Jack Jersawitz | |
Birth Date: | 13 August 1934 |
Birth Place: | Brooklyn, New York, U.S. |
Death Place: | Atlanta, Georgia, U.S. |
Show2: | Brainstorms Telling it Like it is |
Network2: | People TV |
Style: | Public Access |
Jack Jersawitz (August 13, 1934 – December 6, 2012) was an American television host, mayoral candidate, and Marxist activist. He was well known for hosting a Public-access TV show called Brainstorms, a current events talk show on People TV, featuring live telephone call segments that were often targeted by prank callers.
Jack Jersawitz was born on August 13, 1934, in Brooklyn, New York. He lived on the west coast of the United States and in London, England, before settling in Atlanta, Georgia in the early 1970s.[1] Unlike his parents, who were Jewish, Jersawitz identified as an atheist.[2] He earned his high school equivalency degree in 1997 and briefly studied the origins of jazz and film analysis at Georgia State University through a program that offered free classes to senior citizens. He worked as a printer, handyman, and mechanic before he retired.[3]
Jersawitz hosted two Public-access TV shows on People TV;[4] Brainstorms and Telling it Like it is. He took an extremist left-wing stance on his shows and even claimed to be visited by the United States Secret Service for comments made when talking about his belief that the President of the United States should be publicly tried and hanged.[5] His show Brainstorms offered viewers the opportunity to call in live, which made it a target for prank calls that ranged in nature from maniacal laughing to comparing Jersawitz to fictional Batman character, The Penguin. His often flustered and annoyed reactions would only serve to further incentivize the pranksters.[6] [7]
In December 1995, People TV's facility was temporarily shut down for renovations, despite Jersawitz's objections. He made People TV's Board of Directors aware that he would be monitoring their meetings and records due to his suspicion that the renovation budget was inflated to potentially provide kickbacks. In October 1996, a meeting between them and the producers was ended when Jersawitz refused to stop recording with a personal camera, claiming it was a public meeting in a public facility. He filed a lawsuit afterwards, in which the Fulton County Superior Court determined that People TV's meetings were not subject to Georgia's Sunshine Laws. During this time, he repeatedly harassed several of the studio’s employees via letters, telephone calls, and fax messages.[8]
In January 1997, upon arriving at the facility, Jersawitz was ordered to cease his harassment and informed he was no longer welcome on the property. He refused to leave, and was arrested for criminal trespassing. The following month, Jersawitz filed a lawsuit against People TV and the City of Atlanta, alleging that his First Amendment rights were violated when he was barred from accessing the former's facilities and equipment. Ultimately, the court ruled in favor of People TV.
Jersawitz was a radical communist as well as an abrasive critic, who frequently expressed his harsh critiques of persons, places, things, and ideas. His oft-used verbal tactic in public meetings, consisting of slowly building up his aggressiveness from snide comments to full-on insults was dubbed a "Jack Attack".
He unsuccessfully ran for mayor in Atlanta, Georgia, in both 1997 and 2001. In his first campaign, his most important issue was the creation of a Labor Party for the working class. In his second campaign, he proposed to get rid of property taxes for city homeowners making less than $100,000; suggested the Police Department be dissolved; and vowed to fire any city official who did not comply with an Open Records Act request.
Jersawitz stated in 2001 that he picked the side of "the poor, the oppressed, the working class and those who never got a chance to be part of the working class". He won several important lawsuits related to civil liberties, such as Jersawitz v. Fortson in 1994, in which he filed after being denied access to a meeting of a special Olympics task force that had been created to carry out the work of the Atlanta Housing Authority Board of Commissioners with respect to the selection of certain proposals.
Jersawitz died on December 6, 2012, in Atlanta, Georgia after battling several illnesses, including esophageal cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.