame Street, and all these wonderful shows that sparked so much curiosity. I think when you look back at all of the steps that bring you to where you’re at now, I think that… It is, it’s a trusted, trusted space. As parents, sometimes you have to take a shower, and you have to put your kid in front of the television. So you want to be able to put your child in front of a station that you know is going to be putting out positive messages that is well thought out. It’s just a different space that is really… I think trust is a big word that is used whenever we’re talking about PBS kids shows.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: I grew up on Arthur, which was PBS, of course. And what I loved is that it showed a very real family, a very real community, at least to me, and it’s a funny show as well. So coming to the last few months and all of the different Protect My Public Media campaigns that happened… This is a podcast, so I can’t show it. But there was one campaign that had the Arthur fist of… when they come for PBS. It means a lot to me because that is a show that I grew up on and to think that… The stuff will be made, but it won’t be all made in the same way, that there will be changes after this is hard to think about. This kind of brings me over to what’s going on now. In July, the federal government rescinded its funding for public media. Would love to hear what some of your initial reactions to that was over the summer.

June Thiele: I think my first reaction is just controlling the narrative that’s put out and not having an equalizer or just having a view of all of it, which I think for me… It’s terrifying because it’s like, “Yeah, what is real?”, which is slightly crazy to think. Because before, it was just like, “Yeah, I believe in propaganda. I believe things happen with government and people are being in the dark.” But it’s come to a certain extent now where I’m just like… Usually, you can find a safe haven of somewhere to look. And for me, I’m just like, “I don’t know now,” and that’s a really very scary thought.

Jill Cozza-Turner: Yeah. I’ve always considered NPR, PBS pretty neutral, in the middle. Again, the trust that’s there of just reporting facts where… I think that cutting the public media funding, for me, it’s very disheartening, especially because it feels like… A lot of the shows that are on PBS, there is private funding for them. A lot of them, like the content… I’m hoping that the content is not going to change much because there is private funding there. The thing that will change without the government funding is the access to it, that children aren’t going to be able to access these shows in those smaller areas. Those places where… I’m hearing about smaller PBS affiliates… lots of layoffs, and they’re not going to be able to provide that kind of programming to children. So I hope that the content itself won’t change, but I do feel sad that not as many children will have access to it.

Peter Miller: To me, it’s not surprising that when a government is becoming authoritarian, it wants to take away certain institutions. They focus on academics, scholarship, public broadcasting, journalism. This is all about how we know what’s going on around us and how we understand our world. When you dismantle the really good things that we’ve developed to help tell us how to understand and interpret our world in an intelligent, nuanced, and complicated way, it serves a cynical and brutal government that doesn’t want us to know this stuff. And it’s really a shame. The kind of work that I’ve been privileged to be able to work on with public broadcasting has really helped shape national conversations about important issues. I worked on a film about mental health care a few years ago where hundreds of PBS affiliates had conversations using our nationally-broadcast film as an opportunity to have conversations about how to care for the most vulnerable people in the country.

I’m working on another multi-part series about mental health issues, which we are going to be doing impact work, where we get together with local people who are working on the issues in the film and doing it through the stations. and it’s really an amazing opportunity to spark a national conversation. But as the cuts are made, the biggest pain is going to be felt by the little affiliates, the station in the middle of Pennsylvania that’s gone, the stations in rural areas that are gone. And those are the conversations that aren’t going to happen, “Are we really better off as a country if we don’t have conversations about how to care for vulnerable people, how to deal with our mental health crisis, how to understand our history?” All of this stuff that is such a healthy part of what we can do has been made possible by a robust public television system, and that’s being taken away. It breaks my heart.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Thinking about the impact on audiences and how these cuts affect communities is the absolute worst because that’s who we’re making all of this for, we’re not making it to watch ourselves. Would you be able to share some more of the experiences from community events that you’ve been to for your projects or chances that you’ve had to interact with non-film and TV people who are enjoying the work that you’re making?

Peter Miller: I can just say that I worked on a film that was on Independent Lens. It was supported by ITVS. It was a film called Bedlam, which was about the way in which our country has turned its back on people with severe mental illness and how our jails and prisons and our streets are the de facto mental hospitals. It’s just an unthinkably bad situation for millions of Americans and their families who aren’t getting the care they need. We took this film on the road. The film premiered at Sundance and it did really well. It got on Independent Lens, and it was the highest rated program of the 2019 season. But more importantly, we went and partnered with over a hundred TV stations. And this was done by ITVS, which had a program of doing this. We raised some money to do an impact campaign, and we went to communities across the country and had conversations.

We showed up as filmmakers, so we could talk about making a movie. But the most important part of the conversation were the local chapters of the National Alliance on Mental Illness or the local activists who were working in the community to try to make things better, and those conversations were extraordinary. We actually helped get some legislation advanced in California to divert money out of a mental health jail into community-based mental health care. This happened because people who saw our film had a conversation came into the same room, and this happened all over the country. We released the film during the pandemic. I remember that people had to pivot to doing them in creative places. In Madison, Wisconsin, they showed our film at a drive-in cinema and had a conversation about mental health care in the community. The creativity and the passion of the local people we worked with was amazing, and it was made possible because PBS gave a forum for these kinds of stories.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Giving it a life outside of just the TV screen as well. I’ve been to events for Alma’s Way and Xavier Riddle and the Secret Museum at museums, and it’s amazing to watch these shows with a kid audience. Because when you’re writing, you’re kind of in your room and doing your own thing, and then you’re seeing the impact that it has. For Molly or Daniel, or other shows that you all have been part of, have you seen any of that impact as well directly with kids?

June Thiele: For sure. For me, just thinking about my own childhood and never being represented on screen, not ever, I think especially Alaskan native people, it’s like northern indigenous people, I do think it affects kids a lot. It’s like growing up and seeing somebody that looks like them, that does same things that they do, cultural practices, deals with some of the same issues, because they didn’t shy away from also talking about colonization and the residential schools and some hard topics about racism. It’s like we all dealt with that, and not a lot of people know what we’re dealing with unless you’ve had those lived experiences. So not being able to have that represented anywhere else other than your family, it’s hard. It was very hard.

Seeing this character and giving it life was really a good way to spread some of that knowledge and understanding. I feel like we had so much more to do, but it’s a really good start and I feel like… going to certain events. Because at the time, I was living in Chicago. I used to work at the American Indian Center in Chicago, but we ended up going to the Indian Center and having it showing the Molly of Denali episodes. It was a really good time and kids really enjoyed it. Even though it wasn’t necessarily their specific culture, it still made an impact just to see indigenous people on screen and represented.

Jill Cozza-Turner: I think that it’s cool that kids are seeing kids who don’t necessarily look like them, have had those same lived experiences. Working on Carl the Collector, which has a neurodivergent main character, and just seeing how this has just impacted a community of parents and children whose kids just haven’t seen that on screen as much and get to experience it. It’s really nice, not only for kids who might be on the spectrum, seeing a character who’s on the spectrum as well, but for other kids to see other characters that they don’t necessarily have in their classrooms every day or are in their community. So it’s really nice to see that diversity. We get a lot of great fan mail from Daniel Tiger parents. There’s a character named Chrissy who uses crutches and just the kids who are saying like, “She uses crutches like me,” it makes a big difference. It really does.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: A couple of things that have been on my mind are the Ready To Learn grant being terminated, which would’ve gone towards children’s shows and games, and also the ways in which like ITVS’ American Experience and other documentary homes are having to cut back. What does this mean to you and your colleagues? How does this impact jobs for us? Of course, negatively, but would love to hear more of what you all think.

Peter Miller: Well, I can speak to the issue of historical documentary makers, which is the community that I travel in. It’s sort of a one-two punch. Not only did we lose American Experience… which has laid off its entire staff basically, which is the premier showcase for historical documentaries, and has been doing this for decades, creating wonderful work. They’re gone. They have hundreds of films that have been created over the years, but they’re not creating any new ones. At the same time, the National Endowment for the Humanities was cut back to basically nothing. And so many of the really good solid historical films that get on PBS are funded by the National Endowment of Humanities, that source no longer exists.

So people in my community who get NEH funding to produce PBS documentaries to be shown on American Experience or in American Masters, or in one of these great shows, that whole world has collapsed as you have these incredibly talented people who should be telling these historical stories and these cultural stories that need to be told who can’t find work. Yes, it’s terrible for the audience and it’s terrible for America not to have these stories told, but it’s also really terrible for the people who have devoted their careers to making these films who can’t do it right now. And it’s really tough.

Jill Cozza-Turner: Yeah. It’s very similar in the kids television space. Rupeshi, you’re aware. June, you probably are aware. We’re not getting a lot of green lights. We’re not getting new seasons picked up as quickly as we used to. And there just are a lot of… I’m not saying that it’s all because of the Ready To Learn grant or because of the public broadcasting funding, but the industry was struggling before this and now it feels like this. It’s like a one-two punch. It’s like, “Oh, no. Not this, no.” Because that Ready To Learn Grant CPB, they did so much to help these shows get on the air. So I think there’s a lot of uncertainty for my colleagues and myself.

June Thiele: Yeah. I don’t know the ins and outs of all of it. I feel like I’m not as much in the world since Molly’s kind of dropped off. But I’ve stayed in contact with some of the writers, the head writers and see what they’re doing, see what’s going on, connecting, and not a lot of people are working. Everybody’s kind of holding still. I feel like… also, I think the industry across the board as an actor, as a writer, as… a lot of it is stagnant.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: For a moment, I do want to touch on I why you think these cuts were made. What you think politicians were motivated by?

June Thiele: I’m not really sure. There could be probably a lot of different reasons, I would say. Yielding power, showing, as I said earlier, dropping things that are not supporting their rhetoric. I don’t know a ton about what their strategy is because it doesn’t seem like much of a strategy. So who knows?

Jill Cozza-Turner: I found it interesting when… Again, this is anecdotally. People would post something on social media about this, the PBS, when we were trying to keep the funding and to see some comments about, “These woke children’s programs,” “These this left-leaning children’s program.” But honestly, PBS is so careful to make sure that we’re representing as many communities as we possibly can, as many. So it was surprising to me and really disheartening that it was a bit misunderstood. But again, I don’t think that cutting the funding is going to change the actual shows as much as people think it might. I do think it’s just how kids and adults get to see these programs.

Peter Miller: I think that, right now, we’re in the middle of a government shutdown. The leadership of our country doesn’t seem interested in doing anything to stop that from happening. The cuts to the federal workforce have been brutal and random. Laying off people who are doing children’s cancer research, nobody actually wants that. People want public broadcasting. I think all the polling showed that people love public broadcasting. NPR and PBS are central part of so many people’s lives. Nobody actually wanted this to happen. Tiny minority of very strange people have decided that they want to cut back PBS in its entirety. That’s just not what the public wants. We’ve been through this a bunch of times over the years. I’ve been around for previous culture wars. In the ’90s, they threatened to get rid of public broadcasting funding, and it was a tough struggle. But we came out of it, so they cut it back somewhat. This is a completely different age, and I think it is catastrophic what this government is doing to things that we need.

This is a government that doesn’t want to fund emergency relief to people who have been hit by natural disasters. There’s no logic or reason to this other than just wanting to break stuff and punish their perceived enemies. And those of us who have toiled in the trenches of making high-quality programming for mainstream audiences on our public broadcasting system are having to figure out how to get these stories told in a situation where completely dumb and broken and misguided policies are removing the financial supports that we need to do this. The amount of money that every American taxpayer pays to public broadcasting is minuscule. I mean, a billion dollars disappears. They just spent 40 billion bailing out an authoritarian regime in Latin America. This is not about saving money, this is about breaking things. We are about creating things, and I think we just need to keep creating. And hopefully, the kind of inclusive messages that we have in our programming will remind people of the kind of empathy and nuanced thinking that we need in order to live together as a society.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: In terms of content, as you started talking about Peter, as writers, how do we keep this from impacting the stories that we tell? It doesn’t sound like it’s going to be impacting, changing the way that you all tell stories or the stories that you choose to tell. But what’s our responsibility? What’s the responsibility of people that we work with? Coming to the larger free speech part of this conversation, how do we keep this from changing the stories that we’re telling?

June Thiele: I think it changes the stories because it’s like you see more clearly that there are a lot of stories that still need to be told. As for me, as an indigenous trans, non-binary, two-spirit human being who has a family now, I have two children, and I see the world that we’re raising them in, and it’s stressful. Not only because it’s like, “I don’t want them growing up thinking these things,” but I’m like also, “We’re getting more and more nervous being in a country that doesn’t necessarily support our views, our way of life, our individualities.” So I think those images become more prevalent. And before Molly was over, I was like, “I need to write more queer/trans stories for kids, to be normalizing it.” I think that’s our responsibility. Because everyone else is going to be telling their stories, you have to tell your stories as well.

Jill Cozza-Turner: Yeah. It feels like this is a moment That’s kind of a call to action for storytellers where we have to… Yes. I work with very little… the preschool audience, but planting those seeds of critical thinking, of empathy, of… We’ve done episodes on Daniel Tiger that… social justice. There’s just some things like telling these… Continuing to tell these stories is more important than ever now. So I hope that that’s… That’s the positive spin on it that I think we can take, is that this is a moment for us to start making more of those stories and seeing more of those characters. And I don’t see the way I write changing anytime soon. It just feels more important now. It feels more necessary.

Peter Miller: We independent documentary makers are a very stubborn bunch of people, and we have to be because it takes years and ridiculous amounts of work to get our films made. We don’t make them because we think we’re going to get rich doing this, that would be really foolish because we aren’t, but we do them because they’re stories that we have to tell. None of my colleagues… and I certainly am not going to stop telling these kinds of stories. It just becomes more challenging because the money isn’t there. The programs that used to put it on the air are going away, but it’s not going to stop us. The independent spirit of us is driving us to want to keep on sharing, as Jill said, more than ever because these are the times when we need these stories.

And in the world of history storytelling, looking at our history is really a way of making sense of this very complicated present. Let’s just get these stories that we’ve told and that we’re going to tell, and keep on putting them out there. Because as people look at our history and look at our stories, the more we can say, “This is how we can move forward in a positive way.” I ain’t letting us stopping anytime soon, but I know that it’s… The structural challenges of working in this current situation are daunting, but we’re going to do it anyway.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: What would you say to any creators that may be feeling any sense of fear about the stories that they want to tell

Jill Cozza-Turner: Being a part of the guild, I think that… Just leaning on your community right now, I think that… This is wonderful to talk to other writers, other people who are in similar positions right now. I think we can find inspiration and we can find courage, and we can find strength in this community that we have. I love our children’s television group. It’s small, but mighty. And I think that, like Peter said, we’re not doing this to get rich. I think there’s sometimes a misconception about television writers or filmmakers that we’re all making millions of dollars on these shows, but you really have to love what you do to be in this business. So I think staying connected with your communities, it’s really important right now.

Peter Miller: Yeah. I will say fear is a reasonable response to challenging times, but we can’t let it paralyze us. We need to let it motivate us. These are scary times, therefore, as people who tell stories to help make the world a better place, we better keep doing our job that much more intensely.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Yeah. I think-

June Thiele: [inaudible 00:47:04] since I write in the kids section. I think just looking towards the future, this will hopefully pass. Raising good people and putting art out there that is good, that should be a great motivation, and also exactly what Peter and Jill said.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: As we wrap up, I do want to say thank you to you guys, and thank you to the Writers Guild for offering this space to talk about these things. I’m hoping that it sparks more conversations within our community. Even as I was prepping for today, it encouraged me to talk to my peers about what was going on and what they were feeling. We may not have all of the answers, but at least we can lean on each other in the process. I’m wondering if anyone else has any other last words that they want to share.

Jill Cozza-Turner: Thank you so much for bringing us together. It really is so nice because I don’t get to talk to… We’re all virtual now, so it’s really nice to hear these stories and hear from other writers. So thank you so much for gathering this nice little group together.

Peter Miller: Yeah, I’m with you. Given just how grim things are, getting into a room full of these amazing people is really… really lifts the spirit. So thank you for this opportunity.

June Thiele: Yeah, same. Actually, I’m not a part of the guild, yet. Because working for Molly for six years, seven years, I didn’t get credits towards that. But this past year, working with people to talk about Molly through the guild has been a really great sense of place in space, and being able to connect with writers and have similar conversations has been really nice. Thank you for bringing us together today as well.

Rupeshi Shah Bhat: Thank you so much. It was really insightful. So good to talk to you all.

Speaker 5: OnWriting is a production of the Writers Guild of America East. The series is produced by WGA East staff members, Jason Gordon, Tiana Timmerberg, and Molly Beer. Production, editing, and mix by Giulia Hjort. Original music by Taylor Bradshaw. Artwork is designed by Molly Beer. To learn more about the Writers Guild of America East, visit us online at wgaeast.org or follow the guild on all social media platforms at @WGAEast. If you enjoyed what you heard today, please subscribe to the podcast and give us a five-star rating. Thanks for listening. Until next time, write on.

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