Longtime Prairie Home Companion sponsor Lands’ End has ended its underwriting deal with the show, reports the (Madison, Wis.) Capital Times.

Josh Kornbluth, host of a quirky new local series and weblog for KQED-TV, dreamed of being an NBA point guard, but he never imagined having his own TV show. “You look at someone who belongs on television . . . they’re solid, like they belong there….

CPB seeks a firm to help with developing public radio services for Latinos in Los Angeles.

“A lot of people probably don’t know me or haven’t heard about me and are not used to having this additional channel for challenge,” says Michael Getler, describing his new job as PBS ombudsman. Getler, a veteran newspaper reporter and editor who is ending a five-year term as Washington Post ombudsman, joins PBS on Nov. 15.

Katrina vanden Heuvel, editor of the left-wing weekly The Nation, picked up on a senator’s jibe at Ken Tomlinson, suggesting that CPB put $5 million into a commentary program run by her magazine just as it did for the Wall Street Journal’s roundtable show. “We’re serious. With the departure of Bill Moyers from Now, PBS has no outspoken liberals at all offering commentary,” she wrote, concluding, “We eagerly await your response.”

NPR will beef up coverage of the southern U.S. with a reporter stationed in Nashville, reports the Nashville City Paper.

WUNC-FM in Chapel Hill, N.C., hopes to launch a national talk show hosted by Dick Gordon, former host of The Connection. A plea for funds on the website of the Triangle Community Foundation lays out the plan.

Michael Getler, who holds the position at the Washington Post, will become the first ombudsman for PBS. Getler worked for the Post 26 years, reporting on the Pentagon, Central Europe and London beats, then serving as foreign editor and deputy managing editor. He became executive editor of the International Herald Tribune in 1996 and returned to the Post as ombudsman in 2000. With backing from a panel of journalists, PBS decided to hire an ombudsman this summer. CPB had hired a pair of journalists for the purpose.

There’s a LiveJournal community for public radio fans.

“I am by definition a reporter. Not an editor, not a publisher. A reporter,” says NPR Co-Managing Editor Bill Marimow in the Johns Hopkins Newsletter.

NPR has tried to make it easier for listeners to offer feedback but still has work to do, says Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin in his latest column.

“Whenever I’m not sure about something, the ethics of something, the question I ask myself is what would Murrow have done? What would Murrow say?” says NPR’s Daniel Schorr. (Via Romenesko.)

“Beyond investigations, we must lay out a program for a new governance of PBS, one that is safely shielded from partisan hatchets,” writes Rep. Diane Watson (D-Calif.) in a Huffington Post column.

Marc Steiner has stepped down as executive v.p. for broadcast and production at WYPR-FM in Baltimore, reports the City Paper. Anonymous sources cite friction between Steiner and WYPR President Tony Brandon as one reason.

A blogger and Bob Edwards fan reports that NPR barred Daniel Schorr from appearing on Edwards’ XM Satellite Radio show.

The Third Coast International Audio Festival has announced the winners of its annual radio documentary competition (but not the particular awards they won).

City weeklies often disdain the local public TV station, but not Nashville City Paper, which commented on the departure of Steve Bass, head of WNPT: “Last week, Bass announced he will move to Oregon Public Television at the end of the year. He leaves Nashville richer for his having passed this way. . . .”

It’s time to dump CPB and create a funding system independent of politics, Fairness & Accuracy in Reporting (FAIR) suggests. The liberal media watchdog quotes James Ledbetter: “Like a dog that has learned to flinch at the mere pantomime of its master’s lashing, public broadcasters know how to avoid topics and methods of criticism that might bring down the hand of rebuke.”