Newton N. Minow | |
---|---|
![]() Minow in 2006 | |
Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission | |
In office March 2, 1961 – June 1, 1963 | |
President | John F. Kennedy |
Preceded by | Frederick Ford |
Succeeded by | E. William Henry |
Personal details | |
Born | (1926-01-17)January 17, 1926 Milwaukee, Wisconsin, U.S. |
Died | May 6, 2023(2023-05-06) (aged 97) Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
Political party | Democratic |
Spouse | |
Children | 3, includingMartha andNell |
Alma mater | Northwestern University (BS,JD) |
Newton Norman Minow (January 17, 1926 – May 6, 2023) was an American attorney who served as chairman of theFederal Communications Commission.[1] He is famous for his 1961 speech referring to television as a "vast wasteland". While still maintaining a law practice, Minow served as the honorary consul general of Singapore in Chicago, beginning in 2001.[2]
Minow was active inDemocratic Party politics. He was an attorney in private practice concerning telecommunications law and was active in many nonprofit, civic, and educational institutions. He was awarded thePresidential Medal of Freedom in 2016 byBarack Obama, whom he had known since the start of Obama's legal career.
Born to aJewish family inMilwaukee, Wisconsin, in 1926, Minow served inWorld War II from 1944 to 1946 and attained the rank of a sergeant in theU.S. Army.[3] He served in theChina Burma India Theater with the 835th Signal Service Battalion headquartered in New Delhi, India.[4] After the war, he received a Bachelor of Science degree in 1949 fromNorthwestern University and aJuris Doctor degree in 1950 fromNorthwestern University School of Law.[1]
After graduating from law school, Minow worked for the law firm ofMayer, Brown & Platt (1950–1951 and 1953–1955) before becoming a law clerk to Chief JusticeFred M. Vinson of theU.S. Supreme Court (1951–1952).[1] He later became assistant counsel toIllinois GovernorAdlai Stevenson (1952–1953), worked for Stevenson's two presidential campaigns (1952 and 1956), and then was a partner in the law firm, Stevenson, Rifkind & Wirtz (1955–1961).[1] Minow campaigned for PresidentJohn F. Kennedy prior to the1960 U.S. presidential election.[5]
Minow was the senior counsel in the Chicago-headquartered law firm ofSidley Austin LLP, a large international law firm with multiple areas of expertise, including telecommunications-related law. Between 1965 and 1991, he was a managing partner in the firm before becoming senior counsel in 1991.[6]
Reportedly,Robert F. Kennedy and Minow frequently talked at length about the increasing importance of television in the lives of their children when they worked together on the presidential campaign ofAdlai E. Stevenson.[7] Thereafter, it came as little surprise that after the election ofJohn F. Kennedy Minow eagerly pursued the position of FCC chairman. Some observers nevertheless considered it unusual given his lack of experience with the media industry and with communication law.[8] In 1961 he was appointed by President Kennedy to be one of seven commissioners of the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) as well as its chairman.[8][9] He served as chairman from March 2, 1961, through June 1, 1963.[10]
Minow became one of the best-known and respected—if sometimes controversial—political figures of the early 1960s because of his criticism of commercial television. In a speech given to theNational Association of Broadcasters convention on May 9, 1961, he was extremely critical of television broadcasters for not doing more, in Minow's view, to serve the public interest. His phrase "vast wasteland" is remembered years after the speech in which he said:
When television is good, nothing—not the theater, not the magazines or newspapers—nothing is better. But when television is bad, nothing is worse. I invite each of you to sit down in front of your television set when your station goes on the air and stay there for a day without a book, without a magazine, without a newspaper, without a profit and loss sheet or a rating book to distract you. Keep your eyes glued to that set until the station signs off. I can assure you that what you will observe is a vast wasteland.[11]
While some applauded his "vast wasteland" assault on commercial television as a welcome criticism of excessive violence and frivolity, others criticized it as anelitist,snobbish attack on programming that many viewers enjoyed as well as a government intrusion into private enterprise.[12] TheS.S.Minnow of the 1964–67 television showGilligan's Island was reputedlysarcastically named after him to express displeasure with his assessment of the quality of television.[13][14][15]
In a 2011 speech atHarvard, Minow said that he could never have anticipated the impact of television. He still felt that news is the most important public service, but that television continued to fall short in that area. "Too much deals with covering controversy, crimes, fires, and not enough with the country's great issues" he said. He also said that presidential campaigns are obsessed with the trivial. The speech came 50 years after he referred to television as a "vast wasteland" on May 9, 1961. The day after the 1961 speech, theNew York Times headline read "F.C.C. Head Bids TV Men Reform 'Vast Wasteland'—Minow Charges Failure in Public Duty—Threatens to Use License Power".[16]
Minow did foster two significant initiatives that altered the landscape of American television. The first was theAll-Channel Receiver Act (ACRA) of 1961, which mandatedUHF reception capability for alltelevision receivers sold in the United States. This legislation sparked an increase in the number of television stations and helped launch nonprofit educational television stations (nowPBS) throughout the country.[1]
Minow said that his greatest contribution was persuadingU. S. Congress to pass legislation clearing the way for communications satellites. Minow recounted, "When I toured the space program with [John F.] Kennedy, he was surprised to see me". Minow told Kennedy that "communications satellites will be much more important than sending man into space, because they will send ideas into space. Ideas last longer than men."[5]
During his two years in office, it was estimated that, other than the president, Minow generated morecolumn inches of news coverage than any other federal official. He also promoted what ultimately became the International Telecommunications Satellite Consortium (Intelsat). This organization controlledsatellite communications for many years.[1]
Minow's papers from his tenure at the FCC are archived at theWisconsin Center for Film and Theater Research, an organization co-sponsored by theUniversity of Wisconsin-Madison and theWisconsin Historical Society.[17][18]
Quote from a speech to the Association of American Law Schools:
After 35 years, I have finished a comprehensive study of European comparative law. In Germany, under the law, everything is prohibited, except that which is permitted. In France, under the law, everything is permitted, except that which is prohibited. In the Soviet Union, under the law, everything is prohibited, including that which is permitted. And in Italy, under the law, everything is permitted, especially that which is prohibited.[19]
Minow sat on the Board of Governors of thePublic Broadcasting Service and its predecessor,National Educational Television serving from 1973 to 1980 and serving as its chairman from 1978 to 1980. He served out a tenure as the president of theCarnegie Corporation, a PBS sponsor, and the original funder ofSesame Street.[1]
Minow was theWalter Annenberg professor emeritus atNorthwestern University. He also authored four books and numerous professional journal and magazine articles. Minow supported and wrote about the Digital Promise Project, a project to fulfill the educational potential of the internet.[20][21]
Minow's early contact with Singapore and Singaporean officials was through his law work at Sidley Austin, which opened a Singapore office in 1982. Even when he was FCC chairman, he worried about the increasing export of Hollywood programming overseas and the impact it would have on perceptions of the United States among citizens in other countries.[citation needed]
Minow was appointed honorary consul general in 2001.[4] The office he was associated with processes consular and visa applications.[22]
Minow sat on the board of directors at Foote, Cone & Belding Communications Inc.; Tribune Co.; Manpower, Inc.;[23] AON Corp.;CBS, and theSara Lee Corporation. He was chairman of the Board at theRAND Corporation. He was a trustee of the Chicago Orchestral Association as well as with the Mayo Foundation, which operates theMayo Clinic.[8][24] He was a life trustee of Northwestern University and theUniversity of Notre Dame, where he was the first Jewish member of the board, and at the time of his death he was the chairman of the Board of theWorld Health Imaging, Telemedicine and Informatics Alliance.[25]
Between 2015 and 2018, Minow served as a member of the Executive Advisory Council of theAmerican Archive of Public Broadcasting (AAPB), after which, his daughter Mary Minow joined the council.[26] In 2020, the AAPB launched the 'Broadcasting in the Public Interest: The Newton Minow Collection' to honor Minow's role in developing noncommercial television. The collection includes interviews, panels, testimonies, events, and profiles featuring him between 1961 and 2016.[27]
Minow co-chaired the 1976 and 1980presidential debates and was a vice-chairman of theCommission on Presidential Debates. He served on numerous presidential commissions and was chairman of a special advisory committee to theSecretary of Defense on protectingcivil liberties in the fight againstterrorism. His book on the history of the presidential debates was released in 2008.
Minow was a prominent supporter ofBarack Obama's candidacy for President of the United States. Minow recruited Obama in 1988 to work for his law firm Sidley Austin LLP as a summer associate, where Obama met his future wifeMichelle Robinson.[28][29] Minow pursued Obama on the recommendation of his daughter Martha, who was one of Barack Obama's law professors.[30]
According toMichelle Obama's bookBecoming, Minow and his wife "busted" then Michelle Robinson and Barack Obama—both still associates at Sidley Austin—on their first date, greeting them "warmly" in the popcorn line at theWater Tower Place cinema, before the new couple sawSpike Lee's movie,Do The Right Thing. Robinson and Obama had wanted to keep their relationship a secret from colleagues at the firm; Minow only "smiled" and "made no comment" at the fact they were together.[31]
Minow supported RepublicanBruce Rauner in the2014 Illinois gubernatorial election, despite his history in Democratic politics. He said his vote was a response to the poor track record ofDemocratic governance in Illinois.[32][33]
Minow was the recipient of 12 honorary degrees. He was a recipient of thePeabody Award in 1961[8] and theWoodrow Wilson Award for public service.[4] He was also a member of thePeabody AwardsBoard of Jurors from 1963 to 1976.[34]
Minow was inducted as a laureate ofThe Lincoln Academy of Illinois and awarded the Order of Lincoln (the State's highest honor) by theGovernor of Illinois,Pat Quinn in 2014 in the area of Government & Law.[35]
Minow received thePresidential Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama on November 22, 2016.[36]
Minow married Josephine Baskin in 1949.[37] They had three daughters, all trained as lawyers;Nell Minow,shareholder activist andmovie critic;Martha L. Minow, law professor and formerdean of Harvard Law School; and Mary, a library law expert appointed to theObama administration.[38] Josephine Baskin Minow died on February 17, 2022, at age 95.[39]
Minow was a great-uncle to Adam Frankel, a speechwriter of his former protege, Barack Obama.[30][40] Josephine Minow's older sister, Irene, is Frankel's paternal grandmother.[41][42][43][44]
Minow died from a heart attack at home in Chicago, on May 6, 2023, at age 97.[15]
Newton N. Minow, who as President John F. Kennedy's new F.C.C. chairman in 1961 sent shock waves through an industry and touched a nerve in a nation addicted to banality and mayhem by calling American television "a vast wasteland," died on Saturday at his home in Chicago. He was 97.
{{citation}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link){{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)Government offices | ||
---|---|---|
Preceded by | Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission March 1961 – May 15, 1963 | Succeeded by |