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Human Rights Commission <br />Cable Programming Ideas <br />Date: March 4, 1993 <br />Present: Jerry Beck, Roseville Government Cable <br />Mary Helen Deutsch, Commission Chairperson <br />Sarah Bellefuil, Administrative Intern <br />The following options for Human Rights Cable programming were <br />discussed. Authorization is required from the City Administrator <br />or the Assistant Administrator for use of Government Channel staff. <br />Written Bulletins <br />"Pearls of Wisdom", announcements, or information that is played on <br />cable when nothing else is on. Submit in written form to staff and <br />they will submit it to the government channel. The Fire Dept runs <br />many of these types of bullets on fire safety. <br />Taxes <br />Pre-recorded tapes on pertinent topics can be submitted for <br />cablecast. Appropriate permission must accompany the tape. This <br />may require some editing. Two of these have been done at CTV <br />(Sexual Harassment in the Workplace and Bias Motivated Crime). <br />On-Line <br />This option include any live event or meeting that is taped and <br />aired simultaneously. <br />Interviews <br />An interview with someone on a Human Rights topic. This would take <br />4-6 hours of taping\editing but would not involve the extensive <br />planning that a public service announcement would. <br />Public Service Announcement <br />One-two minute P.S.A.'s could be prepared on Human Rights topics <br />and aired as fillers. This would take 4-6 hours to tape after the <br />script is written and other background work is completed. Could be <br />hardhitting and effective. An effective strategy might include <br />preparing a PSA specifically to air before, during, or after a <br />sports event. This would be a timely response to some of the <br />sexist/racist things happening in youth sports. <br />.Human Rights Update Program <br />This would be the most time consuming option because of the <br />additional planning, camera and editing work needed. <br />