Programs/Content
New England News Collaborative sunsets radio show, refocuses strategy
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The collaborative ended its show “Next” last month to focus on new priorities.
Current (https://current.org/category/programs-content/page/21/?wallit_nosession=1)
The collaborative ended its show “Next” last month to focus on new priorities.
“For small and midsize media organizations, a new focus on podcast excellence may mean getting out of the comprehensive local news business.”
NPR and stations have found early success at attracting support from major donors and adding reporting capacity to the system with a journalism hubs model.
Researchers from the Joan Ganz Cooney Center report on how public media can create media that’s relevant to the lives of the teens and tweens who make up Gen Z.
Efficient production and a collaborative funding push allowed for two new seasons of the “Masterpiece” Jane Austen adaptation.
Garfield was fired following two investigations into his conduct.
Greenlit as the COVID pandemic accelerated, “Extra Life: A Short History of Living Longer” suddenly found itself “right in the middle of history.”
#PBSForTheArts is examining how arts organizations are working to “stay around, stay relevant and then fight back,” said WNET Group CEO Neal Shapiro.
Alcindor plans to maintain the show’s traditions while thinking of ways it can speak “to a new generation of people.”
“It really was just a process of us starting and stopping and having to reassess,” said a co-EP of public radio’s “Live From Cain’s.”
“Everyone deserves a chance to share their truth unmitigated because we all have so much to learn from the way incarcerated people process trauma and grief, which also happens on the outside.”
Journalists from KPCC and LAist share reporting on top stories of the day in short segments that air on PBS SoCal and KCET.
Members of Beyond Inclusion say they will keep advocating for issues they raised in a March letter to PBS CEO Paula Kerger.
”With the amount of time and effort and love that we put into this, it should be available again,” said Sonja Williams, a producer of “Black Radio: Telling It Like It Was” who worked to bring the series back to the airwaves.
The network will also participate in Apple and Spotify’s podcast subscription initiatives.
“It’s been a happy accident that we were kind of forced into this, but we’ve really enjoyed doing it.”
By equipping student reporters with microphones, they can provide a unique insight into how the pandemic has disrupted schools and how the last year has upended any sense of normalcy for today’s youth.
Four documentaries and an animated short exploring the Black experience received over $400,000.
The grants went to Native Public Media and to stations licensed to HBCUs.
“We must help rebuild … the faith that most Americans have always had in their future and their ability to share in the American dream,” the filmmaker said in a 1992 keynote at the PBS Annual Meeting.