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                            <title><![CDATA[ Latest from Next TV in Oil-crisis ]]></title>
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        <description><![CDATA[ All the latest oil-crisis content from the Next TV team ]]></description>
                                    <lastBuildDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2015 14:00:00 +0000</lastBuildDate>
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                                                            <title><![CDATA[ CNN Takes Viewers Back to 'Me Decade' ]]></title>
                                                                                                                                                                                                <link>https://www.nexttv.com/news/cnn-takes-viewers-back-me-decade-391545</link>
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                            <![CDATA[ CNN Takes Viewers Back to 'Me Decade' ]]>
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                                                                        <pubDate>Fri, 19 Jun 2015 14:00:00 +0000</pubDate>                                                                                                                                                                                                                                <category><![CDATA[Content]]></category>
                                                                                                <author><![CDATA[ thomas.umstead@futurenet.com (R. Thomas Umstead) ]]></author>                    <dc:creator><![CDATA[ R. Thomas Umstead ]]></dc:creator>                                                                                    <dc:source><![CDATA[ http://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/BRKRoP9suL4GoVzgWPECa7.jpg ]]></dc:source>
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                                <figure class="van-image-figure pull-" data-bordeaux-image-check ><div class='image-full-width-wrapper'><div class='image-widthsetter' ><p class="vanilla-image-block" style="padding-top:56.25%;"><img id="QFp3hAXXY6aSrkAQGsQqMS" name="" alt="" src="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/QFp3hAXXY6aSrkAQGsQqMS.jpg" mos="https://cdn.mos.cms.futurecdn.net/QFp3hAXXY6aSrkAQGsQqMS.jpg" align="" fullscreen="" width="" height="" attribution="" endorsement="" class="pull-"></p></div></div></figure><p>CNN’s eight-part series <em>The</em><em>Seventies</em>, which chronicles the news, events and cultural developments of that decade, launched on June 11 to nearly 900,000 viewers. <em>The Seventies</em> executive producer Mark Herzog (<em>Killing Lincoln, The Sixties</em>) recently spoke to <em>Multichannel News</em> programming editor R. Thomas Umstead about the appeal of the decade and the series. Herzog, who is already in development with CNN’s <em>The Eighties</em> miniseries, scheduled to debut next year, also opines about the lessons and messages the 70s has for today’s generation of young adults. An edited transcript of the interview follows. </p><p><strong>MCN:</strong> Who do you see as the target audience for <em>The Seventies</em>?</p><p><strong>Mark Herzog:</strong> I want people who lived in the 60s and 70s to enjoy it, but  I certainly want people who were born in the 1980s and 1990s to enjoy it as well. They’ve all heard about the decade from a cultural perspective and they’ve heard about the great television shows. They know about Jimmy Carter but they don’t know why -- unless they explored it -- his presidency was deemed a failure. We go into that in one of our segments.</p><p><strong>MCN:</strong> Can today’s generation, which is so vastly different in so many ways, identify with the culture and history of the 70s generation?</p><p><strong>MH:</strong> I want the younger people to experience history in an entertaining way. I want them to feel like they’re experiencing the 1970s and understand why things happened then and, more importantly, ask are they happening again today.  I had a few people come up to me who’ve watched [the series] and our look at Vietnam and said, "That is our Iraq." I hope that young people see that there’s nothing new in this world except the history you don’t know.</p><p><strong>MCN:</strong> Did you have greater access to historical footage for <em>The Seventies</em> than you had for <em>The Sixties</em>?</p><p><strong>MH:</strong> Yes. By that time ABC, NBC and CBS had all started to archive their news footage. For <em>The Sixties</em>, a lot of times we were told that they threw out the news footage because they didn’t have storage space. By the early 1970s they start to archive it. We have a great relationship with the news networks and, certainly, without them we couldn’t have told the story.</p><p><strong>MCN:</strong> Overall, what do you think makes <em>The Seventies</em> so compelling from a documentary perspective? </p><p><strong>MH:</strong> I think there is a mystique about <em>The Seventies</em> and that it is misunderstood. It’s seen as a decade of great music and unbelievable television, but it’s also seen as the Me Decade. The group-loving of the 1960s turned into a "What’s in it for me?" message in the 1970s. We had an economic depression that rivaled what we saw in 2008, and we had a severe oil crisis that the driving generation had never seen. It gets a bad rap but, it’s really an interesting decade – it’s the teenage years of the sixties. </p>
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