Nice Above Fold - Page 681
WOXM, Classical 90.1 in Vermont, takes to the airwaves
There’s a new pubradio music station today: Vermont Public Radio’s Classical 90.1 WOXM, which signed on this morning (June 8). It launched with a performance by pianist Annemieke Spoelstra live from Middlebury College. The station brings VPR Classical to more than 83,000 listeners in most of Addison County. VPR also finalized its purchase in May of WCVR 102.1 FM, based in Randolph; that should begin broadcast this summer, also as VPR Classical. It’s Vermont’s only classical music network featuring local hosts. Station spokesperson Michelle Jeffery told Current the station has been in the process of bolstering its classical offerings since 2007, when VPR split its news and music services.U.S. Forest Service temporarily alters rules affecting pubTV camera crews
The controversy over Idaho Public Television’s request to film in a federal wilderness area is spreading. The Associated Press via the Spokesman-Review in Spokane, Wash., reports that pro-wilderness groups say that filming within areas such as the 2.3-million-acre Frank Church River of No Return Wilderness, which IPTV has been doing for 30 years, may not reflect “appropriate stewardship” of the lands. IPTV’s show Outdoor Idaho annually follows students doing conservation work within the wilderness. Last month its cameras were denied access by a U.S. Forest Service supervisor, who said theirs was a commercial enterprise. That decision was reversed after Gov. Butch Otter and Republican U.S.Sesame Wii games use unique (and fuzzy) remote-control cover
For the first time, two video games will use a cover to actually hide buttons on the Wii Remote. “Elmo’s A-to-Zoo Adventure” and “Cookie’s Counting Carnival” games from Sesame Street will use the plush cover (Elmo, right) to make the Nintendo control less confusing for youngsters, the Associated Press reports. “We will be the first to introduce such an aid,” said Scott Chambers, Sesame Workshop senior vice president of media distribution. “We’re doing it so that preschoolers can play and learn from these Sesame Street games without feeling frustrated with the controller.” The two titles are also the first Wii games from Sesame Workshop.
Upcoming PBS concert has gamers excited
The video gaming community is going bonkers in anticipation of a PBS special airing July 31 and through August. And it’s no wonder: According to the Video Games Live website, the 90-minute orchestral performance includes “never before televised live musical performances from the Mario, Zelda, Sonic, Halo, Warcraft, Final Fantasy, Castlevania, God of War, Civilization, Chrono Cross, StarCraft and Guitar Hero franchises, including a musical journey through Classic Gaming.” It describes the show as an “immersive concert event” featuring music from the video games along with “synchronized lighting, solo performers, electronic percussionists, live action and unique interactive segments to create an explosive entertainment experience!”Veterans' welcome home morphed from doc to project to movement
Wisconsin Public Television’s LZ Lambeau “welcome home” outreach for Vietnam veterans and their supporters last month was judged so successful that pubcasters in Texas, Oklahoma and Michigan are planning similar tributes to service members. The National Center for Community Engagement has scheduled a webinar June 23, and soon there’ll be a CPB-funded LZ toolkit For the Wisconsin network’s three-day event, May 21-23, some 70,000 vets and supporters reported to the landing zone, Lambeau Field, home field of the Green Bay Packers. WGVU in Grand Rapids, Mich., has already scheduled LZ Michigan for July 3. “It’s a perfect fit for local stations, to get us into the community,” said Timothy Eernisse, development manager."LZ" webinar registration opens
Registration is now open for the June 23 webinar on LZ Lambeau from the National Center for Media Engagement. The event, a belated welcome home to Vietnam vets, was the largest single outreach in public broadcasting, with around 70,000 participants over three days last month. At least three stations are now planning similar or scaled-down tributes; the webinar will feature reps from sponsoring station Wisconsin Public Television offering advice. A CPB-funded toolkit also is coming up.
Newspaper reports "radical restructuring" probable for New Jersey Network
The Daily Record of Parsnippany, N.J., today (June 6) takes an in-depth look at the challenges facing NJN pubTV and radio. It reports that state aid is drying up, staff cuts are “a near certainty” and a draft plan is attempting to “reinvent” the New Jersey Network. “A radical restructuring of NJN appears likely, and it’s not clear what the station will look like when it’s done—and whether a not-for-profit, independent charitable media organization can survive, let alone thrive,” it says.NPR, on the cutting edge of silliness
By now you’ve probably heard about NPR President Vivian Schiller’s controversial remarks about the future of radio at D8, the Wall Street Journal’s All Things Digital conference. But you may not have seen the hilarious video that introduced those remarks. Check it out, in all its “NPRness,” here. (“Auto-Tuned Things Considered.” Heh.)Chicago's WTTW to reduce staff by 12 percent
WTTW-Channel 11 will let go 12 percent of its staff, between 25 and 30 positions, due to poor corporate underwriting and a $1.25 million cutback in state funding, the Chicago Sun-Times is reporting. Station President and CEO Dan Schmidt said early retirement packages will be offered first, then layoffs. Schmidt also said executive compensation would be reduced 5 percent more, bringing the two-year reduction in top management salaries to 10 percent. A companywide salary freeze from 2009 will stay in effect until 2011. WTTW also will close its employee cafeteria. Also, on the radio side, $200,000 in expense cutbacks are planned next year due to soft sponsorship.Ken Burns lucks into opening pitch for historic game
Here’s a nice bit of publicity for PBS’s upcoming “Tenth Inning”: Docmeister Ken Burns will toss the first pitch at the long-awaited debut game of Nationals phenom pitcher Stephen Strasburg, according to the Washington Post’s D.C. Sports Blog. The date for Strasburg’s first major league shifted several times, and luckily Burns had been scheduled to appear at Nationals Park on June 8. The game is sold out, although online resale sites have a few remaining tickets for up to $1,000. Yes, for one ticket.Web analysis mentoring program assists PBS.org
A unique mentoring program provided PBS with analytics and advice for PBS.org, reports Internet Retailer. The digital analysis firm Web Analytics Demystified last month began the Analysis Exchange project to “provide training in web analytics to students and build up the industry’s base of analytics experts,” said founder and CEO Eric Peterson. “There are not enough qualified, experienced people doing web analytics in business.” The students, many of whom are already Internet professionals, receive training in web analytics and then research nonprofit websites for no cost to the organization. At PBS, the study found that, for example, the StumbleUpon recommendation site was generating the most traffic from social media for PBS.org,Shapiro takes on Apple's uncharitable policy
Jake Shapiro of Public Radio Exchange challenges Apple’s prohibition on iPhone applications that solicit donations for charitable causes in a guest article for Ars Technica. “The excuse that ‘Apple doesn’t want to be held responsible for ensuring that the charitable funds make it to the final destination‘ is a cop-out,” Shapiro writes. “Apple, of all companies, can’t credibly say it’s not up to the technical and logistical challenge.” The policy presents an “acute problem” for public media, which depends on listener contributions to support content that is “hugely popular” across Apple’s iTunes and iPhone/iPad platforms. Shapiro is responding to Ars Technica’s earlier reporting on how iPhone users reacted to “push notification” fundraising appeals from This American Life.Sutton plays out the scenario of radio oblivion by 2020
NPR President Vivian Schiller’s remarks at D8 yesterday don’t jibe with her reassurances that NPR “is not trying to do an end run around stations,” writes public radio marketing consultant and researcher John Sutton on his blog. If she truly believes that radio towers won’t exist in 10 years, then NPR’s long-term strategy must not include the audiences and revenues aggregated by local stations. “It can’t. Not if the towers are gone. So what replaces the $68 million NPR now gets in station revenues? It’s not all business support. That kind of money comes from listener contributions. With member stations out of the way, NPR has to be thinking about direct listener fundraising.West Virginia takes control of state pubcasting underwriting funds
The West Virginia Educational Broadcasting Authority, licensee for the state’s pubradio and television stations, on June 2 approved the transfer of underwriting funds from the West Virginia Public Broadcasting Foundation to state-controlled accounts, reports the Charleston Daily Mail. Critics are concerned the move may result in the authority making pubcasting programming decisions. The shift was requested by Kay Goodwin, state secretary of education and the arts, to improve accountability. “Currently, all proceeds from underwriting go directly to specific foundation checking accounts, on which no foundation directors have signature authority,” Goodwin said at the Wednesday meeting. “Foundation directors make no determination as to how funds are expended from those checking accounts.”FCC starting up Native Nations Broadband Task Force
The Federal Communications Commission announced June 2 (PDF) that it is seeking members for an FCC-Native Nations Broadband Task Force to help the agency increase broadband deployment and adoption on Tribal lands. The group will help develop a consultation policy, get input from Tribal governments, develop recommendations to promote broadband within its communities and coordinate efforts with other federal departments and agencies. Applications are due to the FCC by July 15 for the two-year appointments.
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