Nice Above Fold - Page 537

  • Debate at Oregon Public Broadcasting still on, despite other cancellations

    A Republican presidential debate on March 19 in Portland, to be produced by Oregon Public Broadcasting and carried live on pubcasting stations, is still on, despite GOP hopefuls Mitt Romney and Ron Paul pulling out of a debate March 1 in Atlanta, the Oregonian is reporting. Another debate on March 5 on MSNBC also has been cancelled. Greg Leo, chief of staff of the Oregon Republican Party, cosponsoring the March 19 event with OPB, PBS, NPR and the Washington Times, said the Portland debate is attractive to the candidates for several reasons, including that it will be carried by public broadcasting and thus reach households that don’t have cable.
  • Queen Curley reigns over creative kingdom in NPT award nomination photo

    Nashville Public Television was a finalist for a local Bowtie Award for Best Workplace Environment, the Arts and Business Council of Greater Nashville announced this week. The honor recognizes “a business that integrates arts and creativity into the business culture to build morale and foster employee creativity and innovation.” The council said that NPT has “transformed its building into the NPT Arts Center — a modern day, nonprofit arts commune that houses NPT, the Nashville Shakespeare Festival, TN Rep and Nashville Film Festival. The creative collaboration greatly enhances each organization, which benefits our entire community.” Also in the building is Book’em, a nonprofit children’s literacy organization, and NATAS (the National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences) Midsouth Chapter.
  • Former PBS station WDSC to become college Center of Interactive Media

    The Daytona (Fla.) State College Board of Trustees on Thursday (Feb. 16) unanimously approved changing WDSC, its former PBS member station, into an educational Center of Interactive Media. Mike Vitale, senior vice president of academic affairs, told the Daytona Beach News-Journal that administrators are reviewing existing contracts with the television station. Fourteen employees have already been notified that their jobs are ending and they may apply for positions at the new station or elsewhere at the college. Locally produced live shows in the studio “will probably not continue,” Vitale said. The school continues to hold the license so it retains the option of returning to PBS.
  • Oklahoma bill to kill pubcasting funding withdrawn

    A bill that would have ended funding to public broadcasting in Oklahoma failed to make it out of a House subcommittee and was withdrawn Thursday (Feb. 16), reports the Oklahoman. Republican Rep. Leslie Osborn said she has no plans to reintroduce the legislation this session. The bill would have reduced the roughly $4 million support by 20 percent annually over five years.
  • No blatant self-inflation on this premise, please

    Randy Cohen, an Emmy-winning comedy writer and past author of “The Ethicist” column in the New York Times Magazine, starts a monthly public radio series today that invites famous people to talk about something other than themselves. Amazingly, people have been willing to come on the show anyway. Person Place Thing — those are the other topics that Cohen will let guests discuss ­— debuts with a famed interviewer as guest, TV talker Dick Cavett, devoting his attention to a phenomenal thing called Bob Hope. The second guest in the hourlong show is novelist Jane Smiley. Ian Pickus of Northeast Public Radio (WAMC) in Albany produces the show, and the New York Council for the Humanities pays for production of the first season.
  • There's good and bad news in indie online journalism, J-Lab reports

    J-Lab, which advocates for new approaches to journalism, has posted an update on independent online news efforts. “We’re entering a period where the pendulum is swinging sharply both ways ­— delivering shakeouts as some sites go belly up and expansion as other sites open satellite operations in the indy news space,” it says.
  • The Moth, and Center for Investigative Reporting, win MacArthur grants

    Two public media entities are recipients of MacArthur Foundation Awards for Creative and Effective Institutions, announced today (Feb. 16). The Center for Investigative Reporting at University of California, Berkeley, will use its $1 million award to “create a venture fund for new projects, strengthen its fundraising capacity, upgrade its technology infrastructure, and establish a reserve fund for legal defense.” And the Moth, the nonprofit behind the storytelling Moth Radio Hour, will spend its $750,000 to “expand its radio program into a regular, weekly Radio Hour, create a radio archive to distribute past content, and create a cash reserve to support better planning and organizational stability.”
  • First tablet launch for NPR Music? The iPad, of course!

    The latest app from NPR’s digital team brings NPR Music to Apple’s iPad, and it’s now available for free download from the iTunes App Store. Designers created “a true multimedia music magazine,” NPR said in a news release, merging original NPR Music content such Tiny Desk Concert performances with its own 24/7 music stream and the live streams of public radio stations. “I think it shows off the flood of amazing stories about music that makes its way to our site from our member stations and our staff,” writes Bob Boilen, All Songs Considered host, in a blog post unveiling the site.
  • Michigan city official can't sell LPFM license on eBay

    A city official in Benton Harbor, Mich., has abandoned his efforts to sell the license to the city’s low-power FM radio station on eBay after observers pointed out that FCC approval would be needed. Joseph Harris has shut down the station and tried to sell the license for $5,000, but pulled it off eBay after getting three bids, reports Laura Conaway on the blog for MSNBC host Rachel Maddow. Harris shut down the station in January to save money, according to the local ABC 57 News, and city commissioners are protesting the move to sell WBHC-LP’s license and equipment.
  • Public radio listeners more satisfied with stations than most, study finds

    A phone survey of radio listeners in the U.S. this month found that public radio listeners are more satisfied with their stations than the average listener. Research firm Mark Kassof & Co. called 649 radio listeners to ask how satisfied they were with the stations they listened to most (P1 stations, in radio parlance). Forty-eight percent overall said they were 100 percent satisfied with their P1 stations, but 61 percent of public radio listeners reported total satisfaction. That was topped only by Christian radio listeners, 77 percent of whom were completely satisfied.
  • Aereo to offer online subscriptions to over-the-air signals, including PBS

    In 2010, a Seattle start-up called ivi attempted to sell online access to 28 encrypted broadcast signals, including public TV stations, without informing the stations (Current, Oct. 4, 2010). It was stopped by a federal judge in New York last February and is currently trying to raise money for its ongoing legal fight. Now, a firm backed by media giant Barry Diller, Aereo, is doing much the same thing — except it’s using “proprietary remote antenna and DVR” technology “that consumers can use to access network television on web-enabled devices.” Aereo has installed miniature antennae throughout the New York City market that pull in over-the-air signals from all local broadcasters, including PBS member station WNET.
  • KUSC producer travels to Venezuela with L.A. Philharmonic, blogging all the way

    Brian Lauritzen, producer and host at Los Angeles classical music pubradio giant KUSC-FM, is venturing far and wide in order to cover the classical beat — more than 3,600 miles, in fact.  Lauritzen is accompanying conductor Gustavo Dudamel and the L.A. Philharmonic Orchestra on their historic trip to Dudamel’s native Venezuela, producing radio pieces and blog posts for KUSC from Caracas, Venezuela’s capital. The orchestra preformed Mahler’s Ninth Symphony on Feb. 11 to a sold-out crowd of 2,400 at the Teatro Teresa Carreño, South America’s second-largest theater. You can see rehearsal video clips, photos, and Lauritzen’s accounting of the performance in his Feb.
  • KCET launches arts series, adds eight "Land of Sunshine" local bloggers

    KCET is launching a new arts series next month, Open Call, hosted by international operatic mezzo-soprano Suzanna Guzmàn, showcasing cultural institutions and other groups in Southern California. The station’s program Live @ the Ford will be folded into the new series, reports the Los Angeles Times. The station also announced on Tuesday (Feb. 14) that its local documentary series Departures is adding eight new bloggers to its Land of Sunshine blog, “dedicated to uncovering the rich diversity of Angelinos throughout time,” and based on the late 19th century journal with the same title, distributed nationwide “to promote Southern California life to tourists and potential residents.”
  • Classical South Florida to extend its signal west

    Miami-based Classical South Florida is expanding its service to the state’s western coast with the $4.35 million purchase of WAYJ 88.7 FM, a 75,000-watt station that broadcasts to a potential audience of nearly 1 million listeners in Fort Myers and beyond. The purchase, announced today, is part of a three-way transaction with seller WAY Media, a religious broadcast network that’s moving its Christian pop music service to 100,000-watt WSRX 89.5 FM in Naples. When the sale closes, Way Media will retain the WAYJ call letters and format for its new station. Though WSRX broadcasts at a higher Effective Radiated Power (ERP) than WAYJ, Classical South Florida is buying the better of the two channels.
  • WPR host develops one-man show on image of Native Americans

    Richie Plass, one of two hosts of Kalihwiyo’se on Wisconsin Public Radio, has developed a unique one-man show on the image of Native Americans, “An Indian … One Block East of Broadway,” which he’s presenting next week at the Neville Public Museum of Brown County in Green Bay, Wisc. According to the local Press-Gazette, it features “humor, music, videos and education — with a positive spin.” As Plass said, “Native American humor has many faces. I am always trying to address stereotypes, stories and/or image concerns relating to our history and even modern awareness.”