Awards
APTS recognizes politicos, pubcasters with awards at annual Summit
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APTS awarded the David J. Brugger Lay Leadership Award to Hilma Prather of Kentucky Feb. 22 at its Public Media Summit in Washington, D.C.
Current (https://current.org/2015/02/)
APTS awarded the David J. Brugger Lay Leadership Award to Hilma Prather of Kentucky Feb. 22 at its Public Media Summit in Washington, D.C.
The circuit attorney for St. Louis will drop a subpoena that had sought audio and video recorded by station reporters during a contentious City Hall meeting in January.
Colorado Public Radio and the Colorado Symphony find some common ground and resume broadcasting partnership.
After eight years, Jesse Thorn is ending his internship program — not because it wasn’t working, but because he thought it was wrong.
Bowles was senior executive of WBGO-FM from 1993 to 2014.
Nearly every public radio station now executes a sustaining membership program, but the latest analyses of fundraising performance reveal that very few of them could be described as effective or successful.
Any benefits from the town-hall-style “listening tour” that stopped here Monday courtesy of PBS and several other public media organizations were strictly therapeutic.
A Virginia broadcaster might swap some of its UHF TV channels for VHF during the FCC’s incentive auction and wants a bigger payout than currently proposed.
In this new column, we’ll feature new podcasts popping up in the public media space or produced by pubmedia alums and news about the podcasting industry.
A forthcoming low-power FM station in Nashville, Tenn., aims to revive the spirit of a Vanderbilt University student-run station.
Plus: grants, HD Radio and public radio in classrooms.
A dustup between independent filmmakers and the New York City station has co-opted a national “listening tour.”
Media startup accelerator Matter launches its fourth class on entrepreneurs.
NPR and ProPublica reject Red Cross’s call to correct the news outlets’ collaborative investigative series.
Testimonials from a wide variety of passionate speakers were followed by assurances from panelists that those voices were being heard.
This week, we contemplate how much children’s public television has changed since Fred Rogers’ day, and the news isn’t all bad — far from it, in fact.
“I’m proud of having built the center and led it for the last 15 years, and delighted to promote its continuity into the next academic generation,” Pat Aufderheide said.
A public radio general manager recalls a taping of the late host’s Says You!.
Roll sold radio, television and digital underwriting at WHYY for 23 years.
The opportunity to grow a podcasting audience for a company that’s producing some of his favorite shows appealed to Bannon.