Paid product placement said to be widespread

Here’s another chance for public broadcasters to demonstrate their trustworthiness … or not. Even Advertising Age says: “Something’s rotten with the state of media.” In a survey of 266 senior marketing execs cited by the magazine, almost half said they’ve paid for product placement in glossy periodicals, TV or other media. Ad Age has reported that auto marketers are pushing hard for paid placements.

House committee restores $20 mil to CPB

The House Appropriations committee restored $20 million to CPB’s 2007 funding, but didn’t alter its proposals to eliminate $104.5 million in federal aid for digital conversion and edtech programs, report the Los Angeles Times and Broadcasting & Cable. The committee also declined to provide a 2009 advance appropriation for CPB.

Atlas to exit PBS this month

Another change to the PBS executive ranks: Los Angeles-based Co-Chief Programmer Jacoba Atlas will leave her job at the end of the month, reports the New York Times. John Wilson, programming co-chief working at PBS headquarters, keeps his job and will report to Boland. Wilson’s claim to fame, according to the Washington Post’s Lisa de Moraes, is being “the guy who moved Masterpiece Theatre from Sunday.”

PBS hires KQED’s John Boland

John Boland, executive v.p. of San Francisco’s KQED-TV/FM, will join PBS in September as chief content officer. His hiring, announced at today’s PBS Board meeting, is the first change to PBS’s executive ranks since President Paula Kerger signed on in March.

Mermigas column on PBS

“New-media’s consumer-supported business model is not much different from public broadcasting’s long-standing membership pledges and corporate sponsorships,” observes media writer Diane Mermigas in a column examining the challenges ahead for PBS.

Conrad on HD Radio

Robert Conrad, president of WCLV-FM in Cleveland, says the technological shortcomings of HD Radio “[are] really very discouraging and [are] leading us to wonder why we should bother to promote HD. To do so will only disappoint, and, perhaps, antagonize a significant segment of the audience who finds that the system doesn’t deliver.” (Via The Future of Radio.)

Charlie Rose returns after recovering from surgery

Charlie Rose returns to his round table tonight after emergency heart surgery interrupted on overseas trip in March, AP reports. Topic No. 1 will be heart surgery. Guest hosts have included WNYC’s Brian Lehrer, ABC’s Barbara Walters, NBC’s Brian Williams, CBS’s Bob Schieffer and The New Yorker’s David Remnick. Interviews from his show are available on demand for 99 cents each through Google Video.

James Barrett dies

James Barrett, NPR’s first public relations director and a former director of public information for New York’s WNET, died of pneumonia June 4 in Fairfax, Va., according to the Washington Post. He was 75.

Louisville Courier-Journal: New team running public radio stations

Board members and senior staffers are running the Public Radio Partnership in Louisville, Ky., in the absence of a permanent president, reports the Courier-Journal. The article details further strife among staff and members of the board, with one member resigning last month and two others stirring up controversy.

Major pubTV history series backed by NEH

National Endowment for the Humanities announced yesterday $5 million in TV grants to projects including WETA’s four-hour The Jewish Americans; WGBH’s We Shall Remain, a five-parter on Native American history; and KCET’s three-hour In the Name of God and King: The Spanish Empire. The broadcast projects were among 171 receiving aid. Details were posted online, organized by grantees’ states: Alabama to Illinois (10-page PDF), Indiana to New Mexico (9-page), and New York to Wyoming (11-page).

Alaska’s KTOO buys 2 stations

KTOO in Juneau, Alaska, is buying two FM stations to offer a wider selection of programming. It already operates one FM outlet — the most listened-to station in Juneau, it says. The broadcaster will consult with listeners as it works out the stations’ formats.

House subcommittee cuts CPB funding

The Boston Globe and Broadcasting & Cable report on the House Appropriations subcommittee vote yesterday to cut $115 million in federal aid to public broadcasting. [Links to the joint statement of PBS, APTS and NPR and CPB’s separate statement.]

TiVo steps out as video presenter

TiVo launches today a service that will let some of its subscribers watch videos from selected Internet sources, including the National Football League and the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal reported. TiVoCast works only with the company’s new Series 2 recorders, which have Internet instead of phone connections.

WGA, pubTV stations negotiate contract

Writers Guild of America and three pubTV producing stations completed negotiations on a three-year contract that includes provisions to share revenues from ventures delivering programs over new digital platforms, according to the Hollywood Reporter.

NPR announces Working Group to consider Digital Distribution Consortium, 2006

NPR exec Ken Stern sent this memo to public radio stations’ Authorized Representatives as a followup to the New Realities Forum in May 2006. News from Ken Stern – Digital Distribution Consortium Working Group
June 6, 2006

Dear Colleagues:

Last month, about 300 of our colleagues gathered at the New Realities National Forum in Washington. We discussed the future of public radio and our service, and envisioned the benefits of working together differently in the future. It was an exciting and motivating session and we’d like to extend our thanks to all who participated in the forum and the retreats leading up to it. Many retreat discussions and more than a dozen forum breakouts explored the shared notion that we have yet to seize the opportunities of the digital age.

NPR : Are NPR Reporters Too Involved in Their Stories?

NPR’s David Kestenbaum’s use of the word “pissed” in a question to an interviewee should not have survived editing, says Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin. “I think that the public radio audience is, (in general), not easily shocked, and they are able to handle harsh language but only when it is contextual and comes directly from the people being interviewed — not from the reporter.”

Washingtonpost.com: Taking Offbeat Films Beyond the Niche

The Prairie Home Companion film is the first major release for Picturehouse Films, a recently formed distributor whose president, Bob Berney, is profiled in the Washington Post. “This is the kind of film that is representative of Picturehouse,” Berney says, “in that it’s a specialty film, but it’s also a populist film.”

KCTS takes over operations of Yakima station

In a cost-cutting move, Seattle’s KCTS is taking over operations of KYVE, the public TV station in Yakima that it has owned for more than a decade. Most of KYVE’s staff will lose their jobs, but viewers should not notice a difference, says Pat Mallinson, KCTS spokeswoman, in the Yakima Herald Republic.

Sam Husseini: Can Pacifica Live Up to Its Challenge?

Sam Husseini calls for a more vital and powerful Pacifica Radio network. “What needs to be scrutinized is the collusion of incumbent programmers, many of whom were put in place by the previous utterly corrupt management, with the current management that seems resistant to change — and stays in place largely because of support from incumbent programmers,” he writes.