disneycuban
loco for disney! #1 Disney Resorts and Splash Moun
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- Jun 21, 2003
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Hi, I just wanted to know what people thought of this.
This article is located at http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,92543,00.html
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MIAMI Financial conservatives are looking to discontinue a Cuban-American, PBS-style newscast beamed out of the United States, saying the Spanish-language program is broadcasting to nowhere.
TV Marti ,a multi-million dollar venture in Florida that takes aim at Fidel Castro, doesn't seem to be reaching the target audience it seeks Cubans on the island nation.
"I can tell you the taxpayers across the country aren't getting their money's worth," said Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.
Since 1990, TV Marti's mission has been to send uncensored news from its West Miami studios to Cubans, much the way Voice of America reached behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War.
"For half a century, we were doing that in Eastern Europe, and no one complains. Why complain when the Cuban people could receive this information?" asked Pedro Roig, news director of TV Marti.
Since its inception, U.S. taxpayers have spent at least $100 million on TV Marti. It currently has 55 reporters, anchors and writers on the payroll, though it cranks out only about five hours per day of news and programming.
On top of that, UHF antennas are illegal in Cuba, and even though as many as 100,000 satellite dishes have been bought on the black market, critics say Cuban engineers have managed to use a $100 piece of hardware to block TV Marti's signal.
The big-screen size failure is not only costing taxpayers, but Cubans themselves, said Flake.
"I think the Cuban people would be a lot better off if we use that money to actually improve their lives somehow, instead of beaming a signal that they can't even view," he said.
But in Miami, Cuban Americans say TV Marti's pro-America message is clear even if the signal isn't.
"Why do they want to stop the information and news from being broadcast?" asked U.S. Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Fla. "It's a totalitarian state, airtight in terms of its control and oppression of the people."
Castro has threatened to jam radio signals in South Florida if the United States doesn't stop trying to send its signal into Cuba. Already, Cuban representatives in the United States have been questioned by the U.S. government about its jamming a satellite signal from California to Iran, where another program is trying to make headway, broadcasting tales of freedom to a dissident population.
The Bush administration has said that it has tested new anti-jamming measures aimed at getting the TV Marti signal into Cuba, but it does not yet know its measure of success.
This article is located at http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,92543,00.html
____________________________________________________
MIAMI Financial conservatives are looking to discontinue a Cuban-American, PBS-style newscast beamed out of the United States, saying the Spanish-language program is broadcasting to nowhere.
TV Marti ,a multi-million dollar venture in Florida that takes aim at Fidel Castro, doesn't seem to be reaching the target audience it seeks Cubans on the island nation.
"I can tell you the taxpayers across the country aren't getting their money's worth," said Rep. Jeff Flake, R-Ariz.
Since 1990, TV Marti's mission has been to send uncensored news from its West Miami studios to Cubans, much the way Voice of America reached behind the Iron Curtain during the Cold War.
"For half a century, we were doing that in Eastern Europe, and no one complains. Why complain when the Cuban people could receive this information?" asked Pedro Roig, news director of TV Marti.
Since its inception, U.S. taxpayers have spent at least $100 million on TV Marti. It currently has 55 reporters, anchors and writers on the payroll, though it cranks out only about five hours per day of news and programming.
On top of that, UHF antennas are illegal in Cuba, and even though as many as 100,000 satellite dishes have been bought on the black market, critics say Cuban engineers have managed to use a $100 piece of hardware to block TV Marti's signal.
The big-screen size failure is not only costing taxpayers, but Cubans themselves, said Flake.
"I think the Cuban people would be a lot better off if we use that money to actually improve their lives somehow, instead of beaming a signal that they can't even view," he said.
But in Miami, Cuban Americans say TV Marti's pro-America message is clear even if the signal isn't.
"Why do they want to stop the information and news from being broadcast?" asked U.S. Rep. Lincoln Diaz-Balart, R-Fla. "It's a totalitarian state, airtight in terms of its control and oppression of the people."
Castro has threatened to jam radio signals in South Florida if the United States doesn't stop trying to send its signal into Cuba. Already, Cuban representatives in the United States have been questioned by the U.S. government about its jamming a satellite signal from California to Iran, where another program is trying to make headway, broadcasting tales of freedom to a dissident population.
The Bush administration has said that it has tested new anti-jamming measures aimed at getting the TV Marti signal into Cuba, but it does not yet know its measure of success.
