Nice Above Fold - Page 636
KQED to pick up two coverage areas lost by KCET's departure
KQED is enlarging its coverage area to include San Luis Obispo and Santa Maria, Calif. In a statement, the station said the expansion will reach viewers lost by the departure of KCET from PBS on Jan. 1. The residents will receive both analog and digital; KQED also has plans to also provide HD in the future.APTS promotes Lonna Thompson
Lonna Thompson has been promoted to executive vice president and chief operating officer of the Association of Public Television Stations, APTS announced today (Jan. 5). She had been general counsel, and served as interim president and c.e.o. during the advocacy group’s recent presidential search. The promotion is effective immediately. Thompson also serves on the Communications Security, Reliability and Interoperability Council of the Federal Communications Commission, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting’s Community Service Grant Review Committee, the CPB Digital Funding Advisory Committee and the PBS Interconnection Committee."This American Life" invades the Great White North
This American Life, the wildly popular pubradio show hosted by Ira Glass, is going international: It will be heard on CBC Radio One this season.
Marketplace and KCET are collaborating on simultaneous radio/TV special
Marketplace from American Public Media and KCET’s SoCal Connected are partnering on a program that will run simultaneously on radio and TV. The special report, “Lot 354: A Tale of America’s Housing Meltdown,” will premiere on Jan. 13. Marketplace’s Kai Ryssdal traces that specific property over several years. He speaks with the couple who bought the home for a bargain in 2002, improved it, and sold it four years later at almost triple the price; the couple who then bought the home at a high price but lost it to foreclosure; and the couple who recently purchased it at a fraction of that high price.Indie KCET's channel moves off VHF on two cable systems
Two California cable systems have shifted Los Angeles’s KCET from its VHF position into the harder-to-find digital tier, now that the station has departed PBS. Charter Communications and Cox Cable made the move to keep PBS’s new primary station, PBS SoCal/KOCE, “in the more trafficked VHF band,” according to Variety (free registration required to view story). KCET President Al Jerome said it made “a strategic decision to retain its digital multicast channels … This has impacted our channel positions with some cable services.” The move affects around 377,000 Charter viewers; Variety did not list the number of Cox subscribers. Jerome said the channel remains the same on other cable outlets, including Time Warner and Comcast.Writer disputes that Masterpiece downsized "Downton" because its plot would "baffle" Americans
“Downton Abbey”, premiering this week on Masterpiece, will be a slightly shortened version of the British Edwardian hit. Its original episodes, which aired across the pond on commercial channel ITV, have been edited to six from eight to ensure the character of Matthew Crawley (Dan Stevens) arrives at the stately home in the first episode rather than in the second, the Brit paper Daily Mail reports. It adds: “PBS also believes its audiences will need an American to outline the key themes of the show. So before the first episode, actress Laura Linney will explain the inheritance principle.” (Linney is a regular host of Masterpiece Classic.)
Roger Ebert selects replacement co-host for Elvis Mitchell
Chicago-based blogger Ignatiy Vishnevetsky will be Christy Lemire’s co-host of Roger Ebert Presents at the Movies, which debuts Jan. 21 on nearly 200 PBS stations. He fills the opening created by the still-mysterious departure of Elvis Mitchell, host of KCRW’s The Treatment. Vishnevetsky founded the alternative-cinema site Cine-File.Classical South Florida to acquire WXEL in West Palm Beach
Barry University has applied to the FCC to transfer its pubcasting station WXEL in West Palm Beach, Fla., to American Public Media’s Classical South Florida in Fort Lauderdale, reports the All Access Music Group website (third item). Deal price: $4.05 million. APM owns adjacent-market noncom Classical WKCP in Miami. The agreement is the culmination of several years of negotiations for WXEL, which was nearly sold to New York City’s WNET five years ago (Current, March 6, 2006) and, more recently, a local community group and school district.Journalism prof joins Ohio University station as interim director
Ohio University pubcaster WOUB is welcoming a journalism professor as its interim director and g.m., as part of a push to integrate the college with the station in Athens, Ohio. Tom Hodson served as the E.W. Scripps School of Journalism’s director from 2003 to 2010. He is replacing outgoing Director and General Manager Carolyn Bailey Lewis, who will retire this month. The station is a nonacademic unit of the college and broadcasts PBS and NPR content as well as student-produced programming to Southeast Ohio and neighboring states. It’s run by student volunteers and full-time technical employees and editors.Open Mobile Video Coalition brings aboard electronics manufacturers
The Open Mobile Video Coalition has expanded its membership to firms other than broadcasters for its new OMVC Mobile DTV Forum. Dell, Harris, LG Electronics and Samsung Mobile are among the first companies to join. “By expanding our membership beyond broadcast companies, we hope to bring greater resources to the task of perfecting the Mobile DTV consumer experience, while bringing an exciting new class of digital mobile devices to the American public,” coalition CEO Vince Sadusky said in a statement. The voluntary association of television broadcasters works to accelerate development of mobile digital television. Its 900 members include the Association of Public Television Stations, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting, and PBS.Hey, WOUB, remember this?
OK, we just could not resist sharing this, although longtime staffers at WOUB in Athens, Ohio, may be annoyed. Or mortified. This very groovy Dec. 19, 1977, WOUB signoff was posted on YouTube in March 2010 by broadcast graphic designer John Christopher Burns. Now it has migrated to Boing Boing (the comments there are pretty amusing). We can’t decide which is cooler: the hair, the music, the equipment or the fashions.Frustrated with politics, longtime producer is departing "Left, Right and Center"
Sarah Spitz, producer of Left, Right and Center at KCRW in Santa Monica, Calif., is leaving the show after 15 years. “This was a decision I came to on my own, no one is shoving me out the door,” she writes in a post on her blog. “But between us, I’ll tell you in all sincerity, I hate the way politics is played now. I want our elected officials to do the business the people sent them to Washington, to city councils, to state legislatures, to do. That’s not the way they play and I no longer want to be part of the process that perpetuates a broken system.Newly independent KCET invites viewers to "Rethink TV"
It’s 2011, and you know what that means: KCET is on its own, formally untethered from the pubTV mothership PBS. Here’s a look at its logo and new tagline: Rethink TV. Check out the station’s Facebook page for viewer reactions so far.WETA's Bieber decides against previously announced move to Seattle's KCTS
KCTS in Seattle now says that WETA producer Jeff Bieber will not be coming on as vice president of content, as it had announced in November. The city’s Crosscut blog reports that Bieber “apparently changed his mind for personal and professional reasons, and now KCTS must begin a search for his replacement just days before Bieber was supposed to start” on Jan. 3. Bieber would have overseen all KCTS broadcast, production, interactive and community engagement activities. Bieber, WETA’s v.p. of news and public affairs programming, wants to stay at the Arlington, Va., station to complete several programs, he said in a statement released by KCTS.Wick Rowland is Denver Post's TV person of the year
The TV critic for the Denver Post has selected Wick Rowland, president of KBDI/Colorado Public Television, as the local 2010 television person of the year. Joanne Ostrow also called KBDI “the little station that could,” and a “feisty outlet” that “routinely stands up to the Public Broadcasting Service bureaucracy.” “When more timid station managers caved on matters of censorship or politics,” she says, “Rowland hangs tough.”
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