
In her opening statements at the hearing on Wednesday on the public media, actress Margori Taylor Green accused PBS of using “taxpayer boxes to pay some of the most extreme left situations such as the width of the queen of clouds in the show.”
The Republican from Georgia referred to the image of Miss Hot Messenger, the queen of clouds, describing it as a “monster”.
The offensive line, which was somewhat expected by the CEO of the largest media networks in the United States. Mrs. Green shared a video on social media before the session, which included a clip from the “PBS NewShour” clip about the queens of clouds.
But Lil Miss Hot Messenger has never been shown on children’s programming on a television program, according to POLA Kerger, CEO of PBS, which witnessed on Wednesday. Instead, it appeared in a project from the WNET Group, the parent company of public television stations in New York, in conjunction with the Ministry of Education in New York City.
“The queen of clouds was not actually in any of our children’s performers,” Mrs. Kerger replied when actress William Timon, Republican in South Carolina asked her if she thought he was “inappropriate to put the queen of clouds in children’s offer.”
Ms. Kerger said that the image showed by the president is a digital category.
The part that is part of a YouTube video series It is called “Let’s Learn”, now opens a statement, on May 24, 2021, which notices the partnership between the WNET Group and the Ministry of Education in New York City. The statement also says that the series has not been funded or distributed by PBS.
“It was not for PBS,” Mrs. Kerger said in response to Mr. Timon’s. She said that the video was mistaken on our website by New York City Station, but it was not intended for a national distribution, and it was not broadcast on PBS.
In her closing statement, Mrs. Green showed a video of Lil Miss Hot Messenger reading her book, “The Hips on the Drag Queen Go Swish, Swish, Swish”.
“This is disgusting, this is not what children between the ages of 3 and 8 should watch,” she said.