Republican gives OPB $50,000, citing “Moyers and Company”

Oregon Public Broadcasting received an unexpected $50,000 gift on Wednesday (Jan. 25), from a longtime donor who has “given consistently but nothing on that level,” OPB President Steve Bass told Current. And here’s a twist: The contributor told an OPB staffer that he’s a registered Republican, and that one of the programs he especially enjoys is Moyers and Company, the latest show from veteran newsman Bill Moyers, widely considered a progressive voice.Several pubTV execs recently told the New York Times that PBS declined to carry Moyers’s latest program, which is distributed by American Public Television, because PBS “did not want to realign itself with Mr. Moyers, a longtime target of some conservatives, as it was fighting to keep its federal financing.”

Pubcasting pic o’ the week

Is this a great photo or what? That’s Terry Gross, host of WHYY’s Fresh Air, alongside larger-than-life political satirist Stephen Colbert. In case you missed her appearance on The Colbert Report, here’s the link on Fresh Air’s Tumblr.

Months later, FCC still “obtaining additional information” on sale of WMFE-TV to Daystar

Nine months after PBS member station WMFE-TV in Orlando announced its sale, the Federal Communications Commission has yet to approve its transfer to Community Educators of Orlando, the local entity representing religious broadcaster Daystar. Orlando Weekly reports that in a Dec. 7, 2011, letter, Michael Perko, spokesperson for the FCC Media Bureau, told U.S. Rep. Kenny Marchant (R-Texas), whose includes Daystar headquarters, that the FCC had “recently completed a preliminary evaluation of the WMFE-TV assignment application . . .

WPSU developing Editorial Integrity Advisory Committee as it navigates scandal coverage

In reaction to the Penn State University athletic department’s ongoing sex abuse scandal, WPSU General Manager Ted Krichels is organizing an Editorial Integrity Advisory Committee for the station, which is licensed to the college, reports CPB Ombudsman Joel Kaplan. “WPSU, like many public broadcasting outlets, is inextricably tied to the university where it is located, and which also holds its license,” Kaplan writes; WPSU is also a news operation. “There is no indication that any pressure was brought to bear” on the newsroom over the scandal coverage, Kaplan notes, “but there is a fear inside WPSU that there is a public perception that WPSU is an auxiliary arm of Penn State.” Krichels invited administrators, faculty from Penn’s College of Communication, WPSU reporters and producers and Kaplan to the committee’s first meeting. The group plans to meet again next month, Kaplan said, adding that the initiative could grow into a template for other university-affiliated pubcasting stations.Krichels is also helping guide the systemwide Editorial Integrity for Public Media initiative (Current, April 4, 2011).

Public Insight Network broadens work to include original reporting

The Public Insight Network from American Public Media is starting up its own news unit to generate original reporting, according to Nieman Journalism Lab, drawing on its massive database of some 130,000 self-identified news sources. “One of the things we learned early on,” Linda Fantin, director of the PIN initiative, told Nieman, “is the amount of intelligence and amazing insights and stories that people have shared with us quickly overwhelm a journalist’s ability to get that information out there.” The first project will be monthlong “virtual road trip” to survey Americans on whether presidential candidates reflect their values.

NewsHour’s translation project presents State of the Union in more than six languages

The PBS NewsHour’s election-year translation project kicked off with President Obama’s State of the Union address on Tuesday (Jan. 24). Online transcriptions of his speech are now available in its entirety in Arabic, French, Italian, Japanese, Polish and Portuguese; portions of the address are there in traditional Chinese, Danish, Dutch, Esperanto, German, Korean and Spanish.

Random House and Sesame launch ebook initiative

Random House Children’s Books and Sesame Workshop are partnering on a new digital publishing initiative focusing on early learning and reading readiness. Titles from the Random House Children’s Books Sesame Street library will be available as ebooks for the first time beginning today (Jan. 25) with Elmo Says Achoo! and Elmo’s Breakfast Bingo. An additional 19 titles will be released this spring.

A tempest in a “Downton” teapot?

Britain’s Daily Mail reports that producers of the ITV drama — and current Masterpiece smash hit — Downton Abbey “are less than happy after an American TV network launched a collection of somewhat tasteless themed jewelry.” PBS had featured several items similar to what Downton characters wear on its ShopPBS website. Supposedly, producers Carnival Films “were forced to call in lawyers” in an attempt to stop PBS “from naming jewelry after the show’s most famous character, Lady Mary Crawley.” Carnival, “which has approved an official range of Downton DVDs and books, was horrified to find that PBS, its broadcast partner, was cashing in on the show’s popularity,” the paper wrote. “The ‘Lady Mary knotted pearl necklace and earring set,’ available for £102 ($159.99), was doing a roaring trade until Downton producers complained,” it noted.

KPCC hires former Los Angeles Times editor to oversee content

Former Los Angeles Times Editor Russ Stanton has joined pubradio station KPCC as its new vice president of content, the station announced Tuesday (Jan. 24). Stanton’s arrival “is part of an aggressive effort by the nonprofit news organization to become the preeminent regional source for both broadcast and online news — with deeper, more enterprising and investigative coverage,” according to a story on the KPCC website.Stanton had left the newspaper last month in what was called a “mutual decision” with Times President Kathy Thomson. During his four years at the helm, the paper won three Pulitzer Prizes, including a prestigious Public Service award. At KPCC, Stanton will be responsible for the station’s broadcasts, website and live events coverage; one of his first duties will be to select an executive editor supervise daily operations of the newsroom on broadcast and digital platforms.The hire is part of plans by Southern California Public Radio to more than double KPCC’s 57-person newsroom by July 2014, a response to last year’s Knight Commission report that criticized public broadcasting’s inadequate commitment to local journalism (Current, Oct.

Docs on PBS garner three Oscar nods

Three documentaries on PBS have received Academy Award nominations, announced today (Jan. 24). In the documentary feature category are “Hell and Back Again” from Independent Lens, which follows a U.S. soldier back from Afghanistan after a serious injury; and POV’s “If a Tree Falls: A Story of the Earth Liberation Front,” which explores both environmentalism and terrorism by examining a radical environmental group the FBI calls the country’s “number one domestic terrorism threat.”POV also received a nomination for documentary short subject for “The Barber Of Birmingham: Foot Soldier of the Civil Rights Movement,” the story of James Armstrong, an African-American barber who experiences the fulfillment of an unimaginable dream, the election of the country’s first African-American president.

WNET releases second online game for middle schoolers, “Flight to Freedom”

“Flight to Freedom,” the second in the Mission U.S. series of educational role-playing online games for middle-school students, was released today (Jan. 24) by WNET/Thirteen in New York City, timed in advance of Black History Month. The game immerses players in the experiences of a runaway slave in the years before the Civil War, the station said in a press release. Its development was funded by the Corporation for Public Broadcasting and the National Endowment for the Humanities.The first game in the series, 2010’s “For Crown or Colony?” introduced players to Nat Wheeler, a 14-year-old printer’s apprentice in 1770 Boston who was forced to decide if he supported the Patriots or Loyalists.

There will be two events: Monday, March 12th and Saturday, May 12th; for family and friends to remember Jim:Monday, March 12, 2012Funeral Service and Burial11 AM: Promptly Blooming Grove Reformed Church (childhood church where Jim and Brenda went to Bible study)706 Blooming Grove DriveRensselaer (North Greenbush), NY  12144518.286.2910Burial will follow the church service at the nearby Blooming Grove Cemetery.Arrangements are by The Lyons Funeral Home in Rensselaer, NY, 518.283-2282 In lieu of flowers, the family suggests donations in Jim’s memory to the American Center for Children and Media, 5400 N. St. Louis Ave., Chicago, IL 60625 or to donations to yourlocal public radio or TV stations. Contact:  Karen Marx at [email protected] or 212.649.7292 (office)Saturday, May 12, 2012 Celebration of Life Party2:00 – 5:00 PMCosmos Club (Jim was an exclusive member)2121 Massachusetts Ave., N.W.Washington, DC  20008202.797.6440*The Cosmos Club has a dress code: business attire – ties/jackets for men, equivalent for womenhttps://www.cosmosclub.org/default.aspxFor more information, contact Pete Willson at [email protected] or 301/980-1569 (c)Article about Jim’s Career and Life: Three attachments. Obituaries about Jim’s life have appeared in the Albany Times-Union, Chicago Tribune, Daily Journal (Vineland, NJ), New York Times, and Washington Post.In addition, the attached extensive article on Jim’s career appeared in the January 17th issue of Current, the newspaper that covers public broadcasting.  Jim helped to found the paper in 1980 with its editor Steve Behrens, who wrote the article.  It is located on the lower half of the front page. Jim always looked for opportunities to let young people advance in public broadcasting, See current.org for commentaries by friends and colleagues Dave Fornshell, retired head of the Ohio Educational Telecommunications Network Commission, and David Kleeman, president of the American Center for Children and Media.

I’ll Make Me a World festival, inspired by PBS mini-series, to draw thousands in Iowa

An annual event that began as an outreach for the 1999 PBS mini-series I’ll Make Me a World is still going strong in Iowa, and organizers expect it to draw some 20,000 participants Friday and Saturday, reports the Des Moines Register.  The celebration of African-American heritage, I’ll Make Me a World in Iowa, kicks off Black History Month in the state. At the original gathering in 1999, “the prediction was for 300 people to attend, but 1,000 showed up — and now we’ve grown to 15,000 to 20,000 and become a premier arts and cultural organization offering a world-class event,” said Betty Andrews, the festival’s executive director. “It’s a blessing to those of us who work to make this happen, and we hope it’s a blessing to those who come and learn and enjoy.” Headliners this year are actor Shemar Franklin Moore of the CBS drama Criminal Minds, and R&B singer Kenny Lattimore. I’ll Make Me a World was a CPB-backed, six-hour mini-series on African-American artists from Henry Hampton, best known for his acclaimed Eyes on the Prize documentary.

Kentucky newspapers piloting a project to supply content to pubradio stations

The Kentucky Press Association’s News Content Service, which shares stories across dozens of newspapers, is starting a pilot program to supply the state’s public radio stations. WEKU at Eastern Kentucky University and WNKU at Northern Kentucky University have signed on. “It’s a way for us to extend the really great work that journalists are already doing around the state,” Roger Duvall, g.m. at WEKU, told the Herald-Leader in Lexington. Greer added that “we know there’s interest” in the project among the other five public radio stations in Kentucky. So far, 23 of the 62 newspapers contributing their reporting to the News Content Service have agreed to allow pubradio stations to use their work, Greer said.

Marfa Public Radio pushing ahead with KOCV work

Marfa Public Radio General Manager Tom Michael told the Odessa (Texas) American that he hopes to re-launch public radio in Midland and Odessa by spring. In December 2011, Marfa finalized its purchase of KOCV-FM radio from Odessa College for $150,000 and another $150,000 in sponsorships over 10 years (background, Current, Aug. 8, 2011). Michael said the tower will be moved from the college campus to Gardendale, to bring back listeners who have seen the signal fade since the 1980s. “We’ve begun the construction phase of the project,” he said.

MPTV and Friends group officially merge

Milwaukee Public Television and MPTV Friends, which had previously operated as two independent organizations, have merged, the groups announced Monday (Jan. 23) in a press release. Under the agreement, Friends will phase out operations in 2012, and many of its employees will join the MPTV staff  to continue coordinating fundraising events including the popular Great TV Auction. “We’ve always shared the goal of bringing the community the best in public television programming,” said station G.M. Ellis Bromberg in the statement. “This agreement strengthens our relationship and makes our stations even better by allowing us to devote more resources to present new and exciting entertainment and educational offerings.”

Downton, American Masters, Sesame win Producers Guild awards

Three shows on PBS scored awards from the Producers Guild of America in ceremonies Saturday (Jan. 21) in Los Angeles. Masterpiece Classic’s hit Downton Abbey continues its string of honors with the David L. Wolper Award for Outstanding Producer of Long-Form Television, beating out Cinema Verite, Mildred Pierce and Too Big to Fail on HBO and The Kennedys on Reelz Channel. The outstanding producer of non-fiction television award went to Susan Lacy and Julie Sacks for American Masters. Also, Sesame Street won for children’s television, a new category in the 23-year-old awards.

Minnesota governor proclaims Gary Eichten Day statewide as longtime MPR host retires

Jan. 20 was Gary Eichten Day in Minnesota, proclaimed by Gov. Mark Dayton to honor the retiring Minnesota Public Radio host and producer after a 45-year career. The proclamation noted that Eichten began his career at MPR as a student announcer at KSJR, Minnesota’s first public radio station, in 1967. Over the years he has served as news director, special events producer, and station manager; for the past 20 years he’s been host of Midday.A “Heckuva Farewell” for Eichten took place Jan. 19 at the Fitzgerald Theater.

KSKA metro reporter Les Anderson to retire

Les Anderson, longtime metro news reporter for KSKA in Anchorage, Alaska, is retiring after a career in which he “once stood by a wet mule in a Wisconsin parking lot, wearing hillbilly clothes and promoting a new citrus pop for a commercial radio station,” reports the Anchorage Daily News.Anderson came to public radio in an interesting way, beginning as a college professor at University of Wisconsin. Decades ago, an English composition student asked him what can be done with an English degree; Anderson went to his office and pondered the question. “Then he decided to see if he, with a master’s degree in English, could make a career in radio,” the paper said. His first pubcasting job was at KEYA on the Turtle Mountain Indian Chippewa Reservation in North Dakota. In 1979 he moved to Alaska as manager of the Kotzebue radio station, KOTZ.

BBC “prepared to take legal action” against CBS’s Sherlock Holmes show, paper says

A legal fight may be brewing between the BBC version of Sherlock Holmes, which airs on PBS as part of Masterpiece Mystery, and an upcoming CBS version of the detective stories. According to the UK newspaper The Independent, the Beeb producers feel that CBS’s Elementary, which also places the character in a modern setting using laptops and cellphones, may be too much like their version.Sue Vertue, Sherlock e.p., said that CBS “approached us a while back about remaking our show. At the time, they made great assurances about their integrity, so we have to assume that their modernised Sherlock Holmes doesn’t resemble ours in any way, as that would be extremely worrying.”The Independent quoted Margaret Tofalides, a copyright specialist, that while the concept of a modern-day Sherlock is unprotectable, “if the unusual elements of the BBC series — the modern settings, characters, clothes, plots and distinctive visual style — were closely reproduced in the CBS version, that could form the basis of a potential copyright claim.”