When Steven Schupak talks about the state of public TV today, you can hear the excitement in his voice. 鈥淲hat other channel has membership? What other channel has people leaving money to them in their wills? Not very many,鈥 he said. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 what public television is.鈥
Schupak, who earned a master's degree in management with a specialization in marketing from The Graduate School in 1995, was recently promoted to executive vice president and chief operating officer at Maryland Public Television.
Despite funding challenges, public television is enjoying a 鈥渂it of a renaissance,鈥 Schupak said. Where cable channels once encroached on public TV鈥檚 bread and butter鈥攕cience, education, and arts programming and documentaries鈥攖hat鈥檚 less of an issue today. Nearly 45 percent of today鈥檚 cable viewers are flocking to reality television, which he says, creates opportunity for organizations like his.
鈥淭here is really no learning on The Learning Channel,鈥 Schupak said. 鈥淭here aren鈥檛 very many serious documentaries on traditional documentary services like Discovery, and less history on the History Channel than there used to be. Nearly no arts on the Arts and Entertainment [A&E] channel. These are genres that now are being reclaimed by PBS [Public Broadcasting Service] nationally.鈥
Market share for PBS is way up, Schupak noted, leaping from 13th to sixth place over the past two years, and last week, it climbed to fifth. He calls this a golden era for television in general鈥攁nd for public television in particular.
Schupak鈥檚 career trajectory didn鈥檛 always point in this direction. As an undergraduate at New York University, he interned at ABC, then worked full-time at a local ABC affiliate, and later took a job at the network. With some experience under his belt, he realized he was not only handling production logistics and creative decisions but also the business of communications and media.
Working for Bob Wussler鈥攚ho had been a CBS executive and then senior adviser at Turner Broadcasting before launching Comsat Video Enterprises with the aim of recreating Ted Turner鈥檚 empire鈥擲chupak looked around and realized he needed a business degree. His colleagues were handling acquisitions of small companies, and he said he felt out of his league.
Researching B-schools, he found many were still using classical examples in their case studies, such as packaged goods companies. In UMUC鈥檚 program, Schupak found a technology track that spoke his language. Cases centered on Microsoft, Apple, and Hewlett-Packard. 鈥淚 thought, 鈥楾his is much more where my interest is,鈥欌 he said.
So he became one of the first students at UMUC鈥檚 Shady Grove location. 鈥淚t was not easy going to school at night,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he laptops back in those days were 20 pounds, and there was a lot of traveling to do.鈥
The program also called for a thesis and oral defense. People still talk about the defense, he said, recalling a tight-knit group of classmates who met twice a week to prepare for the difficult oral exam. 鈥淭he list of questions was really intense,鈥 he said.
But Schupak鈥檚 studies paid off, particularly a class in negotiations that he still remembers clearly.
鈥淚 do that almost every day,鈥 he said, negotiating with partners, producers, and suppliers. 鈥淚 did not understand how important negotiation and deal-making were in daily business deals. You can鈥檛 do anything in public television without partners.鈥
In a recent partnership with Major League Baseball, which beamed to baseball viewers an MPT live show celebrating the 200th anniversary of 鈥淭he Star-Spangled Banner,鈥 no money changed hands, Schupak said. 鈥淏ut both parties had a fabulous experience.鈥
Much has changed in the industry since Schupak got started. In the early days, there were three major networks and PBS.
鈥淣ow look at the cable dial,鈥 he said. Schupak and his colleagues have clearly given the dial, and their own station, a great deal of attention. Under his leadership, MPT has won no fewer than 58 Emmy Awards, according to an MPT news release.
鈥淭here鈥檚 never been a more exciting time for communications and media than right now,鈥 he said, pointing to different 鈥渄isruptive鈥 technologies鈥攕uch as tablets and mobile devices and platforms like Netflix and Hulu鈥攚hich have changed the face of the industry. And while video was the buzzword when Schupak was cutting his broadcasting teeth, today there are many cable 鈥渃ord-cutters,鈥 and even 鈥渃ord-nevers,鈥 who grew up never having had cable.
No doubt 鈥渧ideo鈥 is a foreign language to some today. 鈥淩eally? Seriously? Video? It seems so pedestrian today,鈥 Schupak said. 鈥淪ome of the biggest names in media weren鈥檛 even around 10 years ago.鈥
By all accounts, Schupak and his team have adapted well, and he points with pride to MPT programs such as Space Racers, Chesapeake Bay Week, and Star-Spangled Spectacular.
The latter, which took more than two-and-a-half years to plan, was a live two-hour event that PBS carried nationally. It featured music, fireworks, and historical information about Francis Scott Key. 鈥淕etting the word out about regional history is a perfect example of why public television is set up the way it is,鈥 Schupak said.
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