Nice Above Fold - Page 464

  • Pittsburgh Public Media acquires W.Va. FM station for jazz programming

    The FCC has approved the sale of a West Virginia college station to Pittsburgh Public Media, a jazz webcaster run by former employees of the city’s defunct WDUQ-FM. PPM will pay $135,000 for the 1,100-watt WVBC-FM, currently operated by Bethany College in Bethany, W.Va. It plans to switch the station at 88.1 MHz to a jazz format starting in April, says Chuck Leavens, PPM president. The station now airs music and college sports. PPM was established in 2010 in a bid to buy WDUQ, which broadcast both NPR News and jazz to southwestern Pennsylvania. But Duquesne University sold the license to Essential Public Media, a collaboration between the city’s Triple A station WYEP and a new subsidiary of Public Radio Capital.
  • NCME report says pubmedia needs better impact measurement

    Public media has no standardized impact measurement practices or frameworks, and having just one approach is not realistic for all outlets, according to a new report provided by the National Center for Media Engagement based on research by San Francisco-based LFA (Learning For Action) Group, which works to increase impact and sustainability in the nonprofit sector. “This report confirms much of the conventional wisdom about the lack of use, or convergence, around a single measurement framework – or for that matter agreement on what constitutes impact,” the report notes. It advises that public media must better define “impact,” face the tensions that exist over public media’s responsibilities, prioritize mission, and collaborate on resources to lower costs.
  • WGBH, Amazon Studios collaborating on kids' math series pilot

    WGBH in Boston is partnering with Amazon Studios, the content production arm of mega-retailer Amazon.com, on a pilot for an original children’s math series, Sara Solves It, Amazon Studios announced today. Executive producers are Carol Greenwald of Curious George, Arthur and Martha Speaks, and Angela C. Santomero of Daniel Tiger’s Neighborhood, Super Why! and Blue’s Clues. The series is one of 12 pilots currently in production by Amazon Studios. Each will be posted on Prime Instant Video and Amazon Instant Video for free viewing. User feedback will help determine which series Amazon Studios produces.
  • Two Native tribes are first to benefit from FCC rules favoring tribal applicants

    Native tribes in New Mexico and Arizona are the first to benefit from the FCC’s Tribal Radio Priority, a provision created by the commission to help tribal entities start new radio stations. The FCC announced March 1 that it set aside FM allotments for Navajo Technical College in Crownpoint, N.M., and for the Hualapai Tribe in Peach Springs, Ariz. Allotments serve as placeholders for future FM stations; the tribes must now wait until the FCC opens a filing window and accepts their applications for construction permits. The commission created the Tribal Radio Priority provision in 2010, establishing standards by which Native tribes could be given priority in securing licenses for AM and FM stations.
  • Legislative committee recommends Idaho PTV gets 9.8 percent hike in state support

    Idaho’s Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee is recommending that Idaho Public Television receive a boost in state support over the governor’s recommendation, mainly for equipment replacement, according to the Spokesman-Review. Gov. Butch Otter had recommended a 2.6 percent hike in state funding in next year’s budget, to $1.6 million. IPTV’s request was for a 78.2 percent rise to $2.8 million. The legislature’s Joint Finance-Appropriations Committee on Tuesday approved a 9.8 percent increase to $1.7 million. Included is funding to replace $34,000 worth of failed, 22-year-old equipment that has knocked out service to the communities of Challis, Salmon and Leadore, the newspaper noted.
  • Pubmedia-funded start-up accelerator Matter announces inaugural class

    The first start-up class of Matter, the media accelerator backed by Knight Foundation, KQED and the Public Radio Exchange, includes Localore partner Zeega.
  • One ouster leads to another at Iowa Public Radio

    When the board of Iowa Public Radio voted to remove Mary Grace Herrington as c.e.o. Feb. 25, the directors were responding to mounting evidence of declining staff morale at the state network. Dissension over Herrington’s leadership was sparked at least in part by her decision to fire a popular news director last year. The sole “no” in the IPR board’s 6-1 vote was cast by a newly appointed director who was attending his first meeting. Herrington had been chief executive since 2009, leading IPR through a signal expansion and format differentiation that created two distinct public radio channels for Iowans. She had previously served as assistant vice president for advancement operations at Creighton University.
  • CPB details how automatic budget cuts will work, corporation-wide

    This item has been updated and reposted. CPB on Monday sent a memo to public broadcasting stations detailing the 5 percent sequester of its $445 million 2013 appropriation. “Reflecting our continued concern about the potential for additional budget actions in FY 2013,” CPB President Pat Harrison told pubcasting executives, CPB will base this fiscal year’s second Community Service Grant payments on an appropriation level of $421.415 million, which will incorporate a recalculation of the first CSG payment at $421.415 million. CSGs should be ready by April 1, she added. By statute, Harrison said, the 5 percent cut will be allocated across all CPB functions (numbers  rounded): System support, a total $26.7 million appropriation, will receive a $1.33 million cut; administration, $22.3 million, drops $1.11 million; television station grants, $222.8 million, drops $11.1 million; television programming, $74.3 million, drops $3.7 million; radio station grants, $69.3 million, drops $3.5 million; radio programming acquisition grants, $22.8 million, drops $1.1 million; and radio programming, $6.9 million, drops $347,000.
  • Report: CPB radio v.p. a finalist to run Iowa Public Television

    Greg Schnirring, vice president for radio at CPB, is a finalist for the executive director/general manager post at Iowa Public Television, the Des Moines Register reports. Also vying for the job is Molly Phillips, currently IPTV’s director of communications and community engagement. The IPTV Board will interview the candidates Friday, the report said. Dan Miller, e.d. and g.m. since July 2002, has been with the station for 37 years. He announced his retirement in December 2012 to focus on his health, after receiving a diagnosis of Parkinson’s disease, according to the Register.
  • Former Sesame puppeteer Clash files for dismissal of lawsuits

    Puppeteer Kevin Clash, who resigned his Sesame Street role as Elmo after multiple charges of sexual impropriety surfaced last year, is seeking to have the charges dropped, according to The Wrap, an entertainment news site. An attorney for Clash filed papers in U.S. District Court in New York on Friday. Clash contends the three lawsuits against him should be dropped because the statute of limitations on the allegations has expired.
  • PBS eyeing weekend editions of PBS NewsHour, produced at WNET

    The New York Times is quoting unnamed pubTV employees who say that PBS is close to a decision on adding weekend broadcasts of PBS NewsHour for the first time since the show began in 1975. The programs would be produced at WNET in New York City instead of longtime presenting station WETA in Arlington, Va., the report said. The NewsHour employees also told the Times that program producer MacNeil-Lehrer Productions is facing a shortfall of up to $7 million this fiscal year from what had been a $28 million budget. In the proposed deal, PBS would provide $3 million to WNET to produce the weekend shows.
  • It's official: Sequestration will trim CPB's appropriation by 5 percent

    CPB is losing 5 percent of its $445 million appropriation for 2013 due to the automatic budget cuts known as sequestration, according to a memo released by the White House on Friday. The corporation had received previous estimates of either 5.1 percent or 5.3 percent cuts, and is carefully considering how it handles Community Service Grant disbursements to stations. Last November, the Office of Management and Budget told CPB officials that sequestration would reduce its appropriation by 8.2 percent, so CPB tucked 10 percent into 90-day CDs in preparation for cutbacks.
  • Report: IRS needs to change "antiquated" approach to nonprofit news startups

    Taking too long to confer 501(c)3 status to startup nonprofit news organizations not only undervalues journalism but also has stymied new approaches to community journalism when they are needed most, according to a report released today by the Nonprofit Working Group of the Council on Foundations. The group was created by the Council on Foundations with a grant from the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation to study the impact of the IRS’s recent approach to granting nonprofit status to media organizations. The report cites the IRS’s “antiquated” methods of granting tax-exempt status as hobbling efforts to create new media outlets.
  • Looking to get in listeners’ pockets

    A growing number of public radio stations can now be found on mobile devices, their signature icons wedged between Angry Birds and Google Maps.
  • More than airtime: Documentary producers search for new frontiers of engaging audiences

    During a conference at the U.S. Institute of Peace Feb. 28, the makers of human rights documentaries discussed the techniques and challenges of using modern technology to gain a following for a cause.