Nice Above Fold - Page 473

  • Connecticut pubcaster to provide workforce training for vets with $125K grant

    Newman’s Own Foundation, established by actor Paul Newman, has provided the Connecticut Public Broadcasting Network with a $125,000 grant to provide workforce development training to returning veterans, who face some of the highest unemployment rates in the state. “Although many veterans face unprecedented challenges as they reintegrate back into civilian life, CPBN is committed to making a difference by providing training, certifications and employment placement opportunities.” Jerry Franklin, network president, in the Jan. 15 announcement. The program, launching in February, will provide education and training workshops toward certifications in web and graphic design and video editing. “For nearly 20 years, we have been supporting the organizations that help our nation’s troops and their families,” said Robert Forrester, president of Newman’s Own Foundation.
  • Southern California Public Radio employees vote to join SAG-AFTRA

    Staffers at Southern California Public Radio in Pasadena, Calif., have voted to join Hollywood’s largest union, SAG-AFTRA, according to the station. The union was formed last year with the merger of the Screen Actors Guild and the American Federation of Television and Radio Artists. The Jan. 11 vote, tallied Jan. 18 by the National Labor Relations Board, was 35-26. Employees voting included reporters, producers, show hosts and news anchors, according to the Los Angeles Times. SCPR, operated by American Public Media, runs KPCC-FM in Los Angeles and Orange counties, KUOR-FM in the nearby Inland Empire just east of Los Angeles, and KVLA-FM in the Coachella Valley, which includes Palm Springs.
  • Nine Network of St. Louis recognized as 'Best of the Best' in 2012 NETA Awards

    The St. Louis public TV station’s Nine Academy, a program that trains individuals and community organizations to produce short videos on stories of “community impact,” received special recognition among the awards presented during NETA’s recent conference in St. Louis. In honoring the academy as the top winner in its annual awards program, NETA cited the station for groundbreaking community work. NETA recognized 20 public TV stations in 30 categories spread across four divisions — community engagement, content production, instructional media and promotion. The two stations receiving the most awards, Kentucky Educational Television and New York’s WNET, dominated the instructional media division; each brought a total of four awards home from the competition.
  • Former state senator will earn $150K in GPB job, more than governor's salary

    Former Georgia state Sen. Chip Rogers, a controversial figure recently hired by Georgia Public Broadcasting at the recommendation of Gov. Nathan Deal, will make $150,000 annually, reports the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. The “lofty” salary, the paper notes, comes “despite a rather pedestrian title: Executive producer, community jobs program.” Rogers will earn more than the governor, lieutenant governor, GPB’s vice president for radio and its chief information officer, the paper adds. The state legislator has been linked to a $2.3 million loan default on a failed hotel venture and a group of ultra-conservative activists promoting theories that President Obama uses mind control techniques to influence public opinion (Current, Dec.
  • Roku, Xbox pick up pubTV shows

    PBS is jumping into the “over-the-top” video-streaming space with a pair of deals to distribute public TV programs through apps on Roku boxes and Xbox Live.
  • Rebecca Eaton and Newton Minow honored for distinguished service to public television

    As the executive producer who acquired and managed co-productions of British dramas for Masterpiece and its predecessor titles for more than 26 years, Eaton has brought high-profile miniseries such as Prime Suspect, Bleak House and recent hits Sherlock and Downton Abbey to PBS.
  • KERA hires Glenn Fisher, formerly of TPT, as new chief operating officer

    KERA in Dallas has hired Glenn Fisher as its chief operating officer. Fisher will oversee daily administration of the organization, managing the finance, membership, underwriting, engineering and IT departments. Fisher spent 28 years at Twin Cities Public Television in St. Paul, serving as v.p. of station operations, v.p. for development and communications, and v.p. of broadcast operations. PBS named him Development Professional of the Year in 2005. “Glenn’s extensive experience in public broadcasting and station management will be an excellent addition to KERA’s senior leadership team as the organization continues to grow and provide essential resources to the North Texas region,” said Mary Anne Alhadeff, KERA president and c.e.o.,
  • Cocktails to honor Big Bird and friends? That's the spirit

    When public radio managers gathered for November’s Super-Regional Meeting in New Orleans, home to Bourbon Street and the drive-through daiquiri bar, NPR Chair and ideastream COO Kit Jensen mentioned in passing during a panel discussion that her station has its own official cocktail. The “ideaScreamer” is a mix of Grey Goose orange vodka, cranberry juice and a twist of lime, garnished with a lightstick stirrer, according to Peg Neeson, ideastream community relations director. “It’s really quite pretty in a martini glass,” she said. No one at ideastream can recall when the ideaScreamer was created, possibly due to overindulgence in the drink.
  • Newman's Own gives WETA $100,000 for BrainLine multimedia work

    WETA in Arlington, Va., has received a two-year, $100,000 grant from Newman’s Own Foundation for its BrainLine, a national multimedia project offering resources about preventing, treating and living with traumatic brain injuries. The grant will be used to expand coverage of military-specific information, according to the station. The actor was a big supporter of public broadcasting. His charitable foundation, funded by his Newman’s Own line of grocery goods, donated $2.2 million to nine pubcasting stations — including WETA — in December 2010. Also, in 2007 and ’08, Newman was in the process of developing a public affairs show with a production budget of $5 million with Connecticut Public Television, his local station.
  • FCC launches informational website on upcoming spectrum auctions

    The FCC has just released a staff summary of the upcoming broadcast television spectrum incentive auctions. The 11-page document explains in clear terms why the auctions are taking place, what the FCC hopes to achieve, and the specific decisions that television broadcasters face. It’s part of a new LEARN (Learn Everything About Reverse Auctions Now) website, which aims to be “a one-stop information resource for incentive auction stakeholders, particularly broadcasters,” said Gary Epstein, chair of the Incentive Auction Task Force, in a post on the FCC’s blog.
  • Hoppe brings 'outward focus' to new role as PBS's chief programmer

    PASADENA, Calif. — The special package of primetime shows about gun violence that PBS unveiled to television critics Monday offers an example of how Beth Hoppe intends to operate as the network’s new chief programmer. Hoppe had been promoted to chief program executive and g.m. only three days before the Dec. 14 shooting in Connecticut claimed the lives of 26 students and teachers at Sandy Hook Elementary School. As news of the tragedy unfolded, Hoppe was on the phone with producers, “trying to figure out what the appropriate PBS response was,” she told Current. “We looked at the landscape and said, ‘How can we meet the needs of our viewers in a way they’re not being served by the media?’”
  • George Rogers dies; former development director at WCET-TV

    This item has been updated and reposted with additional information. George H. Rogers, who worked as development and community relations director at WCET-TV in Cincinnati in the early years of the station, died Dec. 27 at his home in suburban Florence, Ky., after a three-year battle with lung cancer. He was 83. The Cincinnati Enquirer reports that Rogers started at the station, now branded as CET, almost 50 years ago. In 1972, CPB honored him for his work in promotion and development. His daughter, Mary Clair Smoot of Lexington, Ky., told the newspaper that during her father’s years at WCET, “we eight kids were all enlisted to help ‘rubber stamp’ thousands of envelopes for mass mailings.”
  • Use of crowdfunding site flags under APM

    Spot.us, the crowdfunding website allowing journalists to raise funds for their reporting projects, has been hit by a sharp decline in usage since its acquisition by American Public Media, which has been making changes intended to revamp its business model and protect the site’s journalistic integrity in the world of online pitch funding.
  • WNYC shares previously unreleased recordings of Martin Luther King Jr. interviews

    New York’s WNYC has released for the first time recordings of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. interviewed on several occasions in the 1960s by Eleanor Fischer, a Canadian Broadcasting Corp. reporter who later worked for NPR. The interviews capture King discussing a wide range of subjects, including his childhood, his adoption of nonviolent resistance tactics, and the Montgomery bus boycott. The recordings were among tapes given to WNYC’s archive in 2008 after Fischer passed away. “We are a rich archive in content but not a huge staff of people and we have received many collections,” wrote Archive Director Andy Lanset in an email to Current.
  • Next Avenue, pubmedia site for seniors, sees "win-win" in partnership with RLTV

    Next Avenue — the online magazine for Americans aged 50 years and older created by Twin Cities Public Television — is now sharing its content with RLTV, a cable and online network for seniors. The agreement, announced Jan. 2, marks the beginning of a targeted syndication push, said Next Avenue Executive Director Judy Diaz. “We’re investing a lot in content, not just in money but in the time it takes to create the pieces,” she said. The plan is a win-win, expanding Next Avenue’s content distribution while raising revenue, Diaz said. Additionally, the deal allows Next Avenue to develop custom online content exclusive to RLTV’s website.