Programs/Content
All Classical Portland initiative aims to diversify choices for classical works
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The station will commission and broadcast recordings of works by composers from underrepresented communities.
Current (https://current.org/category/programs-content/page/23/?wallit_nosession=1)
The station will commission and broadcast recordings of works by composers from underrepresented communities.
The grant will create a “unique opportunity to learn from each other and to help and support each other,” said WBGO CEO Steve Williams.
Station leaders and the Public Radio Program Directors Association are questioning the Times’ damage control related to its podcast “Caliphate.”
The grant will help SCPR’s LAist Studios serve younger and more diverse audiences.
The “NewsHour” correspondent crouched behind a barrier and continued reporting as police confronted rioters near the balcony of the House chamber.
“Pretty much everything on PBS is better than ‘Caillou.'”
“Ear Hustle has done several tough interviews before, but this is my toughest.”
The “It’s Been a Minute” producer is one of 12 Nieman Visiting Fellows for 2021 and the only one working in public radio.
“It’s still a work in progress,” says GM Joanne Urofsky. “But we’re really proud of what we’ve launched.”
A crowdfunding campaign benefiting Alice Brock, who needed help with living expenses, raised more than $125,000 in 24 hours.
“Our goal is to help people understand and use language better,” said Lisa Schneider, Merriam-Webster’s chief digital officer and publisher. “I think the NEPM role in the community meshes really well with that.”
“What constitutes Middle America, rural America, small-town America?”
Launched in September, “Pause/Play” is the station’s most popular podcast to date.
MPR plans to hire a community engagement officer and hold diversity trainings for newsroom staff.
Broadcasters will use the funds to support interns and expand coverage of the pandemic, health care, criminal justice and other topics.
The last episode of “Here’s the Thing” as a WNYC podcast was released this week.
By inviting people who appear on air to share their demographic data, WPR created a way to accurately measure the diversity of sources in its news and talk programs.
Current’s latest survey of new programs coming to public TV provides a snapshot of 117 productions in the works for national distribution.
“Ellis Haizlip ensured that the revolution would be televised, and the revolution was ‘Soul!’”
The three-hour documentary will be directed by James Bluemel, who specializes in reporting first-person accounts of international news events.