NPR’s This I Believe essays “solicited from prominent names sometimes seem bland or banal,” writes the Washington Post’s Marc Fisher. “But the best of the essays combine a poetic sensibility with the occasional pearl of wisdom,” he adds.

Managers of pubradio stations reacted with surprise to the news that Blair Feulner, g.m. of KCPW/KPCW-FM in Park City, Utah, makes $150,000 a year. “For me to ask for $100,000 at KUER would be inappropriate in the extreme — and my boss would make that clear,” said one g.m. in the Salt Lake Tribune.

Connecticut’s attorney general says he will sue the former president of a college radio station for misusing station funds, reports the (New London, Conn.) Day.

Jefferson Public Radio in Ashland, Ore., cancelled a local show after determining that the host had committed plagiarism, reports the Mail Tribune. The host of The Sustainable Kitchen denies any wrongdoing.

A recent survey found that public broadcasting’s news reporting is the most trusted in the media, reports Broadcasting & Cable. (See the survey results and related materials.)

NPR has launched 16 new podcasts, including several online-only features and a revival of “On Words with John Ciardi,” last heard on Morning Edition in the ’80s.

The University of the Pacific in Stockton, Calif., will seek a buyer for its noncommercial FM station, KUOP-FM. Capital Public Radio in Sacramento has been operating the station for five years under a management agreement.

A recent Station Resource Group analysis of CPB data (PDF) suggests that public radio stations need to get serious about becoming more efficient fundraisers, writes consultant John Sutton.

Organization of State Broadcasting Executives (OSBE) Statement of Mission and Purpose

OSBE is an affinity group of statewide public broadcasting organizations, both state-operated and nonprofit. Included are some state agencies that assist but do not operate stations. The Organization of State Broadcasting Executives (OSBE) is an interstate collaborative composed of chief executive officers of state public broadcasting networks and directors of commissions and authorities with statewide public broadcasting responsibilities. OSBE is composed of representatives from 32 states that operate or represent two thirds of the public broadcasting stations in the United States. OSBE began meeting on a regular basis in 1981 and formally organized in 1986.

At TV Barn, Aaron Barnhart comments on the Tomlinson affair and the lackluster output of CPB’s ombudsmen.

Seattle’s KEXP-FM will stop broadcasting on a Tacoma signal it had been leasing from Public Radio Capital. The station is seeking to cut costs as a subsidy from Seattle’s Experience Music Project dries up. (More coverage in the Seattle Post-Intelligencer.)

The FCC seeks comments on a proposal to create a low-power AM service.

WUNC-FM in Chapel Hill, N.C., is moving ahead with plans to produce a national talk show with Dick Gordon as host. Gordon hosted public radio’s The Connection until earlier this year, when it was cancelled by producing station WBUR-FM in Boston.

Sound Opinions, a long-running talk show about rock music that until now has aired on commercial radio, will jump to Chicago’s WBEZ-FM next month and be distributed to public radio nationwide by American Public Media, reports the Chicago Sun-Times.

Garrison Keillor’s traveling Prairie Home Companion will bypass its longtime home base, the Fitzgerald Theater in St. Paul, Minn., for at least the next year and perhaps longer, reports the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

The Rev. James Dobson’s “Family News in Focus” website quotes “media critic Pat Trueman” calling for nonliberals to “step into the void” left by Ken Tomlinson’s resignation from the CPB Board and “take up where he left off.” (Earlier this year Patrick A. Trueman was a senior legal counsel of Family Research Council.) The website says Rep. Zach Wamp (R-Tenn.), a member of the House Appropriations Committee, is volunteering to lead the effort. The article seems to imply that liberals have chased away Tomlinson.

In addition to the CPB probe, Kenneth Tomlinson is the subject of an investigation by the State Department’s inspector general, launched in July, the New York Times reports this morning. Materials including e-mails between Tomlinson and White House aide Karl Rove have been seized by State’s IG and may be disclosed in the CPB IG’s report this month, the newspaper said. Tomlinson is chairman of the Broadcasting Board of Governors, overseer of Voice of America, Alhurra and other agencies.

Pro-life groups are promoting PBS’s Nov. 8 broadcast of “The Last Abortion Clinic,” a Frontline documentary reporting on their movement’s success in limiting women’s access to abortion in Mississippi.

Brooke Gladstone, co-host of On the Media, should have noted on a recent show that a journalist she was citing happens to be her husband, says NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin in his latest column.

The Media Access Project filed petitions with the FCC to deny pending license renewals for commercial television stations in Chicago and Milwaukee. Broadcasters in both cities failed to meet their public interest obligations because their 2004 news coverage largely overlooked local and statewide elections, according to petitions filed on behalf of Chicago Media Action and Milwaukee Public Interest Media Coalition. In a separate petition, Third Coast Press included the city’s public TV stations in its motion (pdf) to deny renewals to Chicago’s TV outlets.