People
Comings and goings: VPR hires ‘Vermont Edition’ hosts, John Decker promoted at KPBS …
|
Connor Cyrus and Mikaela Lefrak will begin hosting for Vermont Public Radio this summer.
Current (https://current.org/2021/02/)
Connor Cyrus and Mikaela Lefrak will begin hosting for Vermont Public Radio this summer.
People who are moving into leadership roles at stations are asking “What comes next?” The answers depend on you.
Vogelzang has worked for the network since 2012 and was previously CEO of Vermont Public Radio.
After a journalist tweeted about “massive red flags” during a job interview, FairWarning’s board called it quits.
Launched this month, “The Parker Edison Project” gives “complete creative freedom” to a local rapper and journalist.
“Frequency Boost,” a column for everyone who wants to set their station on a path towards growth, will give you ideas that can make a big difference.
Each of the nonprofits that fund and support public TV content by and for diverse communities will receive an additional $500,000.
A documentary debuting March 24 follows millennials and their boomer parents as they navigate an “aging boot camp.”
An Acast executive said RadioPublic “brings even better tools and deep … secret-sauce technology” to the Sweden-based podcast company.
The station said Hugo Balta’s departure resulted from “undisclosed conflicts of interest” and violations of news standards.
Jenell Walton most recently worked as VP of communications and strategic development for the Cincinnati USA Convention & Visitors Bureau.
“Success can be defined in so many ways and is not limited just to ratings and weekly cumes.”
We still love technology, always and forever.
A. Rima Dael has taken over as GM of the station.
We discuss these technologies with Steve Bass, CEO of Oregon Public Broadcasting.
The data also reveals that men and women held equal shares of jobs in the system in 2020.
Rocky Mountain Public Media’s The Drop will soon have a primary signal on the FM dial.
Magura, who joined WCTE in 2011, has served on several national committees for PBS.
The seven stations that receive funding from the state could collectively lose $750,000 annually for technology needs if the proposed budget is approved.
“The idea was, how can we listen to people in their neighborhood and tell their stories?”