FREQUENTLY ASKED
QUESTIONS
1. What are
interstitial programs?
Interstitial programs are “short form” editorials that are
two to five minutes in length and are used to bridge the gap
between longer Public Television programs. They air
independently as standalone segments.
2.
Are these interstitial programs created by our studio affiliated
with any network?
No. Our production studio and programs are independently
created and not affiliated with any particular network.
3.
Does our programming or production studio have any affiliation
with programs produced by PBS, or other independent
organizations?
There is a typical misunderstanding that PBS and Public
Television are one and the same. PBS and Public Television
are not one and the same and our series is not associated
with PBS. The producers and studio are not associated with,
distribute programming for, review underwriting for or
otherwise have any business relationship with PBS (or any
other entity program provider such as APT or NETA).
4.
Will the segments air on Public TV?
Yes.
Our programming department deals directly with the
individual Public TV stations as a pre-approved content
provider through American Artists. American Artists is a
distributor of educational programs for Public TV and has
been distributing programs to all of Public TV for over 42
years (including programs such as National Geographic and
Major League Baseball). All programming on Public TV is
aired at the discretion of each individual station.
There are over 200 individual stations, geographically
covering the entire United States, currently airing the
interstitial programs during primetime distributed to them
through American Artists.
5.
Where else are the programs airing?
The segments are currently airing primetime on the major
news networks (CNBC, FOX, CNN, MSNBC) and are also airing on
demographically specific networks based on their storyline
(such as the Outdoor Network, Versus, Fox Sports, Discovery
Channel, TLC and others chosen by participating
organizations).
6.
Do individual organizations gain the licensing rights to the
work once it is completed?
Each individual organization or company owns the segments at
the end of the project and can use them on their website,
distribute, them, etc., as they see fit.
6.
What is the production cycle for completing the project?
The entire project and process is normally set at 90-120
days, though special circumstances that an organization may
face (such as a specific harvest time, or a convention or
event) may speed up the process. They may also set a
specific shoot date for that special time. That is at
the discretion of each company and organization.