Nice Above Fold - Page 398
Chicago's WFMT to leave Public Radio Satellite System for PRX
The Chicago network cited rising costs of satellite carriage and a desire to expand internationally as reasons for the move.PBS plans digital video service as premium for station members
Public television stations are hoping that special access to a rich library of PBS programs will convince viewers to become members and entice members to keep contributing. The multiplatform subscription program, with the working title MVOD (Membership Video on Demand), will be built atop COVE, PBS’s local-national video site. PBS is backing the initiative with $1.5 million in its fiscal 2015 budget. MVOD will feature past seasons of signature PBS general-audience series and provide stations with the ability to add locally produced series, said Ira Rubenstein, head of PBS Digital. “I think of it as Amazon Prime or Netflix, but only for station members,” he said.WNYC adds three podcasts, looks to expand offerings hosted by women
Death, Sex & Money, The Sporkful and The Longest Shortest Time join the station's digital programming lineup.
Student-designed Android app gathers donations for public radio's producers
My2Cents Radio took top prize in an app-development competition co-sponsored by the Public Media Platform.CPB, PBS, local stations launch multiyear national veterans project
PBS will carry content under the banner Stories of Service, and CPB will fund a related community engagement campaign, Veterans Coming Home.Wednesday roundup: PBS Digital won't pursue product placement; KUNM revisits plagiarism charge
Plus: Pubmedia's James Beard Award winners, and a "national conversation" about the future of the CBC.
With return to KCET, SoCal Connected adds local color amid hard news
Los Angeles public TV station KCET is bringing back weekly series SoCal Connected after a yearlong hiatus, this time as a mix of hard news and features. The award-winning show will start its sixth season May 14. In previous seasons, SoCal earned a reputation for hard-nosed journalism, along with 17 local Emmys, by covering corruption at the Los Angeles Housing Authority, sweetheart deals involving electronic billboards and the dire consequences of climate change. But after the station dropped its PBS affiliation, it went into an economic tailspin that resulted in the layoffs of 22 employees, including Bret Marcus, SoCal’s executive producer.Kenneth Tomlinson, CPB chair at center of scandal, dies at 69
Tomlinson, a former Reader’s Digest editor and CPB Board chair who mounted a behind-the-scenes campaign to balance what he saw as a liberal bias in PBS programming, died May 1 in Winchester, Va., after a long hospitalization.Tuesday roundup: PBS Digital Studios to launch scripted show; Innovation Hub goes national
Plus: An Atlanta-based fake news site really dislikes pledge drives.An option for This American Life, self-distribution dwindles among public radio producers
After This American Life parts with longtime distributor Public Radio International July 1, it could become public radio’s most widely carried show without a major distributor representing it. That’s if the show pursues that option. Program host and creator Ira Glass has hinted in interviews with the New York Times and Chicago media reporter Robert Feder that he’s considering self-distribution. But there may be good reasons that few shows have gone that route. Self-distribution poses challenges that few resource-strapped program creators are willing to take on, including handling their own billing, marketing and station relations. Interfaith Voices, a weekly program about religious issues, is among public radio’s few self-distributed programs with significant carriage.Monday roundup: PBS releases Peg + Cat album, AFI Docs to honor Gibney
Plus: A libertarian op-ed calls on pubradio listeners to open their wallets, and Pacifica faces yet another lawsuit.Jones steps down from helm of National Black Programming Consortium
Jacquie Jones, executive director of the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC) since 2005, has resigned, effective immediately, but will continue to produce for public media. Stepping in as interim is Leslie Fields-Cruz, programming director, who has supervised distribution of programs to PBS since 2001. NBPC, a 35-year-old nonprofit that is affiliated with the CPB-backed National Minority Consortia, develops, produces and funds public media content focusing on the African American experience, such as the Peabody-winning documentary, 180 Days: A Year Inside An American High School. The 2013 film, which Jones directed and produced, portrayed day-to-day challenges of students and educators at an alternative high school in in Washington, D.C.Friday roundup: Kansas spares pubcasting funding; letter sheds light on dismissal in Ga.
Plus: Vermont Public Radio spies a threat to its Montreal listeners, and another film draws from This American Life.Thursday roundup: Sweaters for public media, This American Life in the U.K.
Plus: NPR explains its analytics dashboard, and the Knight Foundation's interest in digital storytelling.Center for Public Integrity and Investigative News Network each grow by two, and other comings and goings in public media
The Center for Public Integrity, a nonprofit investigative newsroom, has hired William Gray and Eleanor Bell. Television producer Gray joins as media relations specialist, focusing on increasing the visibility and impact of CPI’s journalism. Gray previously worked at C-SPAN as an operations producer handling breaking news and live and overnight coverage for the cable broadcaster’s three networks. He also created and curates the Floor Charts archive, which tracks and tags props, charts and posters used by politicians. Bell joins as multimedia editor. A native New Zealander, she spent several years reporting for Australia’s public broadcaster, ABC, where her 2011 multimedia investigation about at-risk children in disadvantaged communities won the country’s highest journalism honor, the Walkley Award.
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