Nice Above Fold - Page 497
KCET's "SoCal Connected" moving to nightly broadcast
SoCal Connected, KCET’s investigative news program, is moving to a weeknight format for its fifth season, beginning Oct. 29. “We will continue to investigate the inner workings of Los Angeles and surrounding communities, while offering a daily recap of local headlines,” said Bret Marcus, executive producer, in the Sept. 6 announcement. Last season, SoCal Connected won 16 Los Angeles Press Club Awards, more than any other TV station, including its Public Service Award for exposing lavish spending at the Housing Authority of Los Angeles — only the second news organization to receive the honor. KCET was forced to shut down production of new episodes a few weeks earlier than usual last year, after losing U.S.WBEZ transforms "Eight Forty-Eight" into "Morning Shift"
Chicago’s WBEZ is revamping its flagship newsmagazine, Eight Forty-Eight, into The Morning Shift with Tony Sarabia, reports Time Out Chicago media critic Robert Feder. It’ll also start 10 minutes earlier, at 8:50 a.m. weekdays. “The move is an opportunity to dive in earlier to news and stories that are relevant to our listener community,” Torey Malatia, president and CEO of Chicago Public Media, told staffers Thursday. The program’s original name honored the station’s Navy Pier address, 848 E. Grand Ave. The station has been mulling changes to the show since last November."In The Life," television's first LGBT newsmag, ending in December
In The Life, the first and only nationally broadcast lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender (LGBT) newsmagazine, is going off the air in December, after 20 years. The announcement came Wednesday (Sept. 5) from In The Life Media Co-Chairs Henry van Ameringen, who had contributed $1 million to the show in March, and Jayne B. Sherman. “Creating high quality, in-depth journalism is expensive,” their announcement said. “However, we are committed to using our available resources to reach the broadest possible audience. New digital technologies provide the way forward for ITLM’s work to live on. ITLM has entered into conversations with other organizations to create a web-based, open-source repository of our video archive documenting the LGBT movement.”
Vanity Fair crowns Masterpiece's Eaton one of "The Powers That Be"
Rebecca Eaton, executive producer of Masterpiece, is a new entry to Vanity Fair’s annual “The Powers That Be” list, squeaking in at No. 24 on the roll of 25. Just below her, actor Alec Baldwin; above, Matt Blank and David Nevins of Showtime. Vanity Fair said of Eaton, “Great reviews and solid ratings have been the norm during Eaton’s 27-year tenure at the helm of both Mystery! and Masterpiece, but with Downton Abbey she has given the newly glamorous PBS its most talked-about show since the early 1990s.” It also predicts a good year ahead for her. Others on the list include media titan Rupert Murdoch, music supercouple Jay-Z and Beyonce, and Comedy Central stars Jon Stewart and Stephen Colbert.NPR, WNYC collaborate to make 'Ask Me Another' weekly starting in January
NPR is teaming up with New York’s WNYC to make its trivia and quiz show Ask Me Another into a weekly offering, starting in January. The show’s 13-episode pilot season has aired on 150 stations since its launch in May. As a new co-producer, WNYC will contribute to shaping the show’s creative direction. Taping of 25 new episodes will start in November at the Bell House in Brooklyn, where the first season was recorded in front of sold-out audiences. Ask Me Another will also travel to five cities yet to be determined for additional tapings. The show will be free to stations.Knight announces $3.67 million in Community Information Challenge grants
Twenty local news projects backed by foundations were awarded $3.67 million in matching funds today (Sept. 5) as winners of the Knight Community Information Challenge. Initiatives include the New Jersey News Collaborative, with partners Montclair State University and New Jersey Public Radio, backed by the Geraldine R. Dodge Foundation; New Orleans pubradio station WWNO and the Greater New Orleans Foundation; and TheNewsOutlet.org, a multimedia investigative journalism site run by college students and professional editors supported by the Raymond John Wean Foundation. “These foundations join the 80-plus community and place-based foundations who are leading by informing and engaging the public on issues they care about,” said Trabian Shorters, vice president/communities for Knight Foundation.
NPR selects 'Izzi' Smith as director of programming
Israel “Izzi” Smith will be the new director of programming at NPR, starting in November. He replaces Eric Nuzum, now vice president of programming, who announced the hire in a memo to NPR staffers today (Sept. 5). Smith has worked as a pubmedia consultant for almost 15 years, helping to introduce and manage projects including Radiolab, PRX’s The Moth Radio Hour, State of the Re:Union with Al Letson, and the Public Radio Talent Quest with PRX and CPB. “Izzi is a true ‘connector,’ always trying to link good ideas, people, and stations to serve audiences in bigger, more inclusive ways,” Nuzum said.WNIT in South Bend, Ind., to operate public access TV station
The St. Joseph County (Ind.) Board of Commissioners has approved financing a public access television station, to be operated and managed by local public TV station WNIT, reports the South Bend Tribune. The board authorized spending $155,000, or about 30 percent of the total necessary, over the next five years on the project. South Bend will provide $280,000 and Mishawaka, $75,000. The station will broadcast public meetings and other content related to government and education on channel 99. Angel Hernandez, WNIT vice president of production, is setting up the station, which includes creating a community advisory council. Hernandez anticipates an October launch date.Steve Edwards leaving WBEZ for Institute of Politics
Steve Edwards is leaving WBEZ-FM in Chicago after 14 years to become deputy director, programming, at the University of Chicago’s new nonpartisan Institute of Politics, an organization for students interested in public-service careers that is led by Democratic political consultant David Axelrod. Edwards’s last day is Sept. 21, reports Time Out Chicago media critic Robert Feder, noting that with Edwards’s resignation, “Chicago radio lost one of its most brilliant and talented stars.” Last February Edwards premiered The Afternoon Shift, a live, two-hour weekday call-in program. Previously he had anchored the Eight Forty-Eight weekday news show, as well as served as director of content development and program director.WNET announces arts content sharing system
WNET in New York City is offering an arts and culture content management sharing system for video and web content, mainly among Major Market Group (MMG) stations. The first package of programming is being delivered to stations today (Sept. 4). Content will cover performing and visual arts and feature interviews with a geographically diverse and creatively broad group of artists, writers, composers and performers, “allowing local arts and culture institutions and local funders to get their stories out to a national audience,” the station said in an Aug. 27 announcement. Each half-hour broadcast package will include a line-up, script, video segments, credit roll, music and graphics, sent three weeks prior to air.Ifill made "big mistake" in defending fired journalist, says PBS's ombud
In his latest column, PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler considers a recent flap involving PBS NewsHour correspondent Gwen Ifill, who on Wednesday tweeted in support of fired journalist David Chalian. Chalian, the Washington bureau chief for Yahoo News, was fired after he said that Mitt Romney was “happy to have a party with black people drowning,” referring to the Republican National Convention starting as Hurricane Isaac approached New Orleans. Chalian was unaware that his microphone was on, and the comment was broadcast. Before joining Yahoo, Chalian had worked as the NewsHour’s political editor. “I can understand Ifill’s wanting to go to bat for a friend and colleague,” Getler wrote, “but my personal view is that this was a big mistake on her part, feeding, unnecessarily, a conviction among many critics and reflecting poorly on PBS.Utah educator named director of state's broadband network for schools
Utah Education Network, the only public TV licensee to receive a federal broadband grant and to join the national US Ignite project to develop broadband apps, has appointed a Utah school superintendent, Ray Timothy, as its c.e.o. and executive director, effective Oct. 1. Timothy is superintendent of the Park City School District, former super of the rural Millard County district and a former deputy super of the state Office of Education. He succeeds Mike Petersen, who took a faculty position with Utah State University. Since Petersen left in January, the network’s interim chief has been Eric Denna, co-chair of the UEN Board and chief information officer of the Utah System of Higher Education and the University of Utah.Philly's WXPN brings less-known blues musicians to town
This month Philadelphia’s WXPN launched the Mississippi Blues Project, a concert series and website featuring eight musicians who have had limited exposure outside of their home state. “We wanted to bring awareness to a somewhat obscure form of blues from Mississippi,” said WXPN’s Bruce Warren, executive producer of the project and assistant station manager, in a Philadelphia Inquirer article. “The Delta blues is always the foundation of the blues. We wanted to focus on … dozens and dozens of incredible blues guys and women who rarely play outside of juke joints and areas of rural Mississippi.” The concert series kicked off Aug.Public radio to go deep on political coverage with launch of GOP convention
Here’s a roundup of how NPR, Democracy Now! and Tampa's WUSF are covering the party conventions.NewsHour gives party conventions 18 hours, assigns female anchor team
With the NewsHour's Gwen Ifill and Judy Woodruff stepping into co-anchor roles for PBS’s coverage of the Republican National Convention in Tampa, producers have reconfigured their set and editorial plans for the 18 hours of live broadcasts that begin airing on PBS stations on Tuesday. The coverage, airing at 8 p.m. ET through Thursday on most PBS stations, marks the passing of the torch from retired anchor Jim Lehrer, and makes Ifill and Woodruff the first female anchor due to co-anchor coverage of the major party conventions...
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