Nice Above Fold - Page 559

  • NewsWorks going strong after one year

    Here’s a look back over the first year of NewsWorks, WHYY’s ambitious hyperlocal news site for northwest Philly. It was the station’s first attempt at online news, and is powered by around $1.1 million from CPB and $100,000 from the Knight Foundation, in addition to several other foundations. Chris Satullo, the station’s executive director for news and civic dialogue, told the Nieman Journalism Lab that traffic to the site peaked in August, with 301,000 unique visitors and 1.9 million pageviews. And in May, WHYY created a NewsWorks radio show based on the web-based reporting — “maybe a first for public broadcasting,” Satullo said — called NewsWorks Tonight.
  • APM chief McTaggart, seen as competitor, leaves NPR Board

    American Public Media’s president, Jon McTaggart, won re-election to the NPR Board this summer but won’t be taking the seat after all. McTaggart resigned from the board at NPR’s request after an outside legal analysis determined that his promotion to president of APM and Minnesota Public Radio presented a potential conflict of interest with his service on the NPR Board. Since his first election to the board three years ago, McTaggart had been promoted from chief operating officer to chief exec of American Public Media Group, the parent company of APM/MPR. That put him uniquely and simultaneously on the boards of the two largest producers and distributors of public radio programming.
  • Roger Ebert says show needs a funding "angel," or will end soon

    “Unless we find an angel, our television program will go off the air at the end of its current season,” writes Roger Ebert on his Sun-Times blog. ” There. I’ve said it. Usually in television, people use evasive language. Not me. We’ll be gone. I want to be honest about why this is. We can’t afford to finance it any longer.” He says that since going on the air in January 2011, Ebert Presents At The Movies has been almost entirely funded by he and his his wife, Chaz, plus $25,000 from the Kanbar Charitable Trust. “We can’t afford to support the show any longer.
  • Challenging times for PBS NewsHour

    PBS NewsHour is navigating troubled waters, the New York Times reports. The show’s main corporate underwriter, Chevron, is departing at the end of the year, taking $2 million from NewsHour’s $27 million annual budget; the Knight Foundation, which helped finance the overhaul of the show’s Web site in late 2009, has declined to provide more support. Its political editor, David Chalian, and managing editor for digital news, Maureen Hoch, are both leaving for other positions. MacNeil/Lehrer Productions president and the head of fund-raising and marketing also left for new opportunities. Longtime anchor Jim Lehrer, who stepped away from the weeknight anchor chair in June for a reduced role, may leave permanently in December.
  • Norman Corwin, auteur of radio’s golden years, 101

    Norman Corwin, a radio writer and producer whose pioneering programs made him one of the most renowned creators of shows during radio’s Golden Age, died Oct. 18 [2011] of natural causes. He was 101. Corwin’s name may be unfamiliar to most people today, but during the 1940s his productions for CBS drew huge audiences and influenced a generation of writers and directors in all media. He wrote on a wide range of subjects in a ringing, poetic tone that had few parallels in its time and would be almost unheard of on today’s airwaves, even in public radio. His most admired works for CBS included On a Note of Triumph, which commemorated the end of World War II in Europe, and We Hold These Truths, a celebration of the Bill of Rights on the document’s 150th anniversary.
  • Saying ‘thank you’ isn’t just polite — it could raise millions more

    How much are simple thank-you calls to donors worth to public television stations nationwide over the course of a year? Potentially, about $4.6 million. That’s one of the bright possibilities emerging from the Contributor Development Partnership, an ambitious effort to identify and disseminate the most effective local fundraising practices. The service, funded by CPB and WGBH (Current, Feb. 7), has been busy all year crunching detailed financial data from 76 participating stations. It will publish its initial findings for stations in its first ROAR — that is, Revenue Opportunity and Action Report —within the next few months. The reports will show the revenue potential for each station, normalizing data where possible to calculate for differences among markets.
  • News leaders draw hard line on employees’ public comments

    Update, Nov. 10: The NPR Board postponed considering the ethics policy scheduled for its Nov. 10-11 meeting. Spokesperson Dana Rehm said work was not complete on two of the three ethics documents. “Management and the board determined that the best course of action would be to release the guiding principles of NPR’s journalism, the handbook and the employee code of conduct at the same time so we’re in a position to confidently answer everyone’s questions about which principles apply to whom,” Rehm said. For a year NPR has been sharpening its journalistic standards to help shield its newsroom from intense scrutiny by partisan critics.
  • Market Wars, companion for Roadshow, is coming to PBS

    PubTV programmers heard welcome details of a long-awaited spinoff of the hit Antiques Roadshow at the National Educational Telecommunications Association Conference in Kansas City, Oct. 18–20. [The reality-TV casting agent behind Jersey Shore is seeking antiques authorities for the roles. See below.] John Wilson, PBS program chief, told attendees that the program, with the working title Market Wars, will debut in spring 2012 under the supervision of Roadshow e.p. Marsha Bemko. Wilson said PBS has ordered 20 episodes initially, “at a very effective production cost per hour.” Programmers have been eager to find a companion show to extend the audience of the Roadshow, which is by far the most-watched PBS series.
  • Back below the hills of Tennessee

    The television version of Bluegrass Underground, now distributed in high-def and Surround Sound by PBS Plus, permits the audience to appreciate more vividly the unique auditorium where it’s recorded: southeast of Nashville in Cumberland Caverns, 333 feet below ground near McMinnville, Tenn. Over the past 3.5 million years, water carved out what is now the acoustically pure Volcano Room with room for 500 seats. By 2008 the erosion was far enough along that concerts could be held there and Nashville’s famed country-music carrier, WSM-AM, could begin airing Bluegrass Underground’s original radio version. (It airs monthly on Saturdays, just before Grand Ole Opry.)
  • Romney cites CPB as target for "deep reductions in subsidies"

    In a column in USA Today, GOP presidential hopeful Mitt Romney vows to “enact deep reductions in the subsidies” for entities including the National Endowment for the Arts, the National Endowment for the Humanities and the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, along with other cuts. “What I propose will not be easy,” he writes. “Washington is full of sacred cows that supposedly can’t be slaughtered and electrified third rails that allegedly can’t be touched. But if we do not act now, the irresistible mathematics of debt will soon lead to unimaginable peril.”
  • Harmon retiring at Public Radio Capital; Ikeda will succeed her

    Susan Harmon, a career-long public radio leader and one of Public Radio Capital’s two managing directors, will retire from the position Dec. 31. Ken Ikeda, a relatively new hire and former head of San Francisco’s Bay Area Video Coalition, will succeed her. Marc Hand, who has shared authority with Harmon since founding of the Denver-based nonprofit in 2001, will continue as the other managing director. Harmon’s role has largely involved the organization’s strategic planning, philanthropic support, and investor relations for the Public Radio Fund, a lending source for expansion of public radio. Founded to help public radio expand services by acquiring frequencies, PRC has helped arrange transactions and financing worth more than $270 million in its 10-year life.
  • Austin City Limits to stream live on PBS Facebook

    Austin City Limits will present a live stream of its Friday night (Nov. 4) show on PBS Facebook — a first for both ACL and PBS. Performing at the new Moody Theater will be electro-pop singer Lykke Li. Fans can tune in online at 9 p.m. Eastern; the program is scheduled for broadcast Jan. 28, 2012.
  • New Connecticut pubTV channel is all sports, all the time

    Connecticut Public Television this month kicks off a 24/7 sports channel running high school, college and other sporting events throughout the state. CPTV Sports will debut on Comcast and Cox cable systems, and expand to over-the-air and additional cable outlets early in 2012, the station said in an announcement (PDF). Coverage will include more than 40 schools and organizations, with mainstream sports (baseball, basketball, hockey, soccer) as well as auto racing, cheerleading championships, and Special Olympics. Future programming brings rugby, softball, cricket and roller derby, along with sports-related shows on topics such as sports medicine. Bob Yalen, formerly with ESPN and ABC Sports, is channel director.
  • NewsHour's David Chalian will head Yahoo News D.C. bureau

    Yahoo News is reporting that it has hired PBS NewsHour’s political editor, David Chalian, as its Washington bureau chief. Chalian came to NewsHour in July 2010 from ABC News, where he won an Emmy for his role in coverage of President Barack Obama’s inauguration. At NewsHour, he directed political coverage across  broadcast and digital platforms, as well as managing editorial content from the program’s congressional, White House, and Supreme Court beats. He also appeared in political webcasts on the Online NewsHour and developed additional digital political content. Chalian will start at Yahoo News on Nov. 14 and report to Will Tacy, executive editor.
  • Pubcasters sign on with new Future of TV Coalition

    Several pubcasting groups are part of the new Future of TV Coalition, just announced by the National Association of Broadcasters, which “unites organizations that have expressed concern that legislative and regulatory initiatives currently under discussion in Washington could jeopardize the future of over-the-air broadcasting.” Pubmedia members include the Center for Asian American Media, MHz Networks, Native American Public Telecommunications, Pacific Islanders in Communications and Vme Media. Vme’s founder and president, Carmen DiRienzo, spoke at the luncheon Tuesday (Nov. 1) announcing the initiative. “Digital television is a huge, free and important part of the digital future,” she said. “Its absence would diminish the amount, quality and diversity of voices, thought and experience that Vme and other networks like it provide.”