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After omitting details, ‘Finding Your Roots’ on hold

The Columbian
Published: June 28, 2015, 12:00am

When Ben Affleck volunteered to be featured on the PBS genealogy program “Finding Your Roots” last year, he was hoping to find “the roots of his family’s interest in social justice.”

Researchers did turn up plenty for the actor-cum-activist to be pleased about: a mother who was a member of the Freedom Riders, an ancestor who fought in the Revolutionary War.

But they also found Benjamin Cole, a great-great-great grandparent on his mother’s side. Cole was a sheriff in Chatham County, Georgia, in the 1850s and ’60s, according to historical documents uncovered by Family History Insider. And he was the “trustee” of seven slaves.

An attempt to cover up that unwanted detail has led PBS to suspend the show, citing Affleck’s “improper influence” on programming.

“Finding Your Roots,” which was due to start its third season, is a typically PBS show. Executive produced by Harvard historian Henry Louis Gates Jr., it’s understated, bookish, set to a gentle soundtrack of twanging acoustic guitars and lightly probing in a way that’s neither too harsh nor provocative. It’s as much of a safe space as there ever was for a celebrity looking to burnish his progressive credentials to reckon with his family’s checkered past.

But Affleck was “embarrassed” by his slave-owning ancestor, he wrote on Facebook. “The very thought left a bad taste in my mouth.”

So he asked the show’s producers to leave Cole out of the final cut of the program, and they — after some debate — agreed. When Affleck’s episode was broadcast in October, it contained no mention of Cole or Affleck’s Georgia relatives.

But once uncovered, this skeleton, buried for six generations, would not stay hidden. Hacked emails that surfaced on WikiLeaks this spring show an exchange between Gates and a Sony boss questioning whether to include the detail about Affleck’s slave-owning ancestor.

“We’ve never had anyone ever try to censor or edit what we found,” Gates wrote. “He’s a megastar. What do we do?”

In an initial statement in response to accusations of censorship and pandering, Gates said that Cole’s story was excluded in favor of other, more interesting aspects of Affleck’s history.

The program “never (shies) away from chapters of a family’s past that might be unpleasant,” he said, asserting that he maintained full editorial control over the show.

But on Wednesday, after conducting an internal review of the incident, PBS announced that the producers violated network standards by allowing Affleck to influence “the creative and editorial process.” The network added that it did not learn of Affleck’s request until it was published in the leaked Sony emails.

PBS will delay the next season of the show until its producers implement several staffing changes. They will be required to hire a fact-checker and an independent genealogist, and will withdraw Affleck’s episode from all forms of distribution.

As others have pointed out, Affleck’s story is a case study in the cover-up being worse than the crime. Plenty of other “Finding Your Roots” participants have found things they perhaps wished they hadn’t. Yankees shortstop Derek Jeter got his name from a slave owner who likely raped his distant great-grandmother. Anderson Cooper’s ancestor was beaten to death by a rebellious slave.

But Jeter doesn’t seem to have lost fans over the matter, and people are still watching CNN.

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