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LA: Goldberg's 'Armenian Genocide' will show at Egyptian Theater

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  • LA: Goldberg's 'Armenian Genocide' will show at Egyptian Theater

    Los Angeles Times
    calendarlive.com
    March 23 2006


    TELEVISION
    'Armenian Genocide' will show at Egyptian

    Enter your ZIP Code to find local TV listings customized by your
    cable or satellite provider.

    By Rachel Abramowitz, Times Staff Writer


    WITH local PBS affiliate KCET-TV refusing to air his documentary "The
    Armenian Genocide," filmmaker Anthony Goldberg has decided to rent
    out Hollywood's Egyptian Theatre to show the film in continuous free
    screenings on April 17 - the same day it will be playing on most of
    the top PBS stations in the country.

    "We will continue to screen the film that day and night as long as we
    have the theater," Goldberg said Wednesday.

    The filmmaker, who is paying for much of the $10,000 tab out of his
    own pocket, noted that "the largest market of Armenians outside
    Armenia is in Los Angeles."

    Goldberg's one-hour documentary focuses on the Ottoman Empire's role
    in the massacre of at least a million Armenians during and right
    after World War I.

    The Ottoman Empire became the modern republic of Turkey, whose
    government disputes that a genocide occurred, attributing the deaths
    instead to war, disease and starvation.

    The documentary has already created a flap, in part because PBS
    commissioned a 25-minute panel discussion to run afterward, which
    featured two academics who believed that the killings constituted
    genocide, and two who argued that a holocaust did not occur.

    An Armenian group launched an online petition against the panel
    program and several members of Congress complained to PBS. They
    argued that the network would never follow a documentary about the
    genocide of Jews during World War II with a panel discussion
    featuring holocaust deniers.

    KCET said it wouldn't run either the documentary or the panel
    follow-up.

    Bohdan Zachary, the station's executive director of programming, said
    it would instead air a French documentary about the Armenian
    genocide, which the station felt offered a more comprehensive
    examination of the issue.
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