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PBS postpones ‘Til Kingdom Come’ on Israel, evangelicals pending review of material

CAMERA found that the filmmakers had cobbled together wording from statements made on Jan. 28, 2020 by former President Donald Trump to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

A still from the PBS documentary “Til Kingdom Come.” Credit: PBS.
A still from the PBS documentary “Til Kingdom Come.” Credit: PBS.

PBS has postponed its broadcast of the documentary “Til Kingdom Come” after the media watchdog group CAMERA raised concerns over factual errors.

“In response to communication from CAMERA, PBS notified our senior staff on March 26 that it will postpone PBS’s broadcast of “Til Kingdom Come” while an independent review of the documentary is conducted,” it said in a statement on its website.

“CAMERA commends PBS for taking seriously concerns about the film’s editorial integrity,” the statement added.

The group also reported that PBS told them that a fabricated quote had been corrected in the documentary, which was produced and directed by Grammy Award-winning Maya Zinshtein, and released last year.

After comparing the documentary’s video and audio content, CAMERA found that the filmmakers had cobbled together wording from statements made on Jan. 28, 2020 by former President Donald Trump to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

It pointed to three different instances of the president’s prepared comments with a spliced-together quote that contradicts the overall focus of his remarks.

The film also transformed an expression of hope conveyed in a passage about Jews, Christians and Muslims visiting holy sites “in the West Bank described so vividly in the Bible” into a phrase suggesting Israeli takeover of land.

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