Nice Above Fold - Page 711
FM, web audiences elusive so far for innovative Vocalo
Chicago Public Radio’s board, staff and executives didn’t mince words in their latest strategic plan about their bold experiment known as Vocalo. “As a website Vocalo must be seen as unsuccessful so far.”For NewsHour, one staff is stronger than two
They busted down newsroom walls, adding some space but much more humanity, doubling the number of desks, adding new editing stations and a fixed camera for quick shirt-sleeves standups. The broadcast and website now carry the PBS NewsHour title and they come from the same combined staff.University considering sale of Pittsburgh's WDUQ
Duquesne University is looking to sell Pittsburgh’s WDUQ, an NPR News and jazz station. “Over the years, DUQ has evolved into a station that is virtually independent of the university,” a university spokeperson tells the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. “This could be an opportunity for Duquesne to reallocate assets for the enhancement of our educational enterprise and for the station to thrive on its own. We believe that DUQ will be even stronger under ownership that focuses on radio.”
Gettogethers get schedules together
Nearly all of the year’s major public broadcasting conferences have been dated up. Latest to be announced was the Music Personnel Conference, April 21-23 in New York City. Two have changed their names: PBS Showcase reverts to “the PBS Annual Meeting” as it consolidates with the PBS Development Conference, which was postponed from last fall, and DEI’s Public Radio Development & Marketing Conference, which changes its first name to “Public Media . . .” A quick rundown: Jan. 12-15 — NETA Conference, Henderson, Nev.; Feb. 7-10 — APTS Capitol Hill Day and Members Meetings, Washington, D.C.; April 7-9 — PBS Technology Conference, Las Vegas; before the big National Association of Broadcasters NAB Show, April 10-15; April 8-10 —Public Radio Engineering Conference, Las Vegas, sponsored by the Association of Public Radio Engineers, ditto;April 21-23 —Music Personnel Conference, New York City, sponsored by the Association of Music Personnel in Public Radio; May 17-20 — PBS Annual Meeting, Austin, TX; June 1-4 — Public Broadcasting Management Association, Tampa;June 9-12 — National Federation of Community Broadcasters, St.HuffPost mistakenly reports "convergence" of pubcasting and Bush organization
So. Will the George W. Bush Institute “co-produce a public television show . . . in a rare convergence of public broadcasting and a partisan research organization,” as reported by the Huffington Post? Nope. That and more in this week’s PBS Ombudsman column.Pubradio growth strategies for the new decade
A report released today by Maryland-based Station Resource Group proposes new audience service goals for public radio in the next decade and recommends seven broad approaches for achieving them. Top recommendations of “Public Radio in the New Network Age” call for the field to “commit to a greater inclusiveness of people of color in every dimension” and to expand its journalistic output to become the “most trusted and most widely-used source of daily journalism.” In the biggest change from the draft that SRG issued last year, the report recommends that public radio “create a renewed vision” for music programming that incorporates both broadcast and digital platforms.
PBS announces Teachers Innovation Challenge for STEM
PBS is undertaking a multi-year initiative to recognize excellence in pre-K through 12th grade educators and practices in science, technology, engineering and math (STEM). The PBS Teachers Innovation Challenge was announced today, as President Barack Obama spoke at the White House on the second phase of its Educate to Innovate campaign. “America’s leadership tomorrow depends on how we educate our students today, especially in science, math and engineering,” the president said, praising the numerous partnerships that include PBS. The National Science Teachers Association is encouraging educators to participate in PBS’s Challenge. Fifty winners will be announced this spring.New partnership offers legal advice to indie digital journalists
The Online Media Legal Network will provide legal assistance to independent digital journalists via the Online News Association, the Citizen Media Law Project announced today. The association, part of Harvard University’s Berkman Center for Internet & Society, has more than 1,600 professional members who gather or produce news for digital presentation. The new collaboration offers them access to media, intellectual property and business lawyers nationwide. “Journalists starting up their own sites now need to focus on issues that help them create and sustain their businesses,” said Jane McDonnell, association executive director. “This partnership helps address one of the most critical—providing a legal safety net for small news operations.”"Washington Week" goes HD on Friday
Washington Week is upgrading to HD this week, tweaking everything from the set to the graphics. Senior Producer Chris Guarino tells Current the show has been using HD cameras and down-converting; after several months of preparation, “it was finally time to pull the trigger.” Lighting director Charlie Ide (in photo on the set) has been busy installing additional lights. He points out that viewers will see gradations of dark tones in the backdrops instead of just solid black. Two copper-colored columns widen the set to fill the new image format. Guarino also said a revamped website will launch at the end of the month.Smiley ends decade-long State of the Black Union
After 10 years, PBS talk host Tavis Smiley is ending his State of the Black Union event. He crisscrossed the country for the free gatherings, which served as “as a pulse check on how African Americans were fairing economically, politically and socially,” according to a statement. Tens of thousands attended in person and millions viewed the annual live broadcasts on C-SPAN, the statement said. In a video on his site, Smiley says that during the past 10 years, many venues for those discussions have developed — especially the Internet — which reduced the need for a once-yearly meeting. He also cited his work on a series of primetime specials for PBS that will put more demands on his time.Roadshow's "million-dollar" jade collection sells for much less
Remember Antiques Roadshow’s first million-dollar appraisal, filmed last June? You may have seen it in the season premiere last night. Owner Jinx Taylor was stunned when appraiser James Callahan said her Chinese jade collection from the Qianlong era could bring up to $1 million at auction. But Taylor sold the pieces in October and they didn’t bring nearly that much, according to the Maine Antique Digest. Instead, Taylor got $494,615 for the collection. She also consigned to the same sale about 30 other items she had not brought to the Roadshow; seven of those brought in another $350,523.FCC chairman's Facebook account hijacked by spammers
FCC Chair Julius Genachowski’s Facebook account was briefly taken over late last month by spam-spewing malware, the New York Times tech blog Bits reveals. On Dec. 31, Genachowski appeared to send Facebook friends a message saying, “Adam got me started making money with this.” Attached was a link to a nonexistent website. Facebook suspended the account, as per its policy. No comment from the FCC. Facebook said it takes security “very seriously” and has devoted “significant resources toward helping our users protect their accounts.”Nonprofit Metropolis news site to cover Philly area
Another nonprofit news site has come online, says the Philebrity blog. Metropolis covers the Philadelphia region. According to the site, it’s “dedicated to the notion that the time has come to stop worrying about the future of local journalism and to start creating it.” It’s a project of Tom Ferrick, a former columnist for the Philadelphia Inquirer and now an instructor at Bryn Mawr College. No word on funding.Hawaii PBS to launch unique statewide student news network
PBS Hawaii will “break national ground” with its new multimedia statewide middle- and high-school student news network, reports the Star Bulletin in Honolulu. The effort is dubbed “Hiki No,” meaning “can do” in Hawaiian. Station President and CEO Leslie Wilcox said in a blog post that the project has been in the planning stages for two years. Students will meet in a virtual newsroom and their reports will be shown on the web and Hawaii PBS, Wilcox said. At the helm is Susan Yim, a 20-year newspaper and nonprofit veteran. CPB contributed $200,000 toward the effort.More teachers using digital and streaming media, study finds
The number of K-12 teachers using digital media is up 7 percent from last year, according to a PBS-funded ongoing study by Grunwald Associates. The research and consulting firm has been tracking educators’ media use for PBS since 2002. Other findings: Of those teachers using digital media in the classrom, 80 percent are frequent or regular users. Seventy-two percent say they stream or download content from the Internet, up from 65 percent in 2008. And PBS content and websites are the top choice for pre-K educators.
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