I mentioned a while ago that, KQED-TV, the local PBS
station has pledge
breaks on average about every six to 12 weeks. Their sister radio station has
fewer fundraising drives, but they engage in a practice that I find really
unsettling.
Every time—every
time—they have a fund drive, they run over their stated time limit. By that
I mean that they say they’re going to end on Day X, but if they haven’t reached
their dollar goal by then, they just keep on rollin’ until they do. It’s like demanding
money with menaces: pledge, sucker, or you’re never—and we mean never—going to hear Click and Clack
again.
Every time (meaning, every drive I’ve listened to
since moving to the Bay Area two years ago), they swear that “we end at XX”,
but it goes beyond that date/time.
I felt a sense of dread this past week when “Friday
is the last day of the drive” changed to “Friday is the last weekday of the
drive.” And sure enough…yesterday they announced they’re $200K short of their
goal (although they never tell you what the actual total goal is), And they’re still on the beg.
(I give them credit for not doing this every five
weeks, the way KQED-TV does; but still.)
Thing is, whenever
they do this—keep on rousting us for money—I can’t help but think of the
Winterhilfe campaigns
of Nazi Germany. (When someone in a Hitlerjugend
or SS uniform is standing there, rattling his box, it’s hard to slither past
without dropping a coin in.) I have this image of Michelle Hennigan and her
jolly cohort just going on forever until everyone listening has emptied his
pockets into their tins.
This drive appears to be rogue: KQED alone, not
every other NPR station in the country. (I’ve noticed that they all seem to
conspire to run their campaigns simultaneously and to have breaks in the same time slot so you can’t escape by punching
up another NPR station.) They’ve also cleverly scheduled their breaks at
different slots in the hour, so you don’t know when they’re going to hijack you.
And it’s 33% of the air time, so you miss 20 minutes out of the hour of
nationally-produced content.
I know I shouldn’t crab—I support NPR and I
support KQED. I just don’t like them turning to time extortion, and then
sounding surprised and regretful when they do it. Every. Single. Time.
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