Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - May 31, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba C M Y K PAGE A16
A 16 WINNIPEG FREE PRESS, SUNDAY, MAY 31, 2015 ENTERTAINMENT winnipegfreepress. com
T HERE’S one thing even more
troubling than TLC pulling 19
Kids and Counting off the air
after allegations of child molestation
against one of its stars, Josh Duggar.
And that’s the fact it’s not the first time
something like this has happened.
Last year, the network cancelled Here
Comes Honey Boo Boo after it was reported
June ( Mama June) Shannon — mother to
nine- year- old Alana Thompson, the star of
the show — was dating a convicted child
molester. Two months earlier, Discovery
Channel ( owned by TLC’s parent company,
Discovery Communications) scrapped Sons
of Guns when star Will Hayden was charged
with the rape of a child.
Given that network talent typically goes through
rigorous background checks, how could this occur
more than once? Reality TV has grappled with this
problem since its inception: when you showcase real
people, you get very real problems — especially on
channels that feature unusual families or personalities.
It’s not just Discovery shows: there’s a wide range
of disturbing issues in reality- TV history. VH1’ s
dating show Megan Wants a Millionaire was yanked
off the air when a contestant was suspected in the
murder of his ex- wife. CBS’s Big Brother kicked off
a contestant for holding a knife to another person’s
throat on camera.
Certain industry insiders caution against blaming
the network or production companies for allowing
these cast members on the air in the first place,
pointing out there’s only so much they can prevent.
Others say some vetting processes are too lenient,
and that potential reality stars will hide damaging
pasts in order to get their shot on TV.
Then there’s the fact that when it comes to background
checks, laws can limit what investigators are
even allowed to uncover and report to the networks
in the first place.
When a Josh Duggar situation happens, in which a
2006 police report detailed accusations he molested
several underage girls when he was a teenager, the
natural question becomes when TLC knew about the
allegations; the show didn’t start filming until 2008.
( TLC declined to comment or answer questions for
this article.)
Brant Pinvidic, a reality- TV producer and former
TLC executive, says when a show falls apart, it’s
often easy in hindsight to think the network or a
production company behind the show should have
caught every red flag.
“ The networks take an amazing amount of due diligence
to background- check everybody. They take an
extraordinary amount of precaution... and Discovery,
in particular, is actually one of the most aggressive
( networks) in weeding out background issues,”
Pinvidic said. “ It’s a really unfortunate bar to be
held to: that you’re responsible for every element of
someone’s personal life because you’re documenting
their life. It’s almost impossible.”
Discovery Communications and the production
companies for Here Comes Honey Boo Boo ( Authentic
Entertainment) and Sons of Guns ( Jupiter
Entertainment) also declined to comment; Figure 8
Productions, which produces 19 Kids and Counting ,
did not respond to multiple requests.
Pinvidic, who helped develo p Jon & Kate Plus 8
for TLC, said all potential reality stars go through
a vetting process, complete with psychological and
medical tests. A network will pass on a show if there
are any signs of trouble.
“ Even the slightest twinge of issues, a show never
makes it,” he said. “ It has to be pretty squeaky clean.
You have all of your ducks in a row.”
So how does a network or production company
miss a potentially huge issue? Los Angeles- based
investigator Edward Myers has vetted thousands of
reality- TV candidates over the last 15 years. Background
checks for reality- show subjects, he cautions,
are a lot more complicated than many people realize.
“ It’s quite a process, and I can see how someone
might wonder, ‘ How did they miss that?’ ” Myers
said. “ The reality is that, first, not all records are
discoverable to investigators, no matter how hard
they look. And even if one is accessible, in some situations,
it may not be legally permissible to report.”
For example, if a potential reality star is considered
an “ employee” of the network or production
company, U. S. labour law limits the reporting of
arrests that did not result in convictions in the past
seven years. State laws get even more convoluted: in
California, when investigators look into someone’s
criminal history, they are allowed to tell networks
about convictions in the last seven years, but not arrests
and police reports.
Even if the candidate for the show is not considered
an “ employee” and those limitations don’t
apply, the investigative process “ is still imperfect
and challenging,” Myers said. ( Discovery and TLC
would not answer questions about whether they consider
reality show cast members employees.)
Myers, who did not work on 19 Kids and Counting,
points out records have to be “ discoverable.” Even
if TLC was given a tip about Josh Duggar — such
as when Oprah Winfrey reportedly cancelled an
episode with the family after her show received an
email about the molestation accusations, which had
triggered an Arkansas police investigation in 2006 —
police may not give that information to background
investigators.
Then there’s the obvious: People lie all the time,
especially people who want to be TV stars.
“ If a person self- discloses they were investigated,
arrested or had other similar contacts with the
police that never resulted in a court appearance, one
can make an effort to see if the matter is discoverable
through the police department,” Myers said.
“ Invariably, candidates don’t like to give us those
things.”
Casting directors, meanwhile, feel like they’ve
seen every trick in the book. “ If people want to be
on TV bad enough, they will manage to suppress
their secrets,” said Kristi Russell, president of Metal
Flowers Media.
Russell added the pressure has increased on some
smaller production companies forced to shell out
money for initial background checks. In earlier
years of reality TV, the network would foot the bill.
Saving money could inspire some to cut corners,
Russell said, but many would never risk it.
“ For me, as a casting company trying to stay in
the game... we are aggressive about our background
checks,” Russell said. “ We don’t leave any stones
unturned, for the very reasons that are so prevalent
in the media right now.”
As for Discovery Communications specifically,
former TLC executive Brant Pinvidic reiterates
there’s no way that, for example, the network knew
anything about the Josh Duggar allegations.
“ I would bet anything that there is no possibility
Discovery had any knowledge of this whatsoever. If
there was even remotely talk of this, the show would
have never gone on the air,” Pinvidic said.
“ It’s a big show, but it makes a tiny percentage
of overall Discovery and TLC’s ( revenue). They
wouldn’t risk this kind of publicity.”
— Washington Post
By Emily Yahr
‘ It’s a really unfortunate bar to be held to: that you’re responsible for every element
of someone’s personal life because you’re documenting their life. It’s almost impossible’
Reality checks
Industry
sometimes fails
to uncover
serious
allegations
against TV stars
BETH HALL / TLC
The TLC reality series 19 Kids and Counting was taken off the air after past allegations of child molestation against Josh Duggar surfaced.
JOHN BAZEMORE / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Here Comes Honey Boo Boo, a series about Alana ( Honey Boo Boo) Thompson and her family, was cancelled after
it was reported her mother, June Shannon ( right), was dating a convicted child molester.
DANNY JOHNSTON / THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES
Josh Duggar in 2014.
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