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{{DISPLAYTITLE:Futterman, Susan}}
{{Crew Data
[[File:Susan Futterman.jpg|thumb|Susan Futterman at an ABC meeting circa 2005 CE.]]
| image= Susan Futterman.jpg
'''Susan Futterman''' was the director of Standards and Practices at [[w:ABC|ABC]] from 1976 to 2006 CE, during the tenure of the [[Original Series]] and its successor, ''[[Galactica 1980]]''.
| size= 200px
| role= Director of Standards and Practices
| series= TOS
| series 2= 1980
| nationality= US
| showage= N
| sortkey= Futterman, Susan
}}


Her stepfather, Frank Perls, was an art dealer in Beverly Hills<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|url=https://www.antiquesandthearts.com/gustave-baumann-in-california/|title=Gustave Baumann In California|accessdate=27 October 2024|date=21 March 2017|author=Kate Eagen Johnson}}</ref>; Perls' brother had his own gallery in New York.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/research-centers/leonard-a-lauder-research-center/research-resources/modern-art-index-project/perls-frank|title=The Met - Frank R. Perls|accessyear=27 October 2024}}</ref>
'''Susan Futterman''' was a broadcast standards executive at [[w:American Broadcasting Company|ABC]] from December 1976 to 2006, overseeing content compliance for the network throughout the runs of the [[Original Series]] and ''[[Galactica 1980]]''. She joined the network as manager of children's programs in the broadcast standards and practices department, a newly created position, and eventually rose to director of broadcast Standards and Practices, a title she held for the remainder of her career at ABC. Her tenure brought her into conflict with ''[[Galactica 1980]]'' executive producer [[Glen A. Larson]], as well as with story editors [[Allan Cole]] and [[Chris Bunch]].


Owing to Futterman's position at the studio, she clashed with various creatives over the course of her 3 decade tenure. She was described by illusionist and author [[w:Jim_Steinmeyer|Jim Steinmeyer]] as "stern and schoolmarm-ish, with her hair parted severely in the center and owlish horned-rimmed glasses."<ref name=":1">{{Cite web|url=https://jimsteinmeyer.com/2022/05/31/what-we-hide-cheating-at-cheating/|title=WHAT WE HIDE: CHEATING AT CHEATING|author=Jim Steinmeyer|accessdate=27 October 2024|date=31 May 2022}}</ref>
== Career ==


== Criticisms ==
=== Background and early career ===
Futterman ran afoul of [[Glen A. Larson]], particularly during the run of ''[[Galactica 1980]]''. The numerous jokes about [[Arnie's meatballs]] were peppered into the two-part episode "[[The Night the Cylons Landed]]," as a result of her belief that they were lewd. In addition to Larson's issues with Futterman, she was [[The Night the Cylons Landed, Part I#Official Statements|not fondly remembered]] by ''1980'' story editors [[Allan Cole]] and [[Chris Bunch]]; Cole being the more diplomatic of the two, notably when he told her "that they ought to open every episode of the show with an "educational" tag that read: 'Why aren't you little bug snipes watching ''[[w:60_Minutes|60 Minutes]]''.'" Cole noted that she agreed with that proposal.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html|title=Interview with ''Galactica 1980'' Story Editor Allan Cole|author=John Larocque|accessdate=27 October 2024|date=28 February 2005}}</ref>


Other creatives ran afoul of her, with [[w:Jim_Steinmeyer|Jim Steinmeyer]] noting her intense interest in a [[w:Doug_Henning|Doug Henning]] special of the 1980s.<ref name=":1" />
Futterman earned a bachelor's degree in early childhood from [[w:Mills College|Mills College of Education]], taught for the [[w:Head Start (program)|Head Start program]] in Harlem and Newark, New Jersey, then received a master's degree in education from [[w:Harvard University|Harvard University]] and worked for the Center for Research in Children's Television.<ref group="external" name="margulies_latimes_futterman_1977_mills_harvard">{{cite news|title=ABC's Futterman: An Internal Conscience|author=Lee Margulies|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=June 13, 1977|page=63|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times-susan-futterman-c/199628839/#:~:text=bachelor%27s%20degree%20in%20early%20childhood%20from%20Mills%20College|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> She also took courses in film-making and animation, and held a faculty position at [[w:Pacific Oaks College|Pacific Oaks College]] in Pasadena at the time she joined ABC.<ref group="external" name="margulies_latimes_futterman_1977_mills_harvard" /> Before moving to the network, she had served as a consultant to [[w:Action for Children's Television|Action for Children's Television (ACT)]].<ref group="external" name="margulies_latimes_futterman_1977_mills_harvard" />


In 1994, Dr. Jay Gordon's comments regarding the terminal effects of drugs and alcohol being marketed to children were censored by Futterman's group on a broadcast of the March 9, 1994 episode of the daytime talk show ''[[w:Home_(1988_TV_program)|Home]]''. Gordon believed Futterman solely responsible, with ''Home''<nowiki/>'s executive producer Woody Fraser initially overriding her decision to censor Gordon―one of many times he sparred with Futterman on that show.<ref name=":2">{{Cite news|title=ABC Censors Doctor’s Comments on ‘Home’ Show|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-03-19-ca-35988-story.html|author=Judith Michaelson|accessdate=27 October 2024|date=19 March 1994|publisher=Los Angeles Times}}</ref>
[[w:Peggy Charren|Peggy Charren]], ACT's president, told the ''Los Angeles Times'' in 1977 that Futterman's role within the organization had been that of an expert resource on child development rather than an advocate:


Fraser criticized Futterman's censorship as being driven by advertising, noting "Susan Futterman never says to you directly it has anything to do with potential sponsor problems, but the ''Home'' show is considered to be an advertiser-friendly show. So we sell a lot of spots. We make a lot of money for the network."<ref name=":2" />
{{quote|text=I never thought of Susan as an activist. She was a consultant to ACT. If we had questions about early-childhood development and how television relates to it, we asked her. Her credentials are excellent.|source=Peggy Charren, ''Los Angeles Times'', June 13, 1977<ref group="external" name="margulies_latimes_futterman_1977_charren_quote">{{cite news|title=ABC's Futterman: An Internal Conscience|author=Lee Margulies|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=June 13, 1977|page=63|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times-susan-futterman-c/199628839/#:~:text=I%20never%20thought%20of%20Susan%20as%20an%20activist|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>}}


== Other works ==
Futterman told the ''Los Angeles Times'' she believed she could exert more influence from inside a network than from outside it: "I agree [I spent] 13 years talking to people, being on panels, that kind of thing. Some of those people are more well-intentioned than others but even so, they never have an internal force to say, 'Change that or you're not going on the air.'"<ref group="external" name="margulies_latimes_futterman_1977_internal_quote">{{cite news|title=ABC's Futterman: An Internal Conscience|author=Lee Margulies|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=June 13, 1977|page=63|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-los-angeles-times-susan-futterman-c/199628839/#:~:text=13%20years%20talking%20to%20people%2C%20being%20on%20panels|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> She stated her belief that she was the only person with formal training in early childhood development to have been hired by one of the broadcast networks.<ref group="external" name="margulies_latimes_futterman_1977_internal_quote" />
Actress and comedienne [[w:Whoopi_Goldberg|Whoopi Goldberg]] noted that she became friends with Futterman during her tenure at hosting the Academy Awards.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://interviews.televisionacademy.com/people/susan-futterman|title=Talking About Susan Futterman|accessdate=27 October 2024}}</ref>


== Retirement ==
=== ABC (1976–2006) ===
Futterman retired in 2006, embarking on her "retirement occupation" as an art curator due to her interest in art, owing to her stepfather and art dealer, Frank Perls.<ref name=":0" />  
 
Among Futterman's early content decisions were the rejection of [[w:Tom and Jerry|Tom and Jerry]] cartoons on grounds of excessive violence and the removal of [[w:Bugs Bunny|Bugs Bunny]] and [[w:Road Runner (Looney Tunes)|Road Runner]] cartoons from ABC's schedule, even as both continued to air on competing networks at high ratings.<ref group="external" name="riegelhaupt_sfexaminer_futterman_1978_cartoons">{{cite news|title='A responsible babysitter'|author=Barbara Riegelhaupt|newspaper=The San Francisco Examiner|date=December 12, 1978|page=22|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-san-francisco-examiner-susan-futterm/199629428/#:~:text=refused%20to%20accept%20the%20Tom%20and%20Jerry%20cartoons%20because%20they%20were%20too%20violent|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> Futterman also required that crowd scenes in children's programming reflect minority representation: "They know I'm seat-belt happy and that I'm absolutely a stickler about minorities — even crowd scenes have to be mixed."<ref group="external" name="riegelhaupt_sfexaminer_futterman_1978_minorities">{{cite news|title='A responsible babysitter'|author=Barbara Riegelhaupt|newspaper=The San Francisco Examiner|date=December 12, 1978|page=22|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-san-francisco-examiner-susan-futterm/199629428/#:~:text=seat-belt%20happy%20and%20that%20I%27m%20absolutely%20a%20stickler%20about%20minorities|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>
 
Illusionist and author [[w:Jim Steinmeyer|Jim Steinmeyer]], who encountered Futterman through ABC's variety programming, described her as "stern and schoolmarm-ish, with her hair parted severely in the center and owlish horned-rimmed glasses," and recalled her close scrutiny of a [[w:Doug Henning|Doug Henning]] special during the 1980s.<ref group="commentary" name="steinmeyer_blog_futterman_2022_description">{{cite web|url=https://jimsteinmeyer.com/2022/05/31/what-we-hide-cheating-at-cheating/#:~:text=stern%20and%20schoolmarm-ish|title=What We Hide: Cheating at Cheating|author=Jim Steinmeyer|date=31 May 2022|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>
 
In May 1987, Futterman oversaw the content of the first [[w:American Comedy Awards|American Comedy Awards]] broadcast, airing live from the Hollywood Palladium. Producer [[w:George Schlatter|George Schlatter]] noted that she would "be sitting in master control with a bleep button in her lap," given a lineup that included [[w:Robin Williams|Robin Williams]], [[w:Whoopi Goldberg|Whoopi Goldberg]], [[w:George Carlin|George Carlin]], [[w:Sam Kinison|Sam Kinison]], and [[w:Bobcat Goldthwait|"Bad" Bob Goldthwait]].<ref group="external" name="schwed_upi_knoxville_comedy_awards_1987">{{cite news|title=Censoring the comics: Susan Futterman has her hand on the bleeper|author=Mark Schwed|newspaper=The Knoxville News-Sentinel|date=May 19, 1987|page=11|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-knoxville-news-sentinel-susan-futter/199628752/#:~:text=sitting%20in%20master%20control%20with%20a%20bleep%20button%20in%20her%20lap|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>
 
In February 2005, as director of broadcast standards and practices, Futterman managed the five-second delay on ABC's broadcast of the 77th annual Academy Awards, which featured [[w:Chris Rock|Chris Rock]] as host.<ref group="external" name="harris_ap_journalnews_futterman_2005_oscars">{{cite news|title=She keeps Oscar show in the limits|author=Beth Harris|newspaper=The Journal News|date=February 12, 2005|page=36|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-journal-news-susan-futterman-c-2005/199628977/#:~:text=director%20of%20broadcast%20standards%20and%20practices%20for%20ABC|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> At a production meeting for the telecast, producer [[w:Gil Cates|Gil Cates]] polled approximately 200 staff on their tenure at the network; Futterman withdrew from the count at the 28-year mark, which Cates informally designated as the "Class of 77."<ref group="external" name="harris_ap_journalnews_futterman_2005_class77">{{cite news|title=She keeps Oscar show in the limits|author=Beth Harris|newspaper=The Journal News|date=February 12, 2005|page=36|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-journal-news-susan-futterman-c-2005/199628977/#:~:text=Class%20of%2077|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> She told the Associated Press she had already used tapes of Rock's cable material to train junior editors on delay-button protocol: "You never trust comedians. The second people you don't trust are musicians."<ref group="external" name="harris_ap_journalnews_futterman_2005_comedians">{{cite news|title=She keeps Oscar show in the limits|author=Beth Harris|newspaper=The Journal News|date=February 12, 2005|page=36|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/the-journal-news-susan-futterman-c-2005/199628977/#:~:text=You%20never%20trust%20comedians|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>
 
=== ''Galactica 1980'' ===
 
Futterman's tenure coincided with the production of ''[[Galactica 1980]]'', and she clashed with executive producer [[Glen A. Larson]] over acceptable broadcast content. Larson peppered multiple references to [[Arnie's meatballs]] into the two-part episode "[[The Night the Cylons Landed]]" in direct response to her ruling that such references were lewd.<ref group="external" name="larocque_tripod_cole_interview_galactica1980">{{cite web|url=https://members.tripod.com/john_larocque/tns/acole.html#:~:text=Arnie%27s%20meatballs|title=Interview with ''Galactica 1980'' Story Editor Allan Cole|author=John Larocque|date=28 February 2005|accessdate=June 15, 2026|archive=Y}}</ref>
 
Story editors [[Allan Cole]] and [[Chris Bunch]] both held critical views of her involvement. Cole, the more measured of the two, described suggesting that the series open each episode with an on-air "educational" tag:
 
{{quote|text=Why aren't you little bug snipes watching ''[[w:60 Minutes|60 Minutes]]''?|source=Allan Cole, recalling his proposal to Susan Futterman; interview with John Larocque, February 28, 2005<ref group="external" name="larocque_tripod_cole_interview_galactica1980" />}}
 
Cole noted that Futterman agreed with the idea.<ref group="external" name="larocque_tripod_cole_interview_galactica1980" />
 
=== ''Home'' (1994) ===
 
In March 1994, Futterman's department censored comments by Dr. Jay Gordon on the daytime talk show ''[[w:Home (1988 TV program)|Home]]'' in which Gordon warned about drugs and alcohol being marketed to children. The comments were scheduled for the March 9 broadcast. Gordon attributed the decision to Futterman directly, while ''Home'' executive producer [[w:Woody Fraser|Woody Fraser]] initially overrode her — one of several confrontations between the two during the series' run.<ref group="external" name="michaelson_latimes_home_censorship_1994">{{cite news|title=ABC Censors Doctor's Comments on 'Home' Show|author=Judith Michaelson|newspaper=Los Angeles Times|date=19 March 1994|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1994-03-19-ca-35988-story.html#:~:text=ABC%20Censors%20Doctor%27s%20Comments|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>
 
Fraser told the ''Los Angeles Times'' that her decisions followed commercial rather than editorial logic:
 
{{quote|text=Susan Futterman never says to you directly it has anything to do with potential sponsor problems, but the ''Home'' show is considered to be an advertiser-friendly show. So we sell a lot of spots. We make a lot of money for the network.|source=Woody Fraser, ''Los Angeles Times'', March 19, 1994<ref group="external" name="michaelson_latimes_home_censorship_1994" />}}
 
== Personal life ==
 
A marriage announcement for Futterman appeared in the Mount Vernon, New York area press in July 1977.<ref group="external" name="argus_futterman_siegel_marriage_1977">{{cite news|title=Marriage of Futterman / Siegel|newspaper=Mount Vernon Argus|date=July 3, 1977|page=19|url=https://www.newspapers.com/article/mount-vernon-argus-marriage-of-futterman/199628859/|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> Her stepfather, Frank Perls, was a [[w:Beverly Hills|Beverly Hills]] art dealer with a client base that included the work of printmaker [[w:Gustave Baumann|Gustave Baumann]];<ref group="external" name="johnson_antiquesarts_perls_baumann_2017">{{cite web|url=https://www.antiquesandthearts.com/gustave-baumann-in-california/#:~:text=Frank%20Perls|title=Gustave Baumann in California|author=Kate Eagen Johnson|date=21 March 2017|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> Perls' brother operated a separate gallery in New York.<ref group="external" name="metmuseum_perls_frank_profile">{{cite web|url=https://www.metmuseum.org/research-centers/leonard-a-lauder-research-center/research-resources/modern-art-index-project/perls-frank#:~:text=Frank%20R.%20Perls|title=Frank R. Perls|publisher=The Metropolitan Museum of Art|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref> [[w:Whoopi Goldberg|Whoopi Goldberg]] noted that she and Futterman became friends during Goldberg's tenures hosting the Academy Awards.<ref group="commentary" name="televisionacademy_goldberg_futterman_friendship">{{cite web|url=https://interviews.televisionacademy.com/people/susan-futterman#:~:text=Whoopi%20Goldberg|title=Talking About Susan Futterman|publisher=Television Academy|accessdate=June 15, 2026}}</ref>
 
Futterman retired from ABC in 2006 and took up art curation, a pursuit she attributed to the influence of her stepfather's career as an art dealer.<ref group="external" name="johnson_antiquesarts_perls_baumann_2017" />


== References ==
== References ==
{{Reflist}}
 
=== Commentary and interviews ===
{{reflist|group=commentary}}
 
=== External sources ===
{{reflist|group=external}}

Latest revision as of 14:30, 15 June 2026

Susan Futterman
Role: Director of Standards and Practices
BSG Universe: Original Series and Galactica 1980
Date of Birth:
Date of Death: Missing required parameter 1=month! ,
Nationality: USA USA
[[IMDB:nm{{{imdb}}}|IMDb profile]]

Susan Futterman was a broadcast standards executive at ABC from December 1976 to 2006, overseeing content compliance for the network throughout the runs of the Original Series and Galactica 1980. She joined the network as manager of children's programs in the broadcast standards and practices department, a newly created position, and eventually rose to director of broadcast Standards and Practices, a title she held for the remainder of her career at ABC. Her tenure brought her into conflict with Galactica 1980 executive producer Glen A. Larson, as well as with story editors Allan Cole and Chris Bunch.

Background and early career

edit source

Futterman earned a bachelor's degree in early childhood from Mills College of Education, taught for the Head Start program in Harlem and Newark, New Jersey, then received a master's degree in education from Harvard University and worked for the Center for Research in Children's Television.[external 1] She also took courses in film-making and animation, and held a faculty position at Pacific Oaks College in Pasadena at the time she joined ABC.[external 1] Before moving to the network, she had served as a consultant to Action for Children's Television (ACT).[external 1]

Peggy Charren, ACT's president, told the Los Angeles Times in 1977 that Futterman's role within the organization had been that of an expert resource on child development rather than an advocate:

I never thought of Susan as an activist. She was a consultant to ACT. If we had questions about early-childhood development and how television relates to it, we asked her. Her credentials are excellent.

Futterman told the Los Angeles Times she believed she could exert more influence from inside a network than from outside it: "I agree [I spent] 13 years talking to people, being on panels, that kind of thing. Some of those people are more well-intentioned than others but even so, they never have an internal force to say, 'Change that or you're not going on the air.'"[external 2] She stated her belief that she was the only person with formal training in early childhood development to have been hired by one of the broadcast networks.[external 2]

ABC (1976–2006)

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Among Futterman's early content decisions were the rejection of Tom and Jerry cartoons on grounds of excessive violence and the removal of Bugs Bunny and Road Runner cartoons from ABC's schedule, even as both continued to air on competing networks at high ratings.[external 3] Futterman also required that crowd scenes in children's programming reflect minority representation: "They know I'm seat-belt happy and that I'm absolutely a stickler about minorities — even crowd scenes have to be mixed."[external 4]

Illusionist and author Jim Steinmeyer, who encountered Futterman through ABC's variety programming, described her as "stern and schoolmarm-ish, with her hair parted severely in the center and owlish horned-rimmed glasses," and recalled her close scrutiny of a Doug Henning special during the 1980s.[commentary 1]

In May 1987, Futterman oversaw the content of the first American Comedy Awards broadcast, airing live from the Hollywood Palladium. Producer George Schlatter noted that she would "be sitting in master control with a bleep button in her lap," given a lineup that included Robin Williams, Whoopi Goldberg, George Carlin, Sam Kinison, and "Bad" Bob Goldthwait.[external 5]

In February 2005, as director of broadcast standards and practices, Futterman managed the five-second delay on ABC's broadcast of the 77th annual Academy Awards, which featured Chris Rock as host.[external 6] At a production meeting for the telecast, producer Gil Cates polled approximately 200 staff on their tenure at the network; Futterman withdrew from the count at the 28-year mark, which Cates informally designated as the "Class of 77."[external 7] She told the Associated Press she had already used tapes of Rock's cable material to train junior editors on delay-button protocol: "You never trust comedians. The second people you don't trust are musicians."[external 8]

Galactica 1980

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Futterman's tenure coincided with the production of Galactica 1980, and she clashed with executive producer Glen A. Larson over acceptable broadcast content. Larson peppered multiple references to Arnie's meatballs into the two-part episode "The Night the Cylons Landed" in direct response to her ruling that such references were lewd.[external 9]

Story editors Allan Cole and Chris Bunch both held critical views of her involvement. Cole, the more measured of the two, described suggesting that the series open each episode with an on-air "educational" tag:

Why aren't you little bug snipes watching 60 Minutes?

Cole noted that Futterman agreed with the idea.[external 9]

Home (1994)

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In March 1994, Futterman's department censored comments by Dr. Jay Gordon on the daytime talk show Home in which Gordon warned about drugs and alcohol being marketed to children. The comments were scheduled for the March 9 broadcast. Gordon attributed the decision to Futterman directly, while Home executive producer Woody Fraser initially overrode her — one of several confrontations between the two during the series' run.[external 10]

Fraser told the Los Angeles Times that her decisions followed commercial rather than editorial logic:

Susan Futterman never says to you directly it has anything to do with potential sponsor problems, but the Home show is considered to be an advertiser-friendly show. So we sell a lot of spots. We make a lot of money for the network.

Personal life

edit source

A marriage announcement for Futterman appeared in the Mount Vernon, New York area press in July 1977.[external 11] Her stepfather, Frank Perls, was a Beverly Hills art dealer with a client base that included the work of printmaker Gustave Baumann;[external 12] Perls' brother operated a separate gallery in New York.[external 13] Whoopi Goldberg noted that she and Futterman became friends during Goldberg's tenures hosting the Academy Awards.[commentary 2]

Futterman retired from ABC in 2006 and took up art curation, a pursuit she attributed to the influence of her stepfather's career as an art dealer.[external 12]

References

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Commentary and interviews

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  1. Jim Steinmeyer (31 May 2022). What We Hide: Cheating at Cheating (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  2. Talking About Susan Futterman (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Television Academy. Retrieved on June 15, 2026.

External sources

edit source
  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Lee Margulies. "ABC's Futterman: An Internal Conscience (backup available on Archive.org)", June 13, 1977.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  2. 2.0 2.1 Lee Margulies. "ABC's Futterman: An Internal Conscience (backup available on Archive.org)", June 13, 1977.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  3. Barbara Riegelhaupt. "'A responsible babysitter' (backup available on Archive.org)", December 12, 1978.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  4. Barbara Riegelhaupt. "'A responsible babysitter' (backup available on Archive.org)", December 12, 1978.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  5. Mark Schwed. "Censoring the comics: Susan Futterman has her hand on the bleeper (backup available on Archive.org)", May 19, 1987.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  6. Beth Harris. "She keeps Oscar show in the limits (backup available on Archive.org)", February 12, 2005.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  7. Beth Harris. "She keeps Oscar show in the limits (backup available on Archive.org)", February 12, 2005.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  8. Beth Harris. "She keeps Oscar show in the limits (backup available on Archive.org)", February 12, 2005.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  9. 9.0 9.1 John Larocque (28 February 2005). Interview with Galactica 1980 Story Editor Allan Cole (content archived on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  10. Judith Michaelson. "ABC Censors Doctor's Comments on 'Home' Show (backup available on Archive.org)", 19 March 1994.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  11. "Marriage of Futterman / Siegel (backup available on Archive.org)", July 3, 1977.Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  12. 12.0 12.1 Kate Eagen Johnson (21 March 2017). Gustave Baumann in California (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). Retrieved on June 15, 2026.
  13. Frank R. Perls (backup available on Archive.org) (in English). The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Retrieved on June 15, 2026.