North Carolina
Related: About this forumNorth Carolina radio station plans to reject broadcasts of 'inappropriate' Met operas
North Carolina radio station plans to reject broadcasts of 'inappropriate' Met operas
September 29, 20233:29 PM ET
Anastasia Tsioulcas
A listener-supported radio station in North Carolina, WCPE, is planning to withhold the broadcast of six contemporary operas this season from New York's Metropolitan Opera, because of the station management's objections to the operas' content. It is a classical music controversy that echoes larger, nationwide culture war debates.
WCPE's protest comes at a time when the Metropolitan Opera is eager to showcase its commitment to recently written operas and works from outside the traditional canon of music written by white men. Three of the operas that WCPE plans to reject in the 2023-24 season were written by Black or Mexican composers. This past April, WCPE also refused to broadcast another Met-produced opera written by a Black composer that included LGBTQ themes.
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WCPE's general manager, Deborah S. Proctor, sent out a letter to station patrons about seven operas in particular: one that the Met staged earlier this year and the rest that the Met is scheduled to present in its current season. Proctor wrote in her letter that she was seeking feedback from her listene. ... The letter was published on Aug. 31 but recently gained traction online. Most of WCPE's objections relate to depictions of violence or the presence of LGBTQ subject material; in another instance, Proctor objects to a composer's "non-biblical" meditation on the birth of Jesus.
Link to tweet
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In the NPR interview, Proctor called WCPE's programming "a safe refuge from the horrors of life." Repeatedly, Proctor also appealed to the sensibilities of any children who might tune into her station or come across it online and said that her personal values were integral to her decision-making. Breaking into tears on the phone, Proctor said: "I have a moral decision to make here. What if one child hears this? When I stand before Jesus Christ on Judgement Day, what am I going to say?"
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Croney
(4,868 posts)You: Oh shit, you're not a straight white man with a beard!
Jesus: *pushes trap door button*
Biophilic
(4,648 posts)So one person gets to decide for everyone else. This is truly outrageous. Very scary to me.
justaprogressive
(2,416 posts)moose65
(3,295 posts)Does she even know who listens to her station?
The Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill area is the most liberal place in NC. Those folks aren't going to be shocked by any of those operas.
OldBaldy1701E
(6,229 posts)Fuquay-Varina! Kinghtdale! Garner! Holly Springs!
DUNCAN!?!
(FYI for everyone not from there, Duncan is not even incorporated. It has a few families at a crossroad, that's about it.)
I always felt that the rest of the state never really liked Wake-Orange-Durham counties... too many colleges teaching people how to think...
Wonder Why
(4,576 posts)usonian
(13,550 posts)Everything is available on the internet.
Most stations stream, available on ANY web browser.
Here is a list of stations that carry Met Opera. I made a few discoveries by researching this topic. Where I live, the classical FM station is too weak, so I put a put old iPod on Wi-Fi and listen to any number of radio stations that stream on the web. I am doing so right now. The variety is bewildering.
In fact I am listening to WDAV (Davidson) right now, from California. It is a great station. Streaming or "app". The app still works on my million year old iPod touch.
You want Met Opera?
Check out this list. !!!!
https://www.metopera.org/Season/Radio/Saturday-Matinee-Broadcasts/Station-Finder/
Most stream on the internet.
The list is NOT mobile-friendly, so turn your phone sideways and decrease the font size. The web is decades old and some still don't "get it right"
And WQXR has a 24 by 7 Operavore channel for the seriously addicted opera buffs.
Vissi d'Arte!
mahatmakanejeeves
(60,683 posts)N.C. radio station reverses decision to withhold broadcast of contemporary Met operas
Updated October 5, 20238:30 PM ET
Anastasia Tsioulcas
This story was updated on Thursday, Oct. 5 at 8:25 p.m. ET.
On Thursday afternoon, a listener-supported station in North Carolina, WCPE, reversed its decision to withhold the broadcast of six contemporary operas this season from the Metropolitan Opera saying, "After careful deliberation, due consideration, and hearing from our supporters, listeners and the public, The Classical Station has decided to broadcast the entire 2023-2024 season of the New York Metropolitan Opera."
The reversal came after public outcry from notable figures including Pulitzer Prize-winning musician Rhiannon Giddens and author and journalist Celeste Headlee.
WCPE's protest came at a time when the Metropolitan Opera is eager to showcase its commitment to recently written operas and works from outside the traditional canon of music written by white men. Three of the operas that WCPE planned to reject in the 2023-24 season were written by Black or Mexican composers. This past April, WCPE also refused to broadcast another Met-produced opera written by a Black composer that included LGBTQ themes.
After NPR published its report and other media outlets published similar stories, WCPE put a banner on its homepage asserting that unnamed news stories had "greatly misrepresented" the contents of a letter it sent about these plans to the station's supporters in late August. WCPE did not specifically point to any alleged errors or misrepresentations in NPR's reporting.
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The Classical Station Reverses Course, Will Now Broadcast Entire Met Opera 2023-24 Season
By David Salazar
Days after proclaiming to the world that it would not broadcast the entire Metropolitan Opera 2023-24 season, The Classical Station has reversed course.
The organization made a formal announcement on its website noting that After careful deliberation, due consideration, and hearing from our supporters, listeners, and the public, The Classical Station has decided to broadcast the entire 2023-2024 season of New York Metropolitan Opera.
The organization, via a letter from WCPE general manager Deborah S. Proctor, had previously noted that it did not want to present Dead Man Walking, Florencia en el Amazonas, El Niño, Fire Shut Up in My Bones, X: The Life and Times of Malcolm X or The Hours because it found the content of the works to be offensive and not appropriate for children. The company cited themes of rape, violence, and suicide as reasons to avoid presenting those works, though in the case Florencia en el Amazonas, an opera in Spanish, there was no main reason given. The organization had also banned a broadcast from Champion last season due to vulgar language and a theme unsuitable for a general audience. Proctor, in an interview with NPR, even added that she wanted her programming to be a safe refuge from the horrors of life I have a moral decision to make here. What if one child hears this? When I stand before Jesus Christ on Judgement Day, what am I going to say?
However, themes of the violence against women, suicide, exoticism, and rape didnt seem to have the same resonance if they were presented in French or Italian, as Proctor proclaimed that the radio station would be ready to present La Forza del Destino, Carmen, Roméo et Juliette, Turandot, and Madama Butterfly, all operas that feature these themes and other kinds of adult content.
The Met Opera had replied to The Classical Stations banning of the operas by noting that in all agreements with broadcasts, the companies had agreed to present the full season.