friday, October 9, 1981 page 14 daily nebraskan CBS executive says religious shows important By Jim Garrett A CBS television executive said the assassination of Anwar Sadat can be viewed in association with the in crease in worldwide misunderstanding between peoples and their religious and cultural backgrounds. Pamela Uott, CBS religious and cultural news vice presi dent, said "we (Americans) suffered too in the streets of Cairo. It was as if we (Ameucans) were there. And be cause the public was better educated everyone knew im mediately what the repercussions of this would be. Uott spoke to about 200 people attending a fund raising dinner for the Lincoln Fellowship of Churches Tuesday at the UNL East Union. "The threat to peace, the instability of the world - f the 1 i HOBBY STOICS Is Having A Sidewalk Sale Saturday Oct. 10 31st. & 0 477-2775 ART SUPPLIES CRAFTS MODELS TRAINS RC EQUIPMENT this is why religious programming should be on tele vision,' she said. Ilott, who was born and reared in Great Britain, received degrees in comparative religion and church history from Durham University in London and literature from Oxford-Cambridge. She organized entertainment ser vices for the British Army during World War II. "Religion is not a decorative thing to be added to news to create publicity, but is the fabric of life, the good news." Pamela Ilott, CBS executive. She joined CBS in 1959, and won the George Foster Peabody Award in 1973 for her accomplishments on the television series "Lamp Unto My Feet" and "Look Up and Live." She said the so-called "reality boys of the news depart ments" would rather keep religion locked away in some perfumed ivory tower and out of the day-to-day involve ments of world, national or local happenings. But Ilott said, "what the religious message is, is an integrated part of our lives and we believe it." "It is not a decorative thing to be added to news to create publicity," Ilott said, "but is the fabric of life, the good news." Ilott emphasized that the religious message must be careful to haw quality content. Gray areas Ilott said current religious program themes provide morality plays dealing with the gray areas of life rather than the clear-cut black and white beliefs. Initially religious programming consisted of airing m) (ysiD mt m wrcjgsm wuftW f a nebraska union ph. 472-2589 room 34 famous preachers and the nation's largest denominational churches, she said. These were live broadcasts aimed at children and youth. When it was learned that the Jewish segment was left out, the network switched to short programs dealing with the more common moral life situations, she said. Ilott said programmers realize the relationships with churches had to be broadened, yet order maintained among all the churches in America requesting their pieces be aired. "So we left the mainline cathedrals, which didn't seem to represent the richness of the American religious herit age," she said, "and broadcast live from a small Dutch Re formed Church, with a terrible choir, which proved to be far from a good network program." The emphasis at the network begin to shift toward supplementing what was being done at the local church level, she said, "and not giving, people an excuse or option of attending church while sitting at home in the comfort of their slippers with a cigarette burning out of their mouths." "Religious programming cannot take the place of active involvement in communities and fellowship, but it can provide a glimpse into what other people are thinking." Pamela Ilott. Ilott said religious programming cannot take the place of active involvement in communities and fellowships, but can provide a glimpse into what other people are thinking. "Show the common ground between Christianity, Judaism, and Islam," she said. "Destroy those bad myths that have existed throughout history." Helps neighborhoods Religious programming should help "neighborhoods get to know themselves, to let the ethnic communities know the others, to make them proud of being Hispanic or Indian. Let them all know they have something proud to give of their heritage." Ilott said there is a new breed of broadcasters develop ing programs like "Quincy" and "Lou Grant" who are finally beginning to deal with issues such as homosex uality, divorce and abortion, wiiich used to be confined to religious shows. "You can't do neutral programs," she said. "You have to deal with it, but you don't have to submit to it." Ilott said there is a dangerous deterioration of stand- "Show the common ground between Christianity, Judaism and Islam. Destroy those bad myths that have existed throughout history." Pamela Ilott. ards in America which should not be confused with the interest group rhetoric of "these are the new times," or "it's just a characteristic of the liberation movement." "It is not liberation, making something traditionally accepted appear so trivial," she said. "It is something you have to resist." Religious advocates "It is particularly dangerous when this deterioration brings about a counter-action from the religious element, like the Moral Majority," Ilott said. "The dangers of exclusion and censorship and what they (Moral Majority) advocate are almost as dangerous as those that advocate deterioration and the way it came about," she said. Ilott said both sides are extremist and offer very narrow approaches to solutions and problems. Religious programming may show both of these, but doesn't submit to their control, she said. Ilott said it is important to send the crews to places like Nicaragua and Guatemala to film what churches are doing there. "These are the shows worth doing, but are almost financially impossible except for the major net works," she said. Ilott stressed that religious programming must have strong public backing in order to exist in a competitive world. "Public service programming is struggling to hold its own," she said. She said the networks don't receive much favorable re sponse to most of the programming. "It is a monument that CBS is still making that gesture or commitment to tfhich we all believe in," she said. Blood. It has always been better to give than to receive. Red Cross: Ready for a new century.