COMBINED ACCESSIBLE TRANSCRIPT
American Masters
FLOYD ABRAMS: Speaking Freely
Accessible Transcript (Combination)
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Narration: “American Masters” is made possible by support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The Rosalind P. Walter Foundation. Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III. Seton J. Melvin. Lillian Goldman Programming Endowment. The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation. Koo and Patricia Yuen, committed to bridging cultural differences in our communities. Thea Petschek Iervolino Foundation. The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation. Vital Projects Fund. The Marc Haas Foundation. Judith and Burton Resnick. Ellen and James S. Marcus. The Ambrose Monell Foundation. The Andre and Elizabeth Kertesz Foundation. “Floyd Abrams: Speaking Freely” has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Bringing you the stories that define us. neh.gov.
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Narration: Center for Advanced Hindsight at Duke University. FIRE: Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. The Rogovy Foundation. And by contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you. Thank you.
[Between two fluted pillars on a city building facade, a yellow banner reading “SENSATION”. Tender and uplifting instrumentals begin, devolving into an unsettling melody. News footage of reporting and protest footage appears on screen, featuring protest signs including one reading “Desecration of what is holy is not art.”]
News Reporter: The show “Sensation” is sparking demonstrations at the Brooklyn Museum of Art. And the show hasn’t even opened yet.
Protester: Let’s stop this nonsense now.
New York Mayor Rudy Giuliani: Pigs in formaldehyde and cows dissected and have their parts put out there.
News Reporter: The Brooklyn Museum’s controversial painting of a Black Virgin Mary splattered with manure is drawing more fire from city hall tonight.
Giuliani: This should happen in a psychiatric hospital, not in a museum.
[A sculpture: An amalgamation of naked women wearing matching sneakers.]
Arnold Lehman, Brooklyn Museum Director (1997-2015): It was an enormous exhibition. It caused a bit of commotion.
[Indistinct shouting at protests outside the museum.]
Protester: They say it’s art, they pass it off as art. I say this damn painting should be thrown the hell out of there.
Lehman: I had death threats. Bomb threats. People attacked me on the street. I mean, I was an art museum director.
[A montage of newspaper clippings: “Rudy’s Art War,” “Giuliani Vows to Cut Subsidy Over ‘Sick’ Art.”]
Giuliani: They seem to have no compunction about throwing dung on important religious symbols. I’m not going to have any compunction with trying to put them out of business.
Lehman: Almost $35 million was going to be removed from the museum’s funding. All of our employees thought that they were going to be fired.
Footage of Floyd Abrams, First Amendment Attorney: The language, the tone, the music of what the mayor is saying is the same as that of dictators.
Lehman: Floyd Abrams was on TV and radio saying that this was wrong.
Footage of Abrams: This is a serious, profound First Amendment issue. It’s sad to see good lawyers make such bad arguments.
Lehman: We made an appointment. We got to see him immediately. Floyd was going to take this on. This is, you know, clearly a First Amendment case. And we exhaled for the first time for weeks.
[Footage of a press conference.]
Man at Podium: I’ll ask our attorney, Floyd Abrams, to take that question.
Abrams: The spirit of the First Amendment, as well as its letter, must permit this exhibition to go on and this museum not to be punished for doing so.
News Reporter: During the months of legal wrangling over the controversial “Sensation” exhibition, the Brooklyn Museum fought back and won.
Man: The court said, and I’m paraphrasing here, “You’re not making government weaker by forcing it to support unpopular speech. You’re making it stronger by forcing it to support the First Amendment.”
[A newspaper article titled: Judge to Rudy: Give back museum funds.]
Abrams: They may not decide on their own that because they don’t like a picture or they don’t like a book, that the public doesn’t get to see the picture or doesn’t get to see the book.
[A long line of people wait outside the museum in news footage. Unsettled instrumentals continue.]
News Reporter: An overflow of art lovers, protesters and the curious streamed into the Brooklyn Museum today.
Museum Attendee: In order to be able to discuss it either way, I’d like to see it before, you know, fighting against it or fighting for it.
[Footage of attendees viewing the art exhibition.]
Museum Attendee: The colors, the mosaic effect, the blending of the colors. Yes, it is beautiful.
Museum Attendee: I can’t believe that this caused a commotion.
Lehman: Floyd, you know, was our hero.
[Footage of Floyd Abrams shuffling papers and smiling and offering a smile. Introduction on screen, text imposed over newspaper titles: Floyd Abrams, Speaking Freely. A now elderly Abrams adjusts his suit coat, then enters a town car. The car approaches the Brooklyn Bridge. A series of individuals, not yet introduced, provide brief statements.]
– Floyd Abrams is known as almost First Amendment embodiment. When he takes a principled position on behalf of the press or on the behalf of the publisher of a book, he’s taking a position on behalf of all of us who need to know what’s in that book.
[Editor: Harry Jackson.]
– Everybody in journalism knows who Floyd Abrams is. You know, he’s quite a lion in the field.
– He’s a legendary figure in the world of the First Amendment. And his legacy is tied to the First Amendment that we have today. Whether he deserves credit for that or blame for that I think is — is an important question. Probably some of, you know, some of both.
[Executive Producer: Michael Kantor. Producer: Clare Smith Marash. Abrams walks through a building lobby toward a bank of elevators, then sits at his desk. Director: Yael Melamede.]
– Sometimes I think of the First Amendment almost as one of his clients, if you will.
– The fundamental insight of Floyd is that the American public has to be trusted and that the government has to be distrusted. I think is the essence of the First Amendment so it’s not saying anything new, he just powerfully articulated it.
– If there were the history of defense of the First Amendment in modern times, there probably wouldn’t be a chapter about Floyd Abrams. There’d be a — It would be part one. [Chuckles]
[A tall, ornate church makes up much of the view of Abrams’ office window. Abrams types away at his keyboard. A woman sets a paper cup next to him, where there are already two cups. A cardboard box shows papers and old photographs. Abrams tosses a folder into a recycling bin. He sorts through his office possessions.]
Abrams: I’m gonna be throwing away a lot of stuff. We’re moving to one of these glass places. Every office the same size, every — the furniture the same in every office. Oh, here are earlier drafts of a book that I wrote, so… Ah. This is a newspaper clipping recalling July 9, 1936, which happened to be my birthday and was the hottest day in the history of New York City. These are the files, one of my favorite cases, the Brooklyn Museum case. We worked so hard on these cases that you’re throwing a little bit of yourself away.
[#AmericanMastersPBS. Now, older footage of a young Abrams and slice of life footage of university at the time. Text on screen reads: Chapter 1: A Toast to the Constitution. Light piano instrumentals play. A young Abrams is seen in continued footage, wearing a suit and holding a textbook as he makes his way through campus.]
Abrams: I went to Cornell. I started when I was 16. I had a stuttering problem, which was sometimes embarrassing. In college debating, the dangers were greater and more immediate. But stutterers learn ways to avoid problems. It does lead you to be pretty good about synonyms, other articulations. When I was a junior, I became the head of our debating team.
[A paper reads: Floyd Abrams. Varsity. Cornell Debate Association. 1954-1955. A black and white photograph of the debate team.]
Abrams: We were in a contest at McGill, and that night we were taken to dinner by the Canadian team. There were toasts. And I remember I toasted the queen.
[A young Queen Elizabeth waves to a crowd.]
Abrams: And the Canadian stood up and said, “To the American Constitution with all its amendments.” And I thought, “That’s good.” It’s nice to think it, without a queen, without a king, they didn’t speak about the president or the presidency or our Supreme Court. No, they spoke about the Constitution.
[A sepia-toned painting of the founding fathers gathered in a meeting. String instrumentals strike softly, excerpts from the Constitution appear on screen.]
Abrams: This country came into being after a revolution. The leaders of the country had lived through limitations on speech. So when a written constitution and what became the Bill of Rights came into being, there was great clarity that there could not be legislation which limited freedom of speech and freedom of the press.
Emerson Sykes, Senior Staff Attorney, ACLU: The First Amendment says Congress shall make no law. Congress can be read as government, right. So it’s about restricting the government’s authority. The reason to protect free speech is because when we set up societies and we give certain people power over others, we want to have limits on that power.
Abrams: There was concern that this newly empowered federal government could deprive its citizens of basic human rights that are articulated in the First Amendment. What that doesn’t answer and what they did not answer then, is what is protected under the First Amendment.
Sykes: There are things that you’re not allowed to say. Language that’s harassing. True threats. Fighting words.
[A court document with highlighted terms: harassment, “true threats,” “fighting words,” perjury, libel.]
Abrams: Perjury. Libel. Lots of situations where speech is not protected. But in general, we have a system which more broadly protects speech rather than narrowly. It’s not just aspirational. It’s law. And it’s not poetry. It’s law. It is there to be used, to be asserted, you know, like the cross in front of the vampire in circumstances in which… our government comes down unacceptably against us.
[In old color footage, planes fly overhead and Abrams walks toward the camera in a brown military uniform and cap.]
Abrams: At Cornell I was in ROTC military training. Graduated in uniform. I spent six months at Fort Lee. I did not have the most nation-saving position. I was in charge of a shoe repair unit. And then I went to law school.
[A photo montage includes a law school admission test for Abrams, a 1957 Fall Term schedule, Yale Law School 1957 Spring Term Examinations for Constitutional Law. Current-day Abrams walks the campus. Tender instrumentals play on.]
Abrams: These are the dormitories in which I lived for my three years as a law student. Yeah. I bet that tree was there. [Chuckles] Ah. After law school, while I was clerking for a federal judge in Delaware, I met my wife, Efrat.
[Old footage and photographs of Abrams and Efrat, a young woman with dark shoulder-length hair.]
Abrams: I remember taking her to a party. I had a good time at the party and I asked her, “What did you think of it?” She said, “All you people do is talk — Kennedy and Nixon and Kennedy and Nixon — as if you know these people. There was no dancing.”
Ronnie Abrams, Floyd Abrams’ Daughter, U.S. District Judge: One thing I love, my dad, when he used to say he liked the people in the smoking section. He liked interesting people, fun people. And of course, it applied to my mom. He loved the fact that she just says what she thinks and, you know, said what she thought about everything.
Dan Abrams, Floyd Abrams’ Son, Media Entrepreneur and TV Host: My dad always respected her sort of common sense take on things.
Abrams: She has tended to think that a lot of questions can be answered a lot more easily than I have thought. Or to put it differently, that there was an answer. You ask a question, you get an answer to the question, not an essay. And that was really true from the time I met Efrat.
[Photos of the Abrams continue: A rabbi marries the couple. Photographs of their wedding reception.]
Dan Abrams: My mother’s older than my dad, and she was more cosmopolitan. I think my mother was very helpful in assuring him that he would succeed. If it hadn’t been for my mom, he would have stayed in Delaware. My mother insisted that she wouldn’t marry him if he stayed in Delaware. And he moved, and he had a hard time finding a job as a Jew. Cahill Gordon was one of the only major New York law firms at that time that accepted Jews. It was a very Catholic firm. Catholics and the Jews aligned in that way of being the outsiders.
[A headshot of a younger Floyd Abrams, then black and white footage of news footage, protests, and the Democratic Convention in Chicago.
Abrams: The Cahill Gordon law firm represented NBC for a number of years. I came to meet reporters who I found charming, impressive, doing God’s work. In 1968, the Democratic Convention in Chicago. There was violence on the streets. There were reporters being beaten up. And then there were reporters being subpoenaed to testify at trials.
[A document on screen highlights subpoenaed parties: NBC, NBC News. Old color footage of man bustling, answering phones, and smoking pipes.]
Abrams: It was really then that I started to get attached to a notion of the First Amendment as being so central to the protection of liberty. There was very little law at that time. We were making up, in a sense, First Amendment law as we went along.
Lee C. Bollinger, President (2002-2023) and Law Professor, Columbia University: You know, First Amendment as we know it today is relatively recent, only 100 years old. Most people think First Amendment beginning of the Constitution, yes, it was there, but no Supreme Court cases interpreting it until 1919.
[#AmericanMastersPBS. Black and white footage of military men marching in uniform, anti-war protest footage, and civil rights protest footage.]
Jameel Jaffer, Executive Director, Knight First Amendment Institute: With the First World War and really the establishment of the First Amendment as we know it today, the most important First Amendment cases were often national security cases — a conflict between individuals’ right to speak with national security justifications offered by the government. [Film reel clicking]
Bollinger: So only a hundred years. And then in fact, it really only came together in the way that we understand it today in the 1960s and ’70s.
Protesters: Freedom. Freedom. Freedom.
Eleanor Holmes Norton, Assistant Legal Director (1965-1970), ACLU: The gains we’ve achieved in the civil rights movement we owe almost entirely to the First Amendment. It was the ability to march, to speak, to engage in demonstrations.
[Continued protest footage with signs reading: We march for effective civil rights laws NOW! Photographs of white students wearing black armbands.]
Abrams: The Supreme Court, to the surprise of a lot of people, started saying that schoolchildren have First Amendment rights. A kid that went to school with a black armband protesting the war in Vietnam had a right to have it.
Kate Shaw, Strict Scrutiny Podcast Co-Host, Professor, Cardozo School of Law: Some of the really important cases in which we sort of see the contemporary kind of emergence of this conception of the First Amendment do critically involve the press.
Abrams: The great case was New York Times against Sullivan.
David E. McCraw, SVP and Deputy General Counsel, The New York Times: Southern officeholders wanted to enforce Jim Crow laws and wanted the Northern press to shut up about it.
[Indistinct shouting in footage of protest unrest. Police officers grab at protesters.]
Radio Voice: In a supercharged atmosphere, the racial antagonism flared into violence.
McCraw: That’s what these libel suits were designed to do, burden the press and get The New York Times and CBS News and other news organizations to stop covering the civil rights movement. And the court said, no, we’re going to change the rules around libel so that doesn’t happen.
[A news article: Freedom of the American Press Is Bolstered in Court’s Libel Decision. Civil rights protest footage and soft instrumentals continue.]
Bollinger: It was a political refashioning. One of the most exciting periods in modern history. That’s Floyd’s beginning period.
Jaffer: Those cases are part of what have given us the framework that we have today. But with respect to press freedom, and particularly press freedom relating to the publication of national security secrets, which is a huge part of press freedom, there’s no case more important than the Pentagon Papers case.
[Footage of newspapers being printed. CBS News footage from June 14th, 1971.]
Walter Cronkite: This weekend, portions of a highly classified Pentagon document came to light for all the world to see. The New York Times began publishing parts of a voluminous report that the Pentagon had drawn up on the causes and conduct of American involvement in Vietnam.
[Text on screen: Chapter 2: The Right to Know. Archival footage and documents reading: Justification of the War (11 Vols.)]
Abrams: The Pentagon Papers were 7,000 pages commissioned by Defense Secretary Robert McNamara, addressing the question of how we got into the then raging war in Vietnam.
David Rudenstine, Law Professor and Author, Cardozo School of Law: There was real basis to believe that the government misrepresented, if not lied to the American people over a long period of time regarding the war.
[Archival footage shows a helicopter hovering over soldiers in a field. Then, a black and white still captioned: President Nixon speaking about the Pentagon Papers, Nixon Tapes – June 15, 1971.]
President Nixon: What the Times has done is placed itself above the law. They say it’s our responsibility to print it. Now God dammit you can’t have that thing in a free country. Freedom of the press does not — is not the freedom to destroy the integrity of the government.
Rudenstine: The New York Times’ lawyers at the time was a law firm named Lord Day & Lord, and the managing partner was Herbert Brownell, who had been the attorney general for President Eisenhower in the ’50s.
[Footage of a man captioned: Lord Day & Lord’s Partner Herbert Brownell and President Nixon.]
Rudenstine: When The New York Times got the papers, the advice they got was that the patriotic thing for The New York Times to do was to turn the papers back to the government forthwith.
Abrams: Their senior partner was quoted as having said, “I don’t want to touch them. It’s a violation of law.” They told the Times it was unpatriotic. They told the Times, the publisher, Sulzberger, could go to jail. They told Mr. Sulzberger that his father wouldn’t have run it.
[A black and white still captioned: President Nixon speaking about the Pentagon Papers, Nixon Tapes – June 15, 1971. Nixon speaks on the phone.]
Nixon: This could backfire on the Times. The main thing is to cast it in terms of doing something disloyal to the country.
– That’s right.
Nixon: This risks our men, you know.
[Now, a filmed interview with NYT Publisher Arthur Ochs Sulzberger, Press Conference NYC – June 16, 1971.]
Interviewer: Do you feel, Mr. Sulzberger, that the national security is endangered as charged by the administration?
Arthur Ochs Sulzberger: I certainly do not. This was not a breach of the national security. We gave away no national secrets. We didn’t jeopardize any American soldiers or Marines overseas.
Rudenstine: When I interviewed Mr. Sulzberger, he held out his hands and said, “I’m ready to go if I have to.”
[Men working in a newspaper printing press. Then, a black and white photo of news reporters holding microphones.]
Abrams: The lawyers had urged them not to publish. The Times went ahead and published. The Times called its lawyers. Their lawyers came over and said, “We won’t represent you.” And so the Times found themselves without a lawyer. 1:00 in the morning my phone rang and it was the general counsel of the Times, James Goodale, who had already called a professor of mine from Yale Law School, Professor Bickel, to ask him to lead a team in representing the Times. And I was stunned. Stunned to get the call.
[A crowd of people stand under umbrellas outside a courthouse. Then, a picture of a document reading: United States District Court for the Southern District of New York. Temporary Restraining Order.]
Nina Totenberg, Reporter (1968-1973), National Observer: I was a young reporter working for the late great National Observer, and they sent me to New York to cover the temporary restraining order. I remember being scared, really scared. If the government could stop The New York Times, the Gray Lady, the most important newspaper in the United States, at a time when newspapers were still king, that meant they could stop anybody from publishing for whatever they called national security.
[Archival footage captioned: NYT General Counsel James Goodale, Press Conference NYC, June 16, 1971. Low instrumentals continue.]
James Goodale: Well, it’s a prior restraint on publication. They’re trying to tell us that we can’t publish in advance of seeing what we are going to publish.
[Distant horns honk in modern day footage of the United States Courthouse, captioned: 50th Anniversary of the Pentagon Papers Decision, Courthouse for the Southern District of New York. Abrams ascends the courthouse steps. Black and white photographs featuring Abrams and Judge Gurfein, a middle-aged man with a mustache.]
Abrams: The first thing I remember coming up these stairs then was I’m not going to know where the courtroom is. Everyone’s going to look to me. And when we met with Judge Gurfein for the first time, he said in so many words, “I’m sure we’re all patriotic here and we’re all gonna try to do the right thing for the country.” Which we took as very threatening. [Laughs]
[A black and white still of Nixon captioned: Attorney General John Mitchell and President Nixon, Nixon Tapes – June 15, 1971.]
AG John Mitchell: We’ve got a good judge on it, Murray Gurfein who was —
Nixon: Oh, yeah.
Mitchell: He’s new and he’s appreciative, so…
Nixon: Good.
[Empty wooden pews in a courtroom.]
Abrams: The trial judge, Murray Gurfein, had just been confirmed. He was an appointee of President Nixon. So here this judge on his first day as a judge, first case winds up with the Pentagon Papers case.
Rudenstine: The judge asked The New York Times if they would agree to a temporary restraining order.
[Abrams sits in a courtroom.]
Abrams: The Times’ answer was no. Barring the press even for a day is itself an egregious violation of the First Amendment.
Rudenstine: I think that aggravated the judge and then within a short period of time, he granted the temporary restraining order.
[Newspaper printing presses hiss and ring. Back to Abrams sitting in an empty courtroom.]
Interviewer: After that first day, were you discouraged?
Abrams: No, I was busy. We had to prepare for the argument that I made, which was not to turn over the documents.
[A courtroom illustration of Abrams at a courtroom podium. Slow piano instrumentals play.]
News Reporter: Speaking for the Times, attorney Floyd Abrams. “We are asserting,” he said, “the rights of The New York Times and the public under the First Amendment.”
[Court documents read: Memorandum of defendant, New York Times Company in opposition to motion for preliminary injunction. Another document: The Evidence, The Government Witnesses.]
Abrams: We were drafting our opposition, interviewing witnesses, making a decision, should we call an expert witness. In the hearing in front of Judge Gurfein, an admiral testified and another very high ranking military person, and it became clear that they really had no idea what’s in the Pentagon Papers or how much harm, on what basis it could do. They just thought things ought to be quiet. These are secrets. Why do you reveal secrets? It shouldn’t be allowed.
News Reporter: It was well after 2:00 when Judge Murray Gurfein finally handed down the decision in favor of the Times.
[A courtroom illustration of Judge Gurfein.]
Rudenstine: Judge Gurfein was a levelheaded and serious questioner of the government witnesses.
News Reporter: Judge Gurfein had come out strongly in favor of freedom of the press. “A cantankerous press,” he said, “an obstinate press…”
Abrams: “An obstinate press, a ubiquitous press must be suffered by those in authority in order to preserve the even greater values of freedom of expression and the right of the people to know.” I thought it was maybe the best statement of the value of the First Amendment and its centrality to our legal system and the protection of the press.
[A black and white photo of Abrams and other men descending the courtroom steps. Now, black and white news footage dated June 19, 1971.]
News Reporter: The Justice Department then appealed Judge Gurfein’s ruling, and it won another restraining order against the Times until the appeal can be heard on Monday morning. In all probability, it will go further than that — all the way to the Supreme Court by midweek or sooner.
Abrams: If Judge Gurfein had written a sort of a narrow opinion, “You can publish most of what you want, but you can’t publish this, this and that,” it would have been harder to make sort of full throated First Amendment arguments in the Supreme Court. On the argument day we had written all we could, urged Bickel to focus more on this and less on that.
[The front page of The New York Times dated Saturday, June 26, 1971. Headline: Supreme Court Agrees to rule on printing of Vietnam Series; Arguments to be heard today. Then, courtroom illustrations of Abrams, Bickel, and the Justices.]
Audio recording of Bickel: Prior restraints fall on speech with a special brutality and finality. If a criminal statute chills speech, a prior restraint freezes it. We believe that the only proper resolution of the case is the dismissal of the complaint.
[A black and white photo of Abrams, Bickel, and others at the courtroom steps. Then, news footage from June 30, 1971.]
News Reporter: For two and a half weeks, two constitutional principles have clashed, the government’s view of our national security versus the newspaper’s view of their freedom to print, and the newspapers won.
[Cheers and applause as a man strikes a metal tray. A man pulls a sheet off of a printing press. Now, the front page of The New York Times dated Thursday, July 1, 1971. Headline: Supreme Court, 6-3, Upholds newspapers on publication of the Pentagon Report; Times resumes its series, halted 15 days. Soft instrumentals chime.]
Rudenstine: When the vote came down 6 to 3, streets across America erupted with applause and relief that the press had won.
Totenberg: People look back now today and say, well, obviously the Pentagon Papers should have been published. I think it’s a very lucky thing that the Supreme Court upheld the right of a free press to publish.
[Newspapers rush through a printing press. Stacks of newspapers roll through a conveyor line.]
Abrams: I mean, think of it again. A war. Prisoners of war held. Efforts at negotiations under way. And the press comes along and publishes this secret, secret bunch of documents. We’re really the only country prepared to take these risks.
[Footage of a typewriter and workers in a newsroom. A man carries a stack of papers through the office as chiming instrumentals continue. #AmericanMastersPBS.]
Jaffer: This case has been and remains one of the key pillars of press freedom in the United States. Every day, you know, you can read government secrets in the pages of The New York Times and every other major newspaper in the country. That’s traceable to the Pentagon Papers.
[Footage of newspaper delivering and retrieving. Individuals are interviewed on the street.]
– I think the publication of those documents is long overdue.
– Yeah, I just feel like everybody should know what’s going on. And I don’t like the idea of our government having all these secrets.
Abrams: I was in India in my 20s. A law school classmate of mine, Indian woman, took me to her fortune teller. And he announced that before I was 35… I would go to the country’s capital and do something that would make me famous. The Pentagon Papers case began when I was 34 years and 11 months and ended a week before my 35th birthday. A libel case.
[Abrams continues sorting out his office, throwing an accordion folder into a trash bin. Then, news footage from October 31, 1978.]
Tim O’Brien, News Reporter: CBS are being sued by Colonel Anthony Herbert for $45 million for libel. It’s no exaggeration to characterize the “60 Minutes” case as the most significant free press case in years.
Footage of Abrams: What we want to avoid is any kind of system of law which allows “Why did you print that story instead of another story?”
[Now, footage from the film “All The President’s Men” from 1976. Two actors smirk in the scene excerpt as they stand in a newsroom.]
Adam Liptak, Supreme Court Reporter, The New York Times: The press was popular, rich, powerful — investigative reporters like Woodward and Bernstein were heroes, and Floyd was representing them.
[Abrams in his office, holding a folder.]
Abrams: This is from the Nebraska Press Association case.
News Reporter: Attorney Floyd Abrams said the power to order prior restraint is the power to destroy the media.
[Footage from ABC News Viewpoint.]
Host: Floyd Abrams is nationally known as a defender of the freedom of the press rights in court.
Abrams: There was a period of time in which I was the only, quote, First Amendment lawyer, unquote. I think those words had not existed before my stroke of good fortune.
[The cover of a newspaper. Headline: Law, How to win at the Supreme Court. The cover of a Washington Journalism Review. Headline: Floyd Abrams, The Lawyer With Press Appeal.]
Liptak: You know, Floyd was, in those days like a legal rock star, and people really flocked to him. That’s what you wanted to do. You wanted to come out of law school, be a lawyer, you might want to be a First Amendment lawyer and work for Floyd Abrams.
Ari Melber, Floyd Abrams’ Former Associate, MSNBC Anchor: I wouldn’t be where I am professionally or otherwise, without the way that he mentored me and helped me think through things in a really big way, which he didn’t have to do.
[A photograph of Melber and Abrams standing and smiling together. String instrumentals play.]
Penny Windle, Floyd Abrams’ Former Associate, Lawyer: He was just sort of insatiably curious. Genuinely interested in the other side of absolutely everything. To the point, as an associate, it sometimes was, you know, too much.
George Freeman, Floyd Abrams’ Former Associate ED, Media Law Resource Center: There must have been 10 of us at Cahill who were in the same position as me, who worked for Floyd and then got jobs, in-house at various media companies. And we kind of went out there as the sons and daughters of Floyd.
Liptak: Press law for a long time was evolving, and Floyd in particular was making new gains for the press.
[Black and white footage of a ship sailing under the Golden Gate Bridge.]
Abrams: I had a very major case in California, in San Francisco.
[News footage from July 30, 1978.]
News Reporter: Can television be held accountable if the content of one of its shows is imitated in real life?
Abrams: A girl had been attacked on a beach by three other girls in a manner similar to what was shown the night before in a docudrama on NBC. And the mother of the girl was claiming NBC was responsible for the harm done to her daughter.
[A news article titled: Can a TV Network Rape a Nine-Year-Old Girl?]
Footage of Abrams: Among the many briefs submitted on behalf of NBC in this case was a very telling one from the American Library Association, saying, in effect, “If NBC loses this case, we don’t know what books we’re going to be allowed to keep on our shelves.” If somebody takes out a book and reads something and supposedly gets some idea and goes and does something and a lawyer takes the position that he did it because he read it, that there’ll be a lot of problems. What I fear is that a loss in this case will necessarily lead to a kind of blandness, a kind of avoidance of television dealing with with hard and real and poignant social problems. So that raised one of these issues where if we win, life goes right on. But if we lose, everything changes.
[A news article titled: TV Wins a Crucial Case. $11 million suit blaming NBC for a crime is dismissed.]
Liptak: His greatest contributions really were in the area of making sure the press couldn’t be stopped from publishing the truth and couldn’t be punished for publishing the truth. And those things, now wholly accepted, were not well-established before Floyd Abrams hit the scene.
[A court document titled: Nixon v. Warner Communications, Inc. Low string instrumentals continue.]
Audio of Abrams: What has been missing from the public is what we came to court to seek. The right of the public not present in court to hear the tapes that everyone in court heard.
McCraw: He brings the court in, talks to the court as a colleague. He does not overwhelm with drama. And it just gets laid out in a way that it seems obvious that his side should win.
Abrams: I thought about the situation of a lawyer arguing in the Supreme Court, of me, of anyone arguing. He or she is alone like a batter in baseball. One person by himself or herself facing nine… and even one of the nine can ruin your performance.
[Old footage of an empty Supreme Court. A court document reads: Nebraska Press Assn. et al. v. Stuart, Judge, et al.]
Audio of Abrams: To urge upon you today a ruling which would be unthinkable in any nation in the world except ours. That it is, in our view, entirely consistent with American history, makes it no less remarkable, but simply points to the remarkable nature of that history, for what we would ask of you is nothing less than a renunciation of power.
Bollinger: Your person, your judgment, your wisdom benefits your argument. People ask themselves, do they want to live in the world that you’re arguing for?
[Old footage of two people approaching the Supreme Court. An airplane takes off, engine roaring.]
Abrams: I was on an airplane flying to San Francisco with a number of cases terribly active. And tears came out of my eyes. I didn’t even think I was depressed. Just tears started coming as a response to the totality of the obligations I was under and the risks my clients were at. It was — You know, sometimes it could be really tough.
[Abrams picks up a small picture frame in his office.]
Abrams: This, one of my favorite things in my office.
Interviewer: What is it?
Abrams: This is from my daughter to me when she was nine. “Love is more important than books and studies.”
[Abrams and the interviewer share a laugh.]
Abrams: “Have a great Father’s Day. Love.”
Ronnie Abrams: He did work hard, and on weekends sometimes we went with him to the office. You know, we’d play on the now old fashioned typewriters and get Mr. Softee, which I now realize he liked a lot more than we did.
[Photos of a young Dan and Ronnie, Abrams’ children.]
Dan Abrams: A lot of the time, the activity was going to the office. Dad working and us drawing or eating cookies.
Abrams: We used to play soccer right here.
[Abrams points to a room outside of his office.]
Abrams: That’s a perfect Sunday thing to do.
[A black and white photograph of the Abrams family, posed together outdoors with the children holding a football and a basketball. Sentimental instrumentals chime over a montage of continued family photos.]
Dan Abrams: He worked very often till 10:00, 11:00, midnight on a regular basis. I remember the sound of the door closing when he would get home. We’d get so excited that Dad was home.
Abrams: We didn’t have fairy tales at my house. We had cases that I would talk to them about and when I would go in to say good night to them, that’s what it was. “What did you do today? You have any good cases?” And all they wanted was for me to stay later. And I would.
Ronnie Abrams: My brother and I would try and keep him in our rooms after bedtime. So when he was ready to go, we would then say, “Tell us about your cases.” He would tell us about his cases. And they were suspenseful and sometimes moralistic, and the law seemed noble and even romantic and the lawyers were heroes.
[Text on screen: Chapter 3: The Fight to Protect Journalists.]
Totenberg: Floyd was my lawyer in a time of great trial and tribulation.
[Color footage of a news report.]
News reporter: It was a bombshell that almost derailed Clarence Thomas’ confirmation to the Supreme Court — Anita Hill’s charges that Thomas had sexually harassed her. Now, the reporter who broke that story is being asked by a Senate committee where she got her information. You are willing to go to jail over this. What are the chances that it will come to that?
Totenberg in Interview: I have no idea. I like to think the chances are small. [Chuckles] And certainly I don’t want to go to jail. And I’m no braver than the next reporter. But this really is a matter of the — of an essential professional constitutional principle. And I am not going to reveal my source. And if that means I have to go to prison then I have to go to prison.
[Back to current day Totenberg. The front page of a newspaper dated November 14,1991. Headline: A Reporter’s Story: Nina Totenberg of National Public Radio is caught up in the Anita Hill Controversy. Clarence Thomas takes a seat in front of rows of people in C-SPAN footage. Suspenseful instrumentals beat.]
Totenberg: It was the biggest scoop I ever had and will ever have in all likelihood. I was at a hearing of the Judiciary Committee to confirm Clarence Thomas. Joe Biden was talking about this confirmation was not going to be about personal matters.
Biden in Footage: Some have asked why we have not asked certain questions.
Totenberg: And there had been no discussion of personal matters. So I thought there, something was up, but I had no idea what. Then I started kicking tires. And pretty soon I found out that this law professor, Anita Hill, had made allegations of sexual harassment against Clarence Thomas, for whom she had worked. It ran on “Morning Edition.” I think it was a Sunday morning.
[A photograph of Anita Hill, then footage of Anita Hill leaving a building with security surrounding her.]
News Reporter: X rated and extraordinary. Millions glued to their television sets as senators scrutinized the sexual harassment charges against Supreme Court nominee Clarence Thomas.
Norton: The Anita Hill allegations disqualified Clarence Thomas as far as many of us were concerned. A number of us in the House walked over to his confirmation to oppose his appointment to the Supreme Court.
[A photo of women in pantsuits walking outdoors. Continued footage of Thomas. A 1992 newspaper article titled: Totenberg won’t budge, NPR journalist won’t reveal source of Thomas leak. #AmericanMastersPBS. Low instrumentals continue.]
News Reporter: Thomas won confirmation despite the allegations, but the Senate still wants to know who leaked them to National Public Radio.
Totenberg: The way they were talking about me, as if I’d done something really wrong and criminal. And I remember going home that night and suddenly said to myself, they’re going to subpoena me. They’re going to investigate this, and they’re going to subpoena me. And I want Floyd Abrams as my lawyer.
Abrams: I had represented years before a New York Times journalist, Myron Farber, who was called to testify in a New Jersey case. He refused to reveal sources. It was a criminal case against doctors who were accused of essentially killing patients. And the Times had done big stories about it and had confidential sources.
[A court document reading: In the matter of Myron Farber.]
Abrams: Members of the New Jersey Supreme Court were asking me, almost disbelieving me, “You’re saying in a criminal case that a journalist doesn’t have to reveal information?” I said, “I don’t have to reveal information and I do have the information. You wouldn’t call me, put me in jail. I have an attorney-client privilege, he has a journalist-source privilege.” And I thought it was a great argument, to no avail at all. And so he was jailed for some time.
[An article reads: Why the jailing of Farber ‘terrifies me’.]
Totenberg: The first thing he said to me was, “We don’t have a legal leg to stand on.”
Abrams: That’s not — That’s not the way I would say it. It’s a long time ago, so…
Interviewer: What do you think you would have said to her at the time?
Abrams: It’s a tough case legally.
Totenberg: “So we have to have a different strategy. Our strategy is that you will do every interview you’re asked to do.”
[A montage of Totenberg taking multiple interviews.]
News Reporter: NPR reporter Nina Totenberg broke the story.
Totenberg: The interview with Anita Hill was September 23rd. I was so scared. [Chuckling] I imagine that that’s hard for people to believe. But I was so scared that I asked them if I could have my lawyer on set with me.
News Reporter: Floyd Abrams, counsel for National Public Radio.
Abrams in News Footage: If journalists reveal their confidential sources, there won’t be any confidential sources. And if that gets violated, the public just won’t have the sort of information that all of us need.
Totenberg: Ultimately, I was called to testify and refused to testify. I mean, I went in and I didn’t answer the questions.
Abrams: It looked very threatening. And then the senators decided that it wasn’t worth the bad publicity for them.
Totenberg: [Chuckling] It’ll go to my grave with me. My husband doesn’t know. Nobody knows who my sources were.
[A photo of Totenberg standing at a class door in front of an interview setup behind her.]
Abrams: The U.S. Supreme Court has never said, certainly not in so many words, that there is protection for confidential sources of journalists. So as a result, it has fallen to members of the press who gather this information, I have to use the word bravely, and at great risk to themselves, to say, “I won’t tell you how I got it.”
[A photograph of Judith Miller.]
News Reporter: Judith Miller, highly regarded journalist for The New York Times, currently faces 18 months in jail for refusing a court order to testify about her contacts with confidential sources.
[A newspaper article reads: Contacts between reporter, Cheney aide questioned. Somber string instrumentals strike.]
Freeman: Judy Miller was a reporter, and in this particular case, she was asked to testify in the prosecution of Scooter Libby, Cheney’s chief aide.
[George W. Bush in footage from September 2003.]
George W. Bush: If there is a leak out of my administration, I want to know who it is.
News Reporter: Maybe the most significant clash between federal prosecutors and the press in 30 years. So, not surprisingly, Floyd Abrams is involved.
Abrams: The particular leak that was at issue in this case was something that she had not written about, but which the government, the prosecutors, at least thought she might well, or indeed they were sure she must have information about.
Judith Miller, Former News Editor and Reporter (1977-2005), The New York Times: They knew that I spoke to a lot of the people who would be the targets of such an investigation. Suspected leakers of information.
[A quick montage of Cheney, Bush, and Libby.]
Miller: They wanted all of the notebooks for a period of months. They wanted all of my records. And that would expose not just Scooter Libby, but a great many potential sensitive sources. That I really didn’t have much of a choice. I just had to do whatever I had to do to protect not just Libby, but all of the sources, all of the people I had dealt with, or I would never work in that town again. [Chuckles]
[NewsNight footage featuring Abrams.]
Anchor: Mr. Abrams, what federal law is it that allows a reporter to withhold his testimony from a grand jury?
Abrams: Well, it’s called the First Amendment. Reporters have a right not to reveal their sources because that’s a part of newsgathering.
Anchor: Right. That’s the position you’re staking. Is that position settled law?
Abrams: No, it is unsettled law, in fact.
Miller: One of the first conversations Floyd and I ever had was about the need for a federal shield law.
[A newspaper title reads: ‘Shield Laws’ Protect Press Sources – in Most cases.]
Miller: Many states have shield laws to protect journalists from being hauled up before grand juries and questioned about their sources. But unfortunately, national security is a federal issue. Our goal was to stretch the protection to try and advance it.
Abrams: So when she was called to testify, she refused to do so. And we sought review by the U.S. Supreme Court.
[Footage of Miller being surrounded by reporters and cameras.]
Liptak: Judith Miller in the aftermath of her flawed work in the run-up to the Iraq War had become a controversial figure.
Totenberg: She didn’t have many allies, let’s put it that way. And part of that was because of the way she had reported.
[A newspaper title reads: U.S. says Hussein intensifies quest for a-bomb parts, written in part by Miller. Then an online article reads: The Times Scoops That Melted. Cataloging the wretched reporting of Judith Miller.]
Miller: I had gotten a lot of criticism for my own reporting on weapons of mass destruction in Iraq. From 9/11 until the war began was one of the most fraught periods in American journalism. The pressure to produce at that point, to tell Americans what had happened to us and why. It was a period in which I wrote more stories than I had ever written before. Some of them were certainly not as well-sourced as I would have liked.
[Another online article reads: Judith Miller – the Patron Saint of Propaganda.]
Abrams in News Footage: Elements in the press are outdoing the Special Counsel by far in becoming mini prosecutors. There’s a quite concentrated effort to really, you know, bring down Judy.
Current Day Abrams: It was a case and probably the only one I had involving confidential sources in which the journalistic community, or at least a good part of it, you know, was never really persuaded that they were sure they wanted us to win.
Liptak: Nina’s case, everybody on the liberal end of society would think it’s easy and she should be able to protect her sources. Judith Miller, the source she was protecting was a member of the Bush administration, quite unpopular in liberal groups. So people may have flipped a little bit on which side they were on.
[Photographs of Totenberg and Miller. Now, footage of Abrams addressing a crowd of reporters.]
Abrams: Judy Miller today joins a long train of journalists throughout our history who have insisted on protecting the confidentiality of their sources.
[A newspaper article reads: N.Y. Times reporter goes to jail. Judith Miller refuses to name names; Matthew Cooper will talk.]
Current Day Abrams: In a sense, I was… too stuffed with knowledge about the area, about the arguments, about the different positions.
Liptak: Floyd had a hostile court and a bad day. It was clear he was going to lose.
[A New York Times article reads: Judges skeptical of First Amendment Protection for Reporters in C.I.A. Leak Inquiry. Written by Liptak.]
Abrams: The New York Times the next day on page one — I remember that — referred to the fact that the judge had asked me the same questions five times. [Abrams lowers his head.] Now again, very hostile judge, made no difference. But… certainly did to me.
Ronnie Abrams: You know, when you’re representing individuals and there’s so much at stake for them on a personal level, that’s really hard. I remember that being hard for him.
Abrams: [Shaking his head] We lost. [Chuckles] To this day, there is no sort of flat written-out protection for confidential sources of journalists. And I think that that’s — that’s a loss. I mean, not just that we lost the case, but a loss — a loss to the public.
[Abrams grabs a stack of folders.]
Abrams: All these files are Judy Miller files from one case.
[The files slip, drop, and thud into a recycle bin. He picks up a family photo from his desk.]
Abrams: This is a family picture. My mother and father. This is my uncle, who I learned when I was 12 years old, was a Republican, I couldn’t believe it. I had heard a labor union broadcast on the radio opposing the Taft-Hartley Labor Act. And my uncle, pleasantly enough, but authoritatively objected, started arguing, and this and that. And I said, “Uncle Barney, you sound like a Republican,” as if — and he was my first. [Chuckles]
[Text on screen: Chapter 4: Money and Speech.]
Theodore B. Olson, Partner, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP: Certainly in the ’70s, Floyd was the name that would have come to me immediately when I thought of a advocate for the First Amendment.
Abrams: Well, Ted and I have always been on opposite sides politically. He’s been connected with about every Republican administration of which I disapproved through the years. I think we found we had in common some views — on the First Amendment, for example.
[Billboards read: Vote for Ronald Reagan for common sense answers to California problems. Nikon: Making light work for people. Pepsi-Cola: Refresh without thinking.]
Olson: Among my first clients were people in the outdoor advertising industry. Some people think of that as billboards. Some people felt that they were unattractive. And cities started banning billboards or banning signs. We were representing the sign companies saying that you can’t just ban signs altogether.
[An article reads: Billboards: Beauty vs. Free Speech.]
Olson: And the Supreme Court agreed to hear that case. And I went to my clients and I said, you know, it’s a First Amendment case, but people don’t automatically associate billboards or outdoor advertising signs with the First Amendment. It will be helpful to your case if we had someone who immediately when they walked through the door, the justices would say, “Oh, that must be a First Amendment case.” Let’s get Floyd Abrams.
[A news article reads: The First Amendment and its favorite son. Floyd Abrams.]
Abrams: I will never forget a justice of the California Supreme Court saying, “You want to put a billboard on every redwood in this state.” And I said with all the dignity I could muster, [Chuckling] “No, I don’t want to do that. My client doesn’t want to do that.”
Interviewer: But?
Abrams: We think downtown San Diego is a place where banning of all billboards is a banning of speech. I mean, bear in mind, billboards, while dominantly commercial, are also political. I mean, they’re used for speech, whatever sort of speech people want. We wanted to show them that the billboards in San Diego were not just pure commercial speech, which gets less protection than political speech. And so we sent a photographer out. And here are the — are the billboards.
[Abrams reveals photographs of billboards from a folder. Curious instrumentals play.]
Abrams: This was an ad by the police in San Diego asking for more money. “Support America’s first environmental strike. Don’t buy Shell!” “Get them home.” The P.O.W.s in Southeast Asia. They finally ruled by a very close vote in our favor. The application of the First Amendment to a variety of actions, you could say, of corporate America or of businesses, makes sense to me that it was protected by the First Amendment. That’s very controversial.
[The term “commercial speech” is highlighted in a document.]
Zephyr Teachout, Law Professor, Fordham University: The ’70s were really the sort of turning point in the role of the corporation and the relationship between money and speech.
[A document reads: Virginia State Board of Pharmacy et al. v. Virginia Citizens Consumer Council, Inc. et al.]
Audio of Voice: Commercial speech is not wholly outside the protection of the 1st and 14th Amendments.
Teachout: The Virginia pharmaceutical advertising case was about whether a state could limit corporations from advertising about the pharmaceutical products. And in that case, the court said, no, there are these corporate speech rights. And then ’76 is also the year of Buckley versus Valeo. And that isn’t a corporate speech case, but it is a money speech case. In Buckley, the right to spend money in an election was a free speech right.
[A series of newspaper articles appear on screen, highlighting free speech cases.]
Teachout: On the one hand, you see money is speech. And on the other hand, you see corporations have free speech rights. Each of those then grow and expand. And there’s basically a 30-year fight. The court goes back and forth and back and forth on how to deal with money in politics. And then in Citizens United, grant corporations the right to spend unlimited money in elections.
[A document reads: Citizens United, Appellant, v. Federal Elections Commission, Appellee. Suspenseful instrumentals strike.]
Keith Olbermann in News Footage: Today, the Supreme Court of Chief Justice John Roberts declared that because corporations had all the rights of people, any restrictions on how these corporate beings spend their money on political advertising are unconstitutional. In the case Citizens United v. Federal Election Commission, the lawyer is Floyd Abrams. He will go down in the history books as the Quisling of freedom of speech in this country.
[Abrams addresses press outside of court steps in front of a podium with microphones. Cameras click as Abrams speaks.]
Abrams: This is an extraordinarily triumphant day for the First Amendment. The court has ruled that corporations may participate freely and openly and spend money on electoral and political matters.
Olbermann: In short, there are now no checks on the ability of corporations or unions or other giant aggregations of power to decide our elections. None.
[Suspenseful instrumentals continue. A New York Times article reads: The Court’s Blow to Democracy. Then, a documentary poster titled: Hillary, The Move.]
Liptak: Citizens United was about a documentary about a political candidate financed by a small nonprofit advocacy group. Available only on video on demand.
[An eagle cry is heard in a title shot for Citizens United. Text on screen: So Who is the Real Hillary Clinton? A collection of individuals not introduced appear on screen.]
– Ruthless. Vindictive.
– Liar is a good one.
– Scares the hell out of me.
Abrams: A hit job on Hillary Clinton. That’s what I thought it was. And yet what is really at issue here is something at the core of the First Amendment, political speech. I mean, there’s no speech more important to be independent of and not dependent on government.
Olson: My client, Citizens United, had made a documentary about someone running for president, for heaven’s sakes. Their position was people ought to be able to see the issues about presidential candidates, it’s a documentary, for heaven’s sakes. It was a felony. You could go to jail for five years for violating those provisions. And so we defended Citizens United. Floyd Abrams appeared in that case supporting the position that we were advocating.
[C-SPAN footage of the Mansfield Room in the U.S. capitol. Lower third text reads: Announcement of Legal Team to Challenge Campaign Finance Bill.]
Abrams: I represented Mitch McConnell, not my favorite public servant.
Mitch McConnell: So let me turn first to Floyd Abrams.
Abrams: But I agreed with his views on this.
Abrams in C-SPAN Footage: [Clears throat] Thank you, Senator. I’m delighted to be here in rather unaccustomed company. [Laughter] It’s the oldest of clichés that politics makes strange bedfellows. It is not at all strange that people who disagree politically can come together in defending the First Amendment.
Current Day Abrams: Right away we’re in the area where there is the absolute most First Amendment protection. Nothing is more important than speech about who to vote for. And maybe nothing, nothing, nothing is more important than who to vote for for president. That was an easy case. That must be one in which the First Amendment carries the day.
Shaw: I actually was at the Citizens United argument. I was a young lawyer in the Obama White House Counsel’s office, and the White House would often send lawyers to the court for kind of big, significant arguments.
[Tender piano instrumentals begin.]
Shaw: Citizens United was initially a pretty narrow case. It’s actually not really about a ban on anything but about just like a limitation on when you could spend money and how you could spend money. But then the court, when everyone was expecting, you know, the case to be decided in June of 2009, the court conspicuously set the case for re-argument, reframing in much, much broader terms.
[A court recording plays over footage of courthouse steps.]
Justice: Mr. Abrams.
Abrams: Mr. Chief Justice, and may it please the Court, the first…
Liptak: He didn’t go small. He went big. He said, you know, this is an opportunity. You could decide this case on narrow grounds. And there’s good arguments to be made that the court should have decided in the narrow grounds. But, justices, you should please make a big, bold statement saying that the First Amendment protects independent spending by corporations in candidate elections.
[Court recording audio continues over a court illustration of Abrams.]
Abrams: The First Amendment rights here transcend that of Citizens United. There is a blotch to public discourse caused as a result of this congressional legislation.
[A New Your Times article reads: Justices, 5-4, Reject Corporate Spending Limit. Footage of Barack Obama addressing Congress and the Supreme Court.]
Barack Obama: Last week, the Supreme Court reversed a century of law that I believe will open the floodgates for special interests. To spend without limit in our elections.
[Standing applause. Now, C-SPAN footage of a marching protest.]
Chanting Protesters: Money out. Voters in. Money out.
News Host: Exxon or Microsoft could spend $1 million or $10 million on ads against the candidate. And in the name of free speech, that you find that acceptable.
Abrams in TV Footage: Yeah, I’m okay with that in the same way I’m okay with the fact that CNN andThe New York Times can speak out as they choose to.
Different New Host: I object to the notion that a corporation is equal to an individual.
Abrams in TV Footage: The fact that we’re suspicious of corporations sometimes and of unions sometimes is just not a good reason to say that they have to be silenced.
[Indistinct shouting in continued protest footage. A sign reads: Corporations were given human rights.]
Teachout: These campaign finance laws served these really central, arguably in a democracy, sacred values of allowing for responsive self-government. Protecting against corruption. I think that I’ll call it the Floyd camp, got it wrong, they got the First Amendment wrong. It’s not serving First Amendment ends to call these kinds of corporate behaviors free speech.
Jaffer: One thing that happens when you attach the First Amendment to a new activity is that you make it very difficult for the government to regulate that activity. Now, that is, you know, in some ways, the whole point, that’s the point of the First Amendment is to make it difficult for the government to regulate a certain category of activities. But it’s very important that you get that line right.
Richard L. Hasen, Law Professor and Author, UCLA: In Citizens United, the court rejected what’s come to be known as the anti-distortion argument. It’s the idea that someone who has hundreds of millions of dollars to spend on politics can do that while the rest of us who don’t have that can’t do that. That means we have a very unequal playing field. Money doesn’t buy elections, but spending money is like buying lottery tickets. And the more money you have to spend, the better chance you have of winning that lottery and then being able to have outsized influence over a candidate.
[Indistinct shouting]
Abrams: The argument against too much money is that the speech that the money provides becomes too overwhelming, it’s not fair. And my answer is it’s still speech. Those arguments really used to be made about newspapers, about the enormity of their power, about the wealth of the people that owned them, about the impact on society of too few people having too much power. You know, the answer is taxation.
[Modern day footage of The New York Times, Comcast/NBC Universal, and CBS Broadcast Center buildings. Low acoustic instrumentals play.]
Abrams: You want to take their money away, deal with it in taxes, don’t take the speech away. To me, the notion that many of my friends have had that corporations ought to have less in the way of rights than individuals is counter to all I’ve done representing all my media clients, most of which are corporations.
Liptak: It’s commonplace in American society and American law for people who took one view of some legal principle to all of a sudden take the opposite view of it, because one side or the other would be helped by it. And Floyd doesn’t do that. I mean, Citizens United is the most loathed case, and not only by liberals, and some of Floyd’s other work on behalf of businesses asserting First Amendment rights also not super popular. So where the Floyd Abrams I got to know in the 1980s was, you know, a superstar lawyer on the side of good, is now viewed by a lot of people by dint of his consistency as, you know, a problematic figure.
[#AmericanMastersPBS. Now, Abrams looks pensive standing on a beachfront under an overcast sky. He walks with his son Dan and his grandson. Waves lap the shore. Then, Dan and Floyd Abrams sit together on a couch.]
Abrams: For better or worse, I am very comfortable with the position that I took in it.
Dan Abrams: It’s been interesting to watch my dad go from a First Amendment kind of hero to people get angry at him now for taking positions which are not dissimilar to any positions he’d previously taken.
Abrams: Not long after Citizens United came down, I appeared in front of the board of the American Civil Liberties Union, which was basically on the same side as we were but was being overwhelmed by internal criticism by their members. It was a meeting to discuss whether they should criticize the Supreme Court decision in Citizens United. And I remember telling them, you know, the Supreme Court will never forget you. You’ll be the only litigant who urged them to do something and then denounced them because they did it. I said you were in this case. I mean, are you seriously thinking of denouncing them? For validating the position that you were — We’re talking weeks ago, months ago, and they didn’t do it. But that was fun.
[They share a laugh.]
Interviewer: Why?
Abrams: Look, it’s, you know, it’s fun to be in the battle and, you know, without overdoing this, but fun to be in the battle if you think, especially as I do, that the battle is on behalf of the First Amendment.
[A photograph of protesters holding ACLU signs reading: Dissent is patriotic. We the People. Solemn instrumentals play.]
Sykes: When I was hired at the ACLU, my predecessor, she sort of wished me the best and said, “If you ever figure out campaign finance [laughs] you’ll do better than all of us.” I’m deeply disturbed by the logic of Citizens United, but I’m also humble about the fact that I don’t have a great answer for how to really square that circle.
Shaw: Faith in the power of the kind of pure principles that the Constitution contains is incredibly inspiring. And so I wouldn’t want a world where you don’t have kind of absolutist and purist views of things like the First Amendment, which I think kind of stripped to its essence is an extraordinarily powerful idea. But to me, I think I just can’t avoid the context. And I actually think that it’s important that all of us attend to it.
Jaffer: I certainly have a very positive view of Floyd the person and a generally positive view of, you know, his work. But my feelings [Chuckling] about the sort of expansionist understanding or an expansive understanding of the First Amendment have changed. And since I associate Floyd with an effort to really push the boundaries of the First Amendment, my views of Floyd have become more — more complicated.
[In his office, Abrams points to a framed newspaper page on the wall.]
Abrams: My wife bought for me an original copy of the French newspaper in which Emile Zola wrote his classic “J’accuse…!”– one of the best known defenses of free speech in our history.
[A black and white photograph of Abrams and his wife.]
Interviewer: Can you talk about how hard the last few years have been?
Abrams: Yeah, sure. I mean, Efrat has Alzheimer’s, and so… She’s glad to see me, recognizes me, talk a bit. And the children, too.
[Family photographs appear on screen: Afrat looking away from the camera, the whole family posed together. Emotional instrumentals play.]
Dan Abrams: The one voice that you’re not going to have, obviously, is my mother. My mother is not all there at this point. And yet, you know, she’ll occasionally make a joke or something and he still touches her face the way that he always has.
Ronnie Abrams: She still has the same personality and will tease him. And so I think — I think that’s at least nice, but… Yeah. But, yeah, no, it’s hard, of course.
Abrams: The saving grace is that it’s not hard for her. Not only no pain, but no pain at thinking back at what you can’t do anymore. There are days when I don’t go in to her room because I really do have to get back to work. Sounds silly, even hearing myself say it. But no recriminations. I mean, just glad to see me.
[Abrams walks down a hallway, away from the camera. Text on screen: The Future of Speech. Low instrumentals drone. Now, footage from Amanpour & Co.]
News Host: Clearview AI is a groundbreaking facial recognition technology that scrapes billions of images from social media and all across the Internet.
Kashmir Hill, Tech Reporter, The New York Times: When I got to the Times, I had started looking at face recognition. People had put photos out there of themselves, not realizing that one day it was going to help fuel just a real advance in facial recognition algorithms.
[A montage of people engaging in technology. Blue dots appear on an animated face. The homepage of the Clearview AI website reads: Artificial Intelligence for a better world.]
Hill: An activist reached out to me and said, “There’s this one company that I’ve never heard of before that’s doing something pretty wild. They say that they’ve scraped all the social media sites and that they’re using those photos to help identify anyone.” That was Clearview AI. And Clearview had been selling the tool to law enforcement for a while — for at least six months — and no one knew about it.
[Footage from CBS This Morning. Two individuals look at a laptop.]
Anchor: I mean, I’ve got to say, it’s slightly unnerving seeing someone able to scroll through so many images of my face.
Hoan Ton-That, CEO and Co-Founder, Clearview AI: The first TV interview I did was on CBS and I blurted out, “We have the First Amendment right to do this.”
Anchor: You believe you have a First Amendment right…
Ton-That: Completely.
Anchor: …to access what’s on the platform?
Ton-That: Yes. The way we have built our system is to only take publicly available information and index it that way. My instinct was like, it’s public information. People have that expectation. So when things developed along, I was always trying to find a lawyer who could encapsulate that idea. Floyd ended up being the one who really understood that at his core.
[A New York Times article reads: Facial Recognition Start-Up Mounts a First Amendment Defense. Clearview AI has hired Floyd Abrams.]
Abrams: We’re talking about a direct clash between privacy concepts and free speech concepts.
Ton-That: It’s actually allowed us to reframe the debate a lot. Originally, a lot of it was a privacy case, but more and more people are talking about it as a First Amendment case.
Vera Eidelman, Staff Attorney, ACLU: We first learned about Clearview as a company I think at the same time that everyone in the public basically did in Kashmir Hill’s article, which I believe was titled something like “This Company May Destroy Privacy As We Know It.” We shared that reaction.
Jaffer: Civil liberties advocates have sued Clearview, arguing that the app, and in particular the extraction of biometric data from these photographs, violates an Illinois state law.
[An ACLU article reads: We’re Taking Clearview AI to Court to End its Privacy-Destroying Face Surveillance Activities. Uneasy instrumentals play.]
Hill: This law in Illinois says that you have to get someone’s permission to use their biometrics. Biometrics are measurements of the body, like your fingerprint or the geometry of someone’s face.
[Footage of beeping, futuristic technology demonstrations.]
Eidelman: I also think there are even broader questions at stake here, which really are about whether or not we can have privacy and free speech, too. And I think we have to live in a society where the answer to that is yes.
Jaffer: Many people will be reluctant to go to political demonstrations, to participate in political rallies if they think that the police can and will scan the faces of everybody who’s there, identify who they are. That kind of surveillance will have a real chilling effect. Individual privacy is necessary to protect all of the freedoms we wanted the First Amendment to protect. But Clearview is arguing, with the help of sophisticated First Amendment lawyers like Floyd, that this activity is protected by the First Amendment.
[Protest footage. #AmericanMastersPBS.]
Abrams: The Supreme Court had said that the collection and dissemination of information is protected by the First Amendment. And I think that’s — that’s correct.
Joel Kurtzberg, Partner, Cahill Gordon & Reindel LLP: There is a case where somebody tried to sue Google. They said, “People searched Google, and up came this negative story about me, and I’m suing you because I want you to take it off of the Internet, it’s not really fair.” They lost that case, right. Clearview is a search engine for faces. They are using this technology to allow people to more efficiently identify, in this case, criminals or even children who’ve been abducted. Preventing that efficiency in that speech would cause real harm.
[A New York Times article reads: Clearview’s Facial Recognition App Is Identifying Child Victims of Abuse. Then, Ton-That demonstrates Clearview AI, using a picture of Abrams.]
Abrams: Impairing, if not destroying, the ability to compare one photograph with three billion others is a genuine threat to First Amendment interests and to the even broader notion that truthful information is essentially sacrosanct. It is too easy to sort of yield to the siren call of privacy and to start limiting the dissemination of information, which by its nature is public.
Hill: The technology often seems to be setting the pace rather than the law. I always think about the TSA body scanners that were introduced after September 11th to try to make air travel safer. When they first introduced these scanners, privacy activists were outraged, they hated them, they started all this litigation to say this is an unconstitutional search.
[Indistinct conversations in footage of an airport TSA security line.]
Hill: It took so long for the litigation to make its way through the courts that by the time they did, the judges basically said this is not an unreasonable search. People go through this every day when they go to the airport. A new technology comes, it’s shocking to us and then we get used to it. And I kind of expect facial recognition to be that way. I think in 5 or 10 years we’re all going to have a Clearview AI-type app on our phone.
Abrams: The pace at which technology is improving requires us as a people to, you know, keep looking carefully at striking a balance — a proper, a reasonable balance.
[Footage of a people scrolling through Facebook, Instagram, and Mozilla. Curious instrumentals play.]
Abrams: Think back to when not many years ago social media started to blossom. First Amendment types couldn’t have imagined such a great thing. What could be better than having speech, which doesn’t cost anything and an ability for anyone to participate in it? And here we are. Careful what you wish for and careful even what you imagine.
[A group of white men descend steps, chanting and holding flaming tiki torches. An article reads: How White Nationalism Became Normal Online. Instrumentals gain unease. Another article highlighting Russia’s Information War and anti-Covid vaccine protest footage. Then, instrumentals come to an abrupt halt.]
Abrams: Racist speech… Russian propaganda… false speech about medicines. One of the dangers, one of the realities of free speech is that everything can go overboard. A free speech regime has no answer for that except more speech. You know, we have to cross our fingers and hope that the truth will out.
Interviewer: But when does it become too dangerous just to hope?
Abrams: I think that when one has to make that choice… that the answer ought to be to hold our breath and stay with the First Amendment.
Interviewer: And what do you base that on?
Abrams: History of mankind.
[Low instrumentals return over black and white footage of officers marching.]
Abrams: Governments come to power around the world, then misuse the power. And one of the first things they do is to go after whatever the press is at that moment.
[A montage of news reports.]
News Reporter: Police last week raided the offices of the 26-year-old tabloid paper.
News Reporter: Russia blocked its last independent TV channel and the network shut down.
Donald Trump: You are the enemy of the people. Go ahead.
Journalist: Mr. President…
Abrams: I mean, sometimes it takes a long time for public opinion to be formed.
[Black and white footage of Black civil rights protesters, followed by an environmental protest, a Black Lives Matter protest, and a trans liberation protest.]
Abrams: And then a moment comes when people start to say, “That’s all wrong. None of that makes sense. What are we doing there?” The more we make it difficult to express dissenting views or controversial views, the less we can move, the less we can change, the less we can even understand. I mean, all we can say now, I think, is that we have to lean very, very strongly in the direction of free expression, whatever the future may bring us.
[A press prints newspapers. Then, footage of people scrolling on apps.]
Jaffer: I don’t always see the world in the same way that he does.
Abrams in 1978 footage: …avoid is any kind of system of law…
Jaffer: But there are a number of cases in which we are making arguments in court that Floyd has made 20 years ago or 30 years ago. Few people have done as much to shape the First Amendment as it exists today.
Totenberg: I think we in the press — and I like to call it the press, not the media, because media sounds like paint. But people who do journalism for a living have been very lucky to have Floyd Abrams on our side for generations.
Liptak: Floyd is a good litigator, but by not a little happenstance, he turns out to be the leading First Amendment press lawyer in American history.
Olson: His legacy will be as a fierce supporter of our Constitution and our constitutional rights under the First Amendment, which is just about the most important thing in our Constitution.
Ronnie Abrams: To this day, I’ll be researching issues and find cases that he was the lawyer on. I mean, it happens all the time. You know, my clerks will send me, you know, 10 different cases, like my dad argued two of those. Like, I can see just what an effect he’s had on the law.
[Abrams puts his glasses on at his desk, writing notes and holding a phone. Instrumentals continue.]
Interviewer: Do you think there are any places where the First Amendment has gone too far?
Abrams: Not yet.
[Screen cuts to black. Text on screen: American Masters: Thought Leaders. Episode clips appear on screen.]
Max Roach: Everything I wrote had to do with the movement. So they said, “Well, Max, just come in and play music. You don’t have to talk.”
Bella Abzug: The male power structures decided that they want to not let the people in.
William F. Buckley: See, the trouble with you is that you get very resentful whenever anybody reminds you of what you say. If I said what you said, I’d feel the same way.
Floyd Abrams: What is really at issue is the First Amendment.
Daniel Patrick Moynihan: We’re trying to bring government back to what it knows how to do.
Jerry Brown: You can have an idea and you can be certain about it and completely wrong.
Cesar Chavez: All of us are looking for a place under the sun.
[Text on screen: American Masters: Thought Leaders. Jazzy instrumentals begin as bold text accompanies narration.]
Narration: Major support for “American Masters” provided by…
Jo Ann Jenkins, CEO, AARP: These days, we need each other more than ever. That’s why AARP created Community Connections, an online tool to find or create a mutual aid group, get help, or help those in need. Stay connected with AARP.
Narration: “American Masters” is made possible by support from the Corporation for Public Broadcasting. The Rosalind P. Walter Foundation. Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III. Seton J. Melvin. Lillian Goldman Programming Endowment. The Blanche and Irving Laurie Foundation. Koo and Patricia Yuen, committed to bridging cultural differences in our communities. Thea Petschek Iervolino Foundation. The Philip and Janice Levin Foundation. Vital Projects Fund. The Marc Haas Foundation. Judith and Burton Resnick. Ellen and James S. Marcus. The Ambrose Monell Foundation. The Andre and Elizabeth Kertesz Foundation. “Floyd Abrams: Speaking Freely” has been made possible in part by a major grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities. Bringing you the stories that define us. neh.gov. Center for Advanced Hindsight at Duke University. FIRE: Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. The Rogovy Foundation. And by contributions to your PBS station from viewers like you. Thank you.
[Credits appear on the left side of the screen, as Abrams footage appears on the right. Playful instrumentals.]
Abrams: You know, when we turn off the camera, who knows what I’ll say? How about a confession?
Interviewer: A confession? What are you going to confess about?
Abrams: That I was wrong all the time. [Laughter] Really bad answer, huh? [Laughter] Even in jest I won’t give you a clip. [Laughs] Oh, I thought you said “fire” as in… [Laughter] A very subdued fire. I had no better answer. [Laughs] I could have said yes or no, I guess, but then — then there’d be more questions. [Beeps]
Crew: Alright.
Abrams: Okay. See you tomorrow.
Crew: See you tomorrow.
Abrams: You’re going to leave the cameras or…?
Crew: Nope, we’re not going to leave the cameras.
Abrams: I thought I’d sell them. [Laughter]
Credits:
WRITTEN BY: Yael Melamede. Clare Smith Marash. Harry Jackson.
CINEMATOGRAPHERS: Nelson Hume. Samuel Russell.
COMPOSERS: Olivier Manchon and Clare Manchon.
SOUND RECORDIST: E. Benjamin Posnack.
CO-PRODUCERS: Christopher Allen. Xan Parker.
FEATURING: Floyd Abrams. Dan Abrams. Ronnie Abrams. Lee C. Bollinger. Vera Eidelman. George Freeman. Kashmir Hill. Jameel Jaffer. Joel Kurtzberg. Arnold Lehman. Adam Liptak. David E. McCraw. Ari Melber. Judith Miller. Eleanor Holmes Norton. Theodore B. Olson. David Rudenstine. Kate Shaw. Emerson Sykes. Zephyr Teachout. Hoan Ton-That. Nina Totenberg. Penny Windle.
ARCHIVAL PRODUCER: Amy Brown.
SUPERVISING EDITOR: Adam Bolt.
ADDITIONAL EDITOR: Raven Dahlin.
ASSISTANT EDITORS: Nikita Liamzine. Kate McLane. Blake Caliguiri.
GRAPHIC DESIGNER: Thaned Piyadarakorn.
ILLUSTRATOR: Mona Shafer Edwards.
ASSOCIATE PRODUCER: Nick Kochmann.
ADDITIONAL CINEMATOGRAPHY: Brett Wiley. Jesse Dana. Scott Ruderman. Karl Schroder.
ASSISTANT CAMERA: Alaric S. Campbell. Charlie Metzger. William Dickson. Vivian Lau. Rosalino Ramos.
GAFFER: Christopher Fisher.
ADDITIONAL GAFFERS: Chris Walters. Chris Clarke. Landon Brands.
GRIPS: Kelley Nesper. CJ Yurnet. Dan Green. Gregory Unger.
ADDITIONAL SOUND RECORDISTS: Brian Buckley. Greg Breazeale. Kevin Chung Lee Cheng. Peter Miller. Mark Roy. Taylor Roy.
PRODUCTION ASSISTANTS: Skyler Sulby. Audrey Clark Powell. Bella Scarselli. Sarah Spangler. Cameron Campbell. Sonja Moses. Luka Vonier. Fiki Hunt.
POST PRODUCTION SERVICES PROVIDED BY: Cut + Measure
COLORIST: Chris Ramey.
ONLINE EDITOR: David Gauff.
VISUAL EFFECTS SUPERVISOR: Tim Marchant.
VISUAL EFFECTS TEAM: Andrei Goran. Corinne Ladeinde. Alex Munteanu. Lu Pop. Janos Toth.
POST PRODUCER: Alex Laviola. Jon Hansen.
SOUND SERVICES PROVIDED BY: Red Hook Post
RE-RECORDING MIXER: Tom Elinger.
SOUND DESIGNER: Abigail Savage.
DIALOGUE EDITOR: Joseph Magee.
AUDIO POST SUPERVISOR: Jeff Seelye.
SCORE MIXED AND RECORDED BY: Babella Studios, Kingston, NY.
INSTRUMENTATION: Matt Bauder. Jared Engel. Jeff Lipstein. Alex Waterman. Olivier Manchon. Clare Manchon.
PRODUCTION COUNSEL: Bruns Brennan Berry Pikulin Jacobs PC.
CLEARANCE COUNSEL: Rachel R. Goldberg. Alison Schary.
PRODUCTION INSURANCE: Taylor & Taylor.
ACCOUNTANT: Albert Celi.
LOCATIONS: MCM Creative. Dakota Studio. Interface Media Group. New York City Bar Association
CAMERA & LENSES PROVIDED BY: Adorama. Lenswork Rentals. Hand Held Films.
ARCHIVAL MATERIALS FURNISHED BY: Photography by Jack/Adobe Stock. Hum Images / Alamy Stock Photo. ZUMA Press, Inc. / Alamy Stock Photo. AP Photo/Diane Bondareff. AP Photo/Marcy Nighswander. AP Photo/Davis. AP Photo/John Duricka. AP Photo/Charles Harrity. CQ Roll Call via AP Images. Bill Clark/CQ Roll Call. Frame Stock Footage. Alexander Mordecai Bickel Papers (MS 762). Manuscripts and Archives, Yale University Library. Courtesy CNN. The CONUS Archive. eFootage. Bettmann/Getty Images. Corbis Historical/Getty Images. Robert Landau/Getty Images. Bloomberg Video/Getty Images. New York Daily News/Getty Images. Luis M. Alvarez. Via Films.
Brendan Smialowski/Getty Images. Diana Walker/Getty Images. Win McNamee/Getty Images. Wally McNamee/Getty Images. David Hume Kennerly/Getty Images The Washington Post/Getty Images. Anadolu Agency/Footage/Getty Images. Star Tribune via Getty Images/Getty Images. Jeremy Hogan/Getty Images. Encyclopaedia Britannica Films/Getty Images. Bloomberg Video – Footage/Getty Images. HISTORIC FILMS ARCHIVE, LLC. Kinolibrary. Archival Footage Provided by Oddball Films. Richard Nixon Presidential Library and Museum. Pond5. Jeff Christensen. Ruby Washington/The New York Times/Redux. THE NEW YORK TIMES/Redux. Richard Sandier. Scott Cornell/Shutterstock. CBS NEWS / Veritone. WCBS-TV. The WPA Film Library. The Abrams Family. Joel Kurtzberg.
SPECIAL THANKS: Sandra S. Baron. Lawrence “Punky” Chapman. Jeff Kosseff. Beth Levison. Susan Margolin. Marilyn Ness. Jacob Schriner-Briggs. Nadine Strossen. Nabiha Syed. Stephen Sparkes.
RESEARCH ASSISTANCE FURNISHED BY: Mel Barkan. Vincent Blasi. Susan Buckley. Ron Collins. Judge Nina Gershon. Tom Kavaler. Leste Kendrick. Joel Kurtzberg. Denise O’Nell. Francesca Procaccini. Dean Ringel. Robert Rosenthal. David Schulz. Linda Tortolero,
LOCATION ASSISTANCE FURNISHED BY: Cahill Gordon & Reindel. Columbia University. Gotham Hall. Knight First Amendment Institute. PEN America. Yale Law School. Dan Abrams. Ronnie Abrams. Sam Goldberg. Sam Kahn. Lisa Linden. Lisa Perrochet.
FISCAL SPONSOR: Union Docs, Inc.
ADVISORS: Paul Auster. Robert Post. Eugene Volokh.
IN MEMORY OF: Niv Sparkes (2001 – 2023).
FLOYD ABRAMS: SPEAKING FREELY
ORIGINAL PRODUCTION FUNDING PROVIDED BY: National Endowment for the Humanities. The Center for Advanced Hindsight at Duke University Foundation for Individual Rights in Education Inc. (FIRE). The Rogovy Foundation
ORIGINAL AMERICAN MASTERS SERIES FUNDING PROVIDED BY: Corporation for Public Broadcasting. Rosalind P. Walter Foundation. AARP. Sue and Edgar Wachenheim III. Koo and Patricia Yuen. Seton J. Melvin. Latian Goldman Programming Endowment. The Blanche & Irving Laurie Foundation. Thea Petschek lervolino Foundation. Philip & Janice Foundation. Vital Projects Fund. The Marc Haas Foundation. Judith & Burton Resnick. Ellen & James S. Marcus. The Ambrose Monell Foundation. The André and Elizabeth Kertész Foundation.
FOR AMERICAN MASTERS
SERIES THEME MUSIC COMPOSED BY: Christopher Rife.
SERIES TITLE DESIGNED BY: Arcade Creative Group.
GRAPHIC DESIGNER: B.T. Whitehill.
MUSIC SERVICES: Emily Lee.
BUDGET CONTROLLER: Jayne Lisi.
BUSINESS AFFAIRS: Laura Ball.
AUDIENCE ENGAGEMENT: June Jennings.
SOCIAL MEDIA Maggie Bower.
PRODUCTION COORDINATOR lyare Osarogigabon.
SENIOR PRODUCTION COORDINATOR Chris Wilson.
DIGITAL PRODUCER Diana Chan.
MULTIMEDIA PRODUCER Cristiana Lombardo.
DIGITAL LEAD Joe Skinner.
SERIES PRODUCER: Julie Sacks.
EXECUTIVE PRODUCER: Michael Kantor.
This program was produced by SALTY Features which is solely responsible for its content. A Production of SALTY Features in association with American Masters Pictures. This motion picture is protected under the laws of the United States and other countries. Unauthorized duplication, distribution or exhibition may result in civil liability and criminal prosecution. © 2023 SALTY FEATURES All rights reserved.
[Credits end. Salty Features logo. The WNET Group: Media Made Possible By All Of You.]
Narration: How do artists work? Find out on “American Masters: Creative Spark,” a podcast that explores the creative process. Listen wherever you get your podcasts. You’re watching PBS.
[Episode ends.]