Nice Above Fold - Page 555
WGBH's voice of Boston Symphony Orchestra writes memoir
Ron Della Chiesa, longtime broadcaster and host of Boston Symphony Orchestra performances on WGBH, has a new memoir out, Radio My Way. Among the memories he shared with the Boston Globe was what he considers to be the “worst interview” he ever did, with singer Eartha Kitt during his MusicAmerica show that ran from 1978 to ’96, also on WGBH. “I was playing this rare recording of ‘Lilac Wine,’ and she said: ‘It was stupid of you to play that. It’s one of the worst things I’ve ever done.’ I couldn’t go to black; it was live. She had a reputation for being tough.”WGVU Meijer Public Broadcasting Center's namesake dies at 91
Frederik G.H. Meijer, a billionaire grocery magnate and philanthropist whose famous generosity benefited Michigan and whose name resides on the Meijer Public Broadcast Center at Grand Valley State University’s Grand Rapids campus, died Friday (Nov. 25). He was 91. “Fred’s support for PBS and NPR has enriched the lives of everyone who watches television and listens to radio in West Michigan,” Michael Walenta, general manager at WGVU, said in a statement. “We will be forever in his debt.” Meijer was No. 60 on this year’s Forbes 400 Richest Americans, with an estimated net worth of $5 billion. Here’s his obituary in the Grand Rapids Press, which notes, “he delighted in seeing what his money could do for the area’s hospitals, colleges and cultural institutions.”APM reviewing congresswoman's request to drop Allianz sponsorship of APHC
A Florida congresswoman wants American Public Media and other media outlets to stop airing underwriting spots and advertising by Allianz AG, a German insurer that did business with the Nazis, reports the Miami Herald. Allianz is one of two corporate underwriters of A Prairie Home Companion. GOP Rep. Ileana Ros-Lehtinen, who heads the House Committee on Foreign Affairs, is backing a bill that would allow Holocaust survivors to sue the insurer and has launched a letter-writing campaign aimed at blocking it from advertising in America until it pays off all Holocaust survivors’ life insurance claims. During World War II, the Herald says, Allianz insured concentration camp facilities as well as sent money to the Nazis instead of rightful Jewish beneficiaries.
KCET to air exclusive on-set footage of "Doc Martin" production
Starting Dec. 8, KCET will feature eight-minute, behind-the-scenes clips of the popular British dramedy Doc Martin following each episode, the Los Angeles indie pubcaster announced Saturday (Nov. 26). Bohdan Zachary, v.p. of broadcasting and program development, spent time on the series set earlier this year, interviewing the actors and hanging out in Port Isaac, North Cornwall, U.K., where the show takes place.Country music gets its due at White House celebration and on PBS
President and Mrs. Obama hosted an In Performance at the White House this week, paying tribute to country music. Check out the production photos — including performances by Kris Kristofferson, Lyle Lovett and Alison Krauss — on PBS Press Room’s flickr stream.Jacksonville's WJCT in partnership negotiations with University of North Florida
WJCT in Jacksonville, Fla., is in partnership talks with University of North Florida. Dual-licensee WJCT “would remain a community-based public broadcasting station but would work with UNF in a number of ways,” reports News 4 in Jacksonville. “It has yet to be determined how that relationship is going to be formulated,” said Michael Boylan, president of WJCT. “There are some financial benefits to having this kind of relationship.” In September WJCT-FM dropped A Prairie Home Companion and two others shows, citing a $500,000 drop in state funding.
TuneIn announces successful launch of donation app at KQED
TuneIn, a free streaming audio aggregation app that lets listeners hear music, sports and news from around the world, has launched TuneIn Donate, which enables listeners to contribute to pubradio stations. KQED in San Francisco is piloting the new app, available for iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad and Android smartphones. TuneIn said in a statement that since using TuneIn Donate, KQED “has seen a meaningful increase in traffic” to its website donation page, although it provided no details. “KQED donors are some of the earliest adopters of new technologies,” said Tim Olson, station v.p. of digital media and education. “We are excited to be part of this groundbreaking initiative and are encouraged with the initial results.”Human skull, bones, discovered in KCAW building in Sitka, Alaska
Contractors working in the basement of KCAW/Raven Radio in Sitka, Alaska, uncovered human remains that may predate the 103-year-old building, the Associated Press is reporting in the Anchorage Daily News. When workers found the skull and skeleton between two slabs of bedrock, work immediately stopped. “And the first thing we had to do was figure out what to do,” said KCAW General Manager Ken Fate. Police and an archeologist determined the bones were not part of a crime scene. Then, “erring on the side of caution,” Fate said, “we determined that we better treat them as if they might be culturally significant.”Thank you, public broadcasting
Here’s a nice Thanksgiving tribute to public media from the staff of the National Center for Media Engagement, talking about what they’re most thankful for. From Charles Meyer, NCME executive director: “I’m grateful for the times I’ve giggled uncontrollably while listening to This American Life podcasts. I’m thankful for being moved deeply every time I watch Ken Burns’s documentary about Lewis and Clark. And I’ve never been more proud and grateful to be part of public media as I was when my family and I watched the recent NewsHour segment about American Graduate and the Nine Network Teacher Town Hall.Brian Eckstein of Indiana Public Radio dies at 40
Brian Eckstein, production manager at Indiana Public Radio and a volunteer at the station since high school, died unexpectedly Monday (Nov. 21) at his home in Muncie, Ind. He was 40. “Chances are, if you live around here, your life has been touched somehow, in some way, by Brian Eckstein,” wrote the Star Press in Muncie. “His small shoes leave an enormous space to fill at the radio station, and in our hearts,” Angie Rapp, marketing manager of WIPB and IPR, told the paper. Eckstein was recognized as an Outstanding Alumnus by the Disabled Student Development Office of Ball State University.California governor taps pubcaster for prison media relations post
California Gov. Jerry Brown has named Jeffrey Callison of Capital Public Radio in Sacramento, as press secretary of media relations in the state’s Department of Corrections and Rehabilitation. Callison, with his distinctive Scottish brogue, is host of the daily pubaffairs show Insight. “I’m happy what I’m doing,” Callison told the Sacramento Bee. “It’s not that I don’t like what I’m doing or that I’m not happy at Cap Radio. I just felt it was time for a new challenge.” Salary for the position is $102,015.CPB ombudsman gets complaint over station's Occupy Wall Street button premiums
CPB Ombudsman Joel Kaplan looks into a complaint that during a recent fundraising campaign at WAMC Northeast Public Radio in Albany, N.Y., the station sold buttons that read “I support WAMC & Occupy Wall Street — 99%” for an additional 99-cent contribution. Also, the listener writes to Kaplan, during that campaign, station President Alan Chartock “constantly referred to the Republicans in the House as ‘radical’ intent on silencing public radio because it is an answer to Rush Limbaugh. This speaks directly to how Dr. Chartock views himself. If he is the answer to Rush Limbaugh, he should raise the money from sponsors and not the taxpayers.”Two political parties protest Dutch pubcasting plan to cut channels from 21 to eight
Two Dutch political parties are opposing a plan to cut the number of public broadcasting organizations in the Netherlands from the 21 to eight, because they think two channels will end up with an unfair advantage over the others, according to Radio Netherlands Worldwide. The VVD and Freedom Party are lobbying media minister Marja van Bijsterveldt to ban the merger, supported by the Dutch Public Broadcaster authority (NPO), which would give 10 million euros extra to two of the broadcasters. “The Dutch government is shaving up to €127 million off the national TV/radio budgets, demanding that broadcasters merge rather than co-operate,” explains Dutch media consultant Jonathan Marks on his Critical Distance blog, which explains the proposal in depth.Screeners complete pre-selection for INPUT pubcasting entries
Pre-selection for U.S. entries for next year’s INPUT (INternational PUblic Television) screening conference took place Nov. 16-20 in Charleston, S.C., where South Carolina ETV is INPUT secretariat. American finalists will be announced in mid-December for INPUT, which takes place May 7-12, 2012, in Sydney, Australia. The panel, from left to right: Gayle Loeber, NETA; Erica Deiparine-Sugars, ITVS; Donald Thoms, PBS; Ron Hull, Nebraska ETV; Amy Shumaker, SCETV; Jennifer Lawson, CPB; Betsy Newman, SCETV; Sandie Pedlow, Latino Public Broadcasting; and Bill Gilcher, Goethe Institute. (Image: Kent Steele, WNET)Former "Sesame Street" composer charged in child porn case
Fernando Rivas, a former award-winning composer for Sesame Street, entered a not guilty plea in federal court Monday (Nov. 21), in Charleston, S.C., on charges of production, transportation and possession of child pornography, according to the local Post and Courier. Local officers and FBI agents had executed a search warrant at Rivas’s Charleston home on April 19, during which Rivas reportedly admitted to restraining a 4-year-old girl in handcuffs and photographing her, the paper says. According to his website, Rivas began to write for the Children’s Television Workshop, now Sesame Workshop, in 1990 and composed “a number of songs for the show Sesame Street,” featuring singers Celia Cruz, Gloria Estefan and Cindy Lauper.
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