Nice Above Fold - Page 709
Robben Fleming, one of CPB's best presidents, 'seemed to me the least interested in himself'
David Stewart, one of CPB’s original employees and later a writer and Current contributing editor, sent this letter after the death of Robben Fleming, a former president of CPB. To the editors: I was very sad to learn of Robben Fleming’s death in the Feb. 28, 2010, issue of Current newspaper. He served as CPB’s president from 1979 to 1981 — sadly, one of the shortest tenures for, in my view, one of the best presidents in the organization’s history. Predictably, his obituary described a number of important decisions that provided CPB with considerable prestige, as well as new audiences for public television.Public media conference to focus on high-impact projects
“Real Stories, Real Impact” is the subject of this year’s Making Your Media Matter confab sponsored by the Center for Social Media at American University. The meeting, In Washington on Feb. 11 and 12, will examine “methods for assessing various elements that contribute to high-impact public media projects,” according to the center. Register online.Blogger criticizes "Between the Lions" CD in Chick-fil-A kids' meal
Tim Graham, a blogger with the conservative site Newsbusters, was upset during a recent drive-through visit to Chick-fil-A. Included in his daughter’s kid’s meal was a Between the Lions CD, with logos of WGBH and Mississippi Public Broadcasting. “This underlines how blurry the line is between public broadcasting and private-sector merchandising,” he writes on the site that calls itself “the leader in documenting, exposing and neutralizing liberal media bias.” The “Hypocrisy!” in the headline refers to PBS President Paula Kerger’s comments at the recent winter press tour that children’s programming on commercial stations is built mainly around opportunities to sell toys to kids.
Frontline delays "Dancing Boys" documentary
Frontline has delayed its Dancing Boys of Afghanistan documentary due to concerns over the safety of a boy in the film, Broadcasting & Cable reports. It’s about the custom of “Bacha Bareesh,” in which boys are sold to men who keep them as concubines. In the film, an Afghan journalist infiltrated one of the rings and spoke with several boys and their “masters.” It was schedule for Jan. 19; a repeat of A Death in Tehran will air instead.BNET says San Francisco news hybrid is a no-go; Berkeley dean denies report
The deal to start up a local nonprofit news organization in San Francisco (Current, Oct. 13, 2009) has fallen apart, according a BNET blog report quoting anonymous sources. KQED, the public radio and TV outlet that was to partner with the journalism school of the University of California in Berkeley to launch the organization with backing from philanthropist Warren Hellman, is beset by internal turmoil, reports David Weir, a journalist/blogger and former KQED exec. “Sources have told me that the various parties to the negotiations have not been able to come up with a consensus over how to run the new news organization, and as of today, financier Hellman’s patience has apparently run out.”Strategies for pubradio audience growth lack priorities, Sutton says
Public radio marketing consultant John Sutton is troubled by the “something for everybody” approach outlined in “Public Radio in the New Network Age,” the final report from the CPB-backed Grow the Audience project. “‘Do everything’ is not a strategy,” Sutton writes on his blog. Even if decision-makers follow the report’s recommendation to focus resources on stations in the top 50 markets, “the reality is that there aren’t enough resources to serve the objectives listed….Further prioritization is necessary to make smart, effective investments in audience growth.” The report, written by the Station Resource Group after an 18-month research and consultation project, is “silent” on how these priorities will be set, Sutton notes.
Start social networking before disaster strikes
In an interview with BayNewser, Andy Carvin explains how NPR News is using social media to track developments and find sources in Haiti. The network’s social media guru also offers some insights about how to cultivate contacts and reliable news sources over time.PBS stunned at volume of preschoolers' video streaming: 87.5 million streams in month
PBS was expecting online streaming of PBS Kids shows for the 2-5 set to be popular when it started late last year; the usage of shows for older kids, 6-plus, which went online earlier, had fluctuated around 2 million video streams a month. They were not prepared for the tots’ appetite: 87.5 million streams in December. PBS kept mum about the number until the press tour and the NETA Conference this week. Station folk broke into applause Wednesday as PBS education chief Rob Lippincott announced the figure. Streaming of the little kids’ programs rises in the evening as the grownups’ NewsHour grabs the TV sets, he said.$25 million in financial aid flows to pubcasting stations
Today pubcasting stations received their share of $25 million in fiscal stabilization grants (Current, Dec. 14, 2009) from the Consolidated Appropriations Act from CPB. According to the act, the funds are provided “to maintain local programming and services and preserve jobs threatened by declines in non-Federal revenues due to the downturn in the economy” at both public TV and radio stations. President Barack Obama signed the bill Dec. 16, with funds to be distributed within 45 days. Station grants were calculated on a multiplier of each station’s three-year average community service grant, a CPB statement said.Press tour Nature panel includes Pugsley the 13-foot python
Nature e.p. Fred Kaufman remained surprisingly calm yesterday considering he was sitting next to a man with a 13-foot Burmese python named Pugsley around his torso at TV critics press tour in Pasadena (PBS photo). Kaufman and herpetologist Shawn Heflick answered questions from reporters about the upcoming episode, “Invasion of the Giant Pythons.” Questions included: How does one go about helping a person being crushed by a python? (Pour alcohol on it, snakes despise that.) Kaufman also discussed the impetus for the show: Pythons, some dumped by owners, are quickly reproducing in the Florida Everglades; the episode takes a close look at how the species is having a serious impact on the environment.Overall, "good years" for PBS, critic comments from press tour
Barry Garron, reporting on the TV Critics Association winter press tour in Pasadena for the Hollywood Reporter, tells Current the PBS executive session was generally heartening. “Except for the struggle for donations during these recessionary times, these are good years for PBS,” Garron notes. “No one is accusing them of controversial programs, following a hidden agenda or pushing their liberal ideas on children. Even better, with the Democrats in control, there are no credible threats to funding. [PBS President Paula] Kerger even said they’re getting an 8 percent increase in federal aid.” Regarding Kerger’s critical comments on commercial children’s programming, “In some respects, her attack .Noncoms may fundraise for Haiti, FCC announces
The Federal Communications Commission has given permission to noncom stations to raise money for Haiti earthquake relief (PDF). Rules usually limit NCE (noncommercial educational) stations to fundraise on the air only for their own benefit. The FCC has waived the rules for past disasters including Hurricane Katrina (Current, Sept. 19, 2005), the Southeast Asia tsunami, and the Sept. 11 terror attacks (Current, Sept. 24, 2001). UPDATE: Twin Cities Public Television has set up a page to refer visitors to Minnesota’s statewide Haiti relief effort. Is your station raising money for victims of the massive earthquake?Four duPont-Columbias awarded to pubcasters
Four of the 2010 duPont-Columbia Awards announced this morning went to public broadcasting news programs, including investigative reports by American RadioWorks and Frontline/World. NPR News received a silver baton for “The York Project,” a series of conversations with voters about the role of race in the 2008 election. P.O.V., a PBS series showcasing independent film, won for The Judge and the General, a documentary about the prosecution of human rights violations in Chile. The first-ever duPont Award for a Web-based production was presented to MediaStorm and photojournalist Jonathan Torgovnik for a multimedia presentation about Rwandan children born of rape.NPR reports to appear on PBS pubaffairs web site, Kerger says at press tour
PBS President Paula Kerger said NPR news content will be included on the upcoming pubaffairs website, according to insiders at the Television Critics Association winter press tour in Pasadena, Calif. (Kerger speaking at the conference, right.) She said the site also will compile reporting from PBS news series including Frontline, NewsHour and the new Need to Know weekly series from WNET. That content, along with NPR stories, will provide viewers and web users with a central place to go for news of the day, Kerger told critics. The Washington Post reports that Kerger also explained that PBS’s subscription to more detailed Nielsen ratings is not for making decisions based on those numbers but to help funders determine the number of viewers they’re reaching.Kerger criticizes commercial TV children's programming
In kids’ programming on commercial networks, “The line between commerce and content are blurred beyond recognition. . . . Advertising is so thoroughly embedded into the content,” PBS President Paula Kerger told reporters at the Television Critics Association’s winter press tour, continuing this week in Pasadena, Calif. According to the Hollywood Reporter, Kerger said she welcomes an upcoming FCC review of the 1990 Children’s Television Act, which requires that stations run a minimum of three hours of educational programming weekly.
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