Nice Above Fold - Page 620

  • Susanna Capelouto heading to CNN

    Susanna Capelouto, Georgia Public Broadcasting’s news director, has left to join CNN. She’s been with GPB a total of 19 years, the first two part-time. She’ll be a producer for CNN Radio working with another GPB alum, John Supulvedo, producing long-form audio stories. Capelouto said last week she now plans to become “a loyal GPB volunteer,” network spokesperson Nancy Zintak told Current. Also last week, she was honored at the Georgia State Capitol by lawmakers with a House Resolution for her years of service to GPB; guests nibbled on a cake featuring her likeness on the icing. She reports to CNN on March 7.
  • "Motown Sound" fills White House for PBS show

    The White House “reverberated like a long-ago basement sound studio in Detroit” on Thursday (Feb. 24), reports the Associated Press. The occasion: a PBS In Performance at the White House, “The Motown Sound.” Performers included Smokey Robinson, John Legend, Seal and Stevie Wonder — first lady Michelle Obama confessed he’s her favorite, “yes indeed.” And Motown founder Berry Gordy was in the audience. See a clip here.
  • PBMA leaving NETA, will focus on pubcasting leadership training

    The Public Broadcasting Management Association is departing its 30-year home at the National Educational Telecommunications Association. It’s time, said PBMA Vice Chairman Tom Livingston, president of Livingston Associates in Baltimore. “We’re grown now.” Coulter Nonprofit Management in McLean, Va., will work with PBMA. Livingston told Current that the group’s aspiration “is to become more significant in the leadership development area.” The system is facing “unbelievable challenges,” he said. If pubcasting is to have a viable future, “it’s going to take some great leadership. Basically there’s been no coordinated leadership development work in public media for 15 or 16 years. And I believe we can see the results of that in the state of our leadership today.”
  • Pubradio tech survey charts growth in smartphone usage, streaming audio tune-ins

    Results of the third annual Public Radio Technology Survey measured dramatic growth in smartphone adoption among public radio listeners and their clear preference for Apple’s iPhone among mobile hand-held devices. More than a third of respondents now own a smartphone, a 29 percent gain since last year’s survey; within this subgroup of survey participants, 63 percent use the iPhone. The survey of 21,000 public radio listeners, conducted through a partnership of Jacobs Media and Public Radio Program Directors, also shows impressive gains in the number of respondents who listen to public radio via Internet streams. An infographic from Jacobs media sums up the 2010 survey findings; PRPD details top-line results here.
  • Pubcasting foe Sen. Jim DeMint on Communications subcommittee

    Senate Commerce Committee Chairman Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) and ranking member Kay Bailey Hutchison (R-Tex.) have named the members of their subcommittees, including the Communications and Internet Subcommittee that has the most direct oversight of communications issues and the FCC, reports Broadcasting & Cable today (Feb. 25). John Kerry (D-Mass.) returns as subcommitte chair; GOP ranking member is John Ensign (Nev.). “The Republican membership includes two of the 10 most conservative Senators according to National Journal’s just-released ratings,” B&C points out — such as Jim DeMint (S.C.), author of several bills to defund public broadcasting.
  • PBS: Doing something right ... or left?

    “The conventional tag that I often see applied to PBS is ‘liberal,'” writes PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler in his column today (Feb. 25). “I get a fair amount of mail from critics who say they are viewers and who say they see public broadcasting that way.” But wait: “I also get probably an equal amount from viewers, or from people who claim to be viewers, that think PBS has moved to the right, that the service has increasingly sold out to the right-wing and corporate interests. I’m not trying to invoke, here, the idea that when one is criticized by both sides it must mean it is doing something right and in the broader public’s interest.”
  • WNYC latest to sign on with Public Insight Network

    WNYC Radio in New York City has joined American Public Media’s Public Insight Network, which will provide its newsroom with a direct link to persons in their community to act as sources for reporting, reports Fishbowl NY. WNYC will focus on the subject of education, reaching out to both English- and Spanish-speaking mebers of the community. More than 40 newsrooms nationwide are now members of the network (Current, Jan. 24, 2011).
  • PBS going Gowalla

    PBS is going live on Gowalla in March. Not sure what that means? “Gowalla helps you keep up with friends, share your favorite places and discover the extraordinary around you,” it says. So where is PBS? Thirteen hours ago, at the White House South Lawn.
  • NCME web analytics webinar info now available on site

    If you’re curious about web analytics but weren’t able to participate in the Feb. 9 webinar on the topic from the National Center for Media Engagement, it’s now archived at its site.
  • Two more Knight Commission papers released today

    The fourth and fifth in a series of white papers aimed at implementing recommendations of the Knight Commission on the Information Needs of Communities in a Democracy are being released today (Feb. 25) at an Aspen Institute roundtable from 9 a.m. to noon Eastern (webcast here). The papers: “Government Transparency: Six Strategies for More Open and Participatory Government” by Jon Gant and Nicol Turner-Lee, and “Creating Local Online Hubs: Three Models for Action” by Adam Thierer. Roundtable participants include John Bracken, Knight’s director of digital media; Lucy Dalglish, e.p. of the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press; and Lee Rainie, director of Pew’s Internet and American Life Project.
  • Republican Congressman loves public radio — no, really

    Rep. David Dreier (R-Calif.), new chairman of the Rules Committee in the House of Representatives, is a big fan of public broadcasting, particularly NPR’s foreign coverage and This American Life, the Public Radio International series produced by WBEZ in Chicago. Yes, you read that correctly. “It might not be healthy these days for conservatives to admit they like public broadcasting, given the relentless flogging it takes from some ideologues,” writes the Los Angeles Times’ Jim Rainey. “So give credit to Dreier for acknowledging the truth — that NPR, PBS and their local affiliates are gems that deserve our support, one way or another.”
  • GOP-Dem talks on Continuing Resolution "off to a shaky start," Washington Post reports

    The budget stalemate continues to percolate over the Continuing Resolution to keep the government running through September, which contains a provision wiping out all of CPB’s funding. Since the bill’s passage at 4:30 a.m. Feb. 19, the Republicans put together a bill that would push the March 4 deadline two weeks – with $4 billion in cuts, roughly proportional to the $61 billion over the remaining seven months of the fiscal year. Senate Democrats rejected that idea, the Washington Post reports. Those lawmakers, meanwhile, want another 30 days to work all this out with funding remaining at current levels; House Republicans rejected that idea.
  • Boston Globe: Defend aid to PBS and the endowments, let NPR survive on its own

    Congressional Democrats have to make some tough choices about which programs to defend against the Republican drive to slash government spending, especially when it comes to a “fat GOP target” like the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, according to op-ed page editors of the Boston Globe. CPB’s $531 million appropriation is a comparatively small item in the federal budget, but it offers a big political pay-off for Republicans. As the Globe sees it, public radio doesn’t need federal assistance: NPR receives only a sliver of this federal aid through direct grants, and the financial squeeze of lost CPB grants on public radio stations could be eased through dues relief.
  • Beth Deare dies in house fire; groundbreaking former WGBH producer

    Aloyce Beth DuVal Deare, a pioneering producer of African-American programming and documentaries at WGBH, was killed Feb. 20 in a four-alarm house fire at her home in Newton, Mass. She was 63. She had also been battling brain cancer, which had spread from throat cancer last year. Deare won 13 Emmys and a Peabody Award during her tenure at the station in the 1980s. One was for a critically acclaimed “In the Matter of Levi Heart,” a documentary about a Boston Police shooting. Her credits also include “Beacon to Freedom: Black Life in the Bay Colony,” which she finished in 2008 while undergoing treatment for throat cancer, and American Experience’s “Midnight Ramble,” a 1994 film tracing the history of black filmmaking.
  • A little birdie told us . . .

    Are you in pubmedia? Here are five Twitter feeds you should be following, as suggested by Bryce Kirchoff at the National Center for Media Engagement.