Nice Above Fold - Page 882
- Washington Week with Gwen Ifill will change its name Feb. 17, adding the words “and National Journal.” The National Journal, an elite (subscriptions cost $1,800 a year) chronicler of the federal government, may someday share stories with the PBS program but will start as a partnership in marketing and fundraising, the New York Times reported today. Two National Journal advertisers, Boeing and Chevron, will join the program.
- To make up for Congress’s 1 percent rescission from this year’s appropriation, the CPB Board juggled its budget Friday, moving $2.8 million to the Community Service Grant pool. The money comes from the “system support” part of CPB’s budget, which also assist stations, covering some satellite and copyright costs.
- Former KCRW commentator Sandra Tsing Loh weighs in on the Chris Douridas affair: “[I]f there is a silver lining for Douridas, it’s that at least Ruth Seymour is not avowing his mentally (sic) instability directly to the press, and that she does not consider him, as she did me, a public danger.” (Current‘s coverage of Loh’s 2004 firing from the station.)
- Former Pacifica host Marc Cooper delivers a tirade against his former employer and points out that Greg Guma, recently hired as the network’s executive director, has endorsed arguments that the widely accepted account of what happened on 9/11 is untrue. “Look forward, if you can, to more programming and fund-raising that would be better suited for a UFO cult than for a serious or credible political and cultural opposition,” Cooper writes. Meanwhile, the g.m. of Pacifica’s KPFA-FM in Berkeley has resigned. In a letter on KPFA’s website, he says, “This past year has provided me with a memorable introduction to KPFA/Pacifica’s complex and challenging environment.”
- The Boston Globe profiles Gather.com, the blogging and social-networking website backed by the parent company of Minnesota Public Radio. “We think of Gather as doing for user-driven content what eBay did for user-driven retail,” says Gather founder Tom Gerace. “Today, the problem in the blogosphere is finding what you want.” The startup announced last week that it received another $6 million in equity financing, some from Southern California Public Radio, a sibling to MPR.
- “In the radio business, if someone’s not criticizing you for something, you’re probably not doing your job,” says Gerry Weston, who has stepped down as president of the Public Radio Partnership in Louisville, Ky. A Louisville Courier-Journal article presents a host of speculations about why Weston has resigned, reportedly under pressure from his board of directors. “It’s a complex situation,” says a former employee.
- “[NPR’s leaders] still believe it is the responsibility of the journalist to focus the attention of the listener on issues that are important,” says Ted Koppel in a Wall Street Journal article about network TV reporters recently hired at NPR. NOTE: New host Michel Martin will have to adjust to a lower salary. “I’m going to save a lot of money on haircuts,” she says.
(Courtney and husband fined for La. contract)
Louisiana Public Broadcasting Executive Director Beth Courtney and her husband paid a $10,000 fine after the state ethics board determined that TV production subcontracts involving Bob Courtney’s company violated conflict of interest laws, reports the Baton Rouge Advocate. (The ethics opinion is posted here.) Accuracy in Media, a right-wing media watchdog group that endorsed Kenneth Tomlinson’s campaign to balance public broadcasting, issued a news release calling for a federal investigation into whether Beth Courtney, a CPB Board member who opposed Tomlinson, violated CPB’s ethics code.
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