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GPB CEO Teya Ryan to retire
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Ryan has led the station since 2009.
Current (https://current.org/2023/04/)
In a Q&A, lawyers Melodie Virtue and Brad Deutsch discuss what’s next for pubcasters experimenting with ATSC 3.0 and what questions are still too new to even have answers yet.
As co-director of news at Pacifica’s KPFA, Alfandary has endured “utter chaos” at the station while training generations of reporters.
John Sutton is leaving the parent organization of WESA and WYEP to become interim CCO at New England Public Media.
The case centered on NHPR’s investigation of alleged sexual misconduct by the former CEO of an addiction recovery center.
“We are adding another top-notch interviewer and host who brings her own distinctive voice and expertise to the program.”
Leila Fadel, Michel Martin, Ayesha Rascoe and Juana Summers have taken over host chairs at NPR’s flagship news programs. They’re thinking holistically on how to lead when it comes to representative news.
Rathke worked at stations including WRTI, New Hampshire Public Radio and Georgia Public Broadcasting.
Some stations received donations and notes of support after announcing that they would stop using the platform.
Hamlett succeeds Bohdan Zachary, who announced he was stepping down last year.
The Public Radio Satellite System is seeking a contractor to research future connectivity needs of stations large and small.
Twitter also removed the label from public broadcasters outside the U.S.
While membership fundraising slipped during the three-month reporting period, the decline in donor acquisition slowed.
In addition to rethinking its editorial workflow, the newsroom aims to build a staff that closely mirrors the demographics of Boston by 2027.
“I just never thought this was my thing and so I sort of fell into it,” says music director Bill Sherman. “But now I just love it.”
An agreement between KET and Public Media Connect is the first in which separately owned public broadcasting networks are cooperating on an ATSC 3.0 launch.
“Chicanas who stepped up to the microphone for the first time were not only hearing their own voices audibly broadcasted over public airwaves, they also were announcing the arrival of a sonically distinct Chicana public sphere.”
The news service will be transformative for Ampers, as well as “a very needed product and project for the citizens of Minnesota,” CEO Joel Glaser said.
Jonathan Blakley stepped up from interim to permanent chief content officer for WYPR.