Finding Your Roots Season Delayed by PBS Over Ben Affleck Story

We may earn a commission from links on this page.

The third season of the ancestry-research program Finding Your Roots, hosted by Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr., has been postponed by PBS after a determination that an episode of the program featuring actor Ben Affleck violated the network's standards.

In a strongly worded statement, PBS announced that the network is "postponing the scheduling of the third season of Finding Your Roots pending the production team's implementation of staffing and other process changes that will significantly enhance the ability of PBS and WETA to oversee the editorial development of each episode on a timely basis, and to ensure that the problems that arose in episode #204 will be avoided in the future."

PBS also noted that a commitment to the fourth season of the program will be delayed until "we are satisfied that the editorial standards of the series have been successfully raised to a level in which we can have confidence."

Advertisement

Episode No. 204 featured the genealogy search of Affleck, who, it was later revealed, had requested that the program be edited to remove a reference to his slaveholding ancestor. This request was discovered, PBS notes in its statement, only after a series of emails were uncovered between Gates (who is also chairman of The Root) and Sony Chairman William Lynton. In those emails, Gates sought advice from Lynton about how to handle Affleck's editing request.

Advertisement

When the program ultimately aired in October, there was no mention of the Affleck slaveholding ancestor. PBS said that the revelation of these emails months later, after Sony was hacked by WikiLeaks, "marked the first time that either PBS or WNET learned of this [Affleck] request."

Advertisement

Gates issued the following statement after the PBS announcement:

I want to thank PBS for its thoughtful internal review. I sincerely regret not discussing my editing rationale with our partners at PBS and WNET and I apologize for putting PBS and its member stations in the position of having to defend the integrity of their programming. Throughout my many years of producing genealogy documentaries, I have always operated with rigorous ethical standards. Even so, we have been working with PBS and WETA to create new guidelines to increase transparency going forward.

My career has been dedicated to improving race relations and intercultural understanding in our country. We are very excited about the third season of “Finding Your Roots” and look forward to uncovering and sharing many more incredible ancestral stories with our viewers.