Nice Above Fold - Page 805
Philly station aims to make viewers into producers
“In my 20 years in the business, I’ve never seen anything quite like this,” says a Pennsylvania pubTV leader of Philadelphia’s WYBE, which has reinvented itself to air short videos made by community members. An Associated Press article describes the channel’s offerings as “a grab-bag of museum-exhibit tours and Christian rappers, tattooed performance artists and a green-building primer by local corporate landlord Liberty Property Trust.”"Electric Company" to return to PBS
Production has begun on a revival of The Electric Company, the classic kidvid show from the ’70s. Media Life reports that the new Company will air on PBS Kids starting in January, with a writing team that includes veterans of Law & Order and the Will Ferrell film Blades of Glory. “The biggest advantage for ‘TEC,’ which enters a much more sophisticated kids’ TV environment than when it debuted 37 years ago, may be its devoted following among nostalgic adults, who will ensure that their children watch the show,” says the magazine. A New York Times article calls the new version “a weekly, more danceable version of its former daily self.”V-me offers preview of programming
V-me, the Spanish-language multicast channel, is set to introduce an original show aimed at preschoolers and, for adults, a reality series about new parents, reports MediaDailyNews. Two additional reality series are also in the works.
Horn named e.p. of Great Perfs
WNET has promoted David Horn from series producer to e.p. of Great Performances, the station announced today as the PBS Showcase Conference wrapped up in California. Horn has led four Primetime Emmy-winning productions and won two ASCAP Deems Taylor Awards for music programming. He came to Thirteen as a production assistant in 1979 and later created In the Spotlight and was e.p. of Sessions at West 54th, both pop music series.Lowell Award goes to Becton
CPB gave this year’s Ralph Lowell Award to Henry Becton Jr., who retired as WGBH president last fall and is now vice chairman. Becton discussed his career and WGBH in a Current Q&A in September.Knight Foundation backs project creating open source software for pubradio
The Knight Foundation announced a $327,000 grant to Quiddities, a web development company partnering with KUSP-FM in Santa Cruz, Calif., to develop and test a Drupal-based content management system tailored to public radio stations’ needs. The open-source software package, dubbed RadioEngage, will be designed to “promote local discourse, expand participation in the arts, and increase civic participation in local and regional communities,” the partners said in a news release. Quiddities is among 16 winners in the foundation’s second annual Knight News Challenge, and plans to share the new software package with other public radio stations. Full descriptions of this year’s News Challenge winners are posted here, and foundation President Alberto Ibarguen discusses this year’s submissions and grantees here.
NPR reviewing controversial installment of The Infinite Mind
NPR is reviewing whether the recent Infinite Mind program “Prozac Nation: Revisited” meets its editorial standards and practices, according to Ombudsman Alicia Shepard. The program, which NPR distributed on its Sirius satellite radio channel, criticized the media for overplaying the link between antidepressant drugs and violent behavior, and didn’t reveal that experts who appeared on the program had financial ties to drug companies that manufacture antidepressants. Also: the series itself received a substantial grant from Ely Lilly, maker of Prozac, two years ago, according to Shepard. “Being upfront about real or potential financial conflicts of interest is key to establishing credibility,” Shepard wrote.PBS picks thePlatform for online video
PBS has chosen thePlatform, an online video publishing and management company, to provide the backend of a pubTV online video distribution system, Jason Seiken, senior v.p. for interactive announced today at PBS’s Showcase conference in Palm Desert, Calif. Local stations will also be able to use thePlatform’s publishing system to post locally-produced video on their own websites and make it available to other stations’ sites. ThePlatform provides online video services for BBC, Gannett/USA Today and PBS KIDS Sprout, among other media companies.It seems a long time since Alistair Cooke
Scottish actor Alan Cumming will host Masterpiece Mystery!, the summer season of WGBH’s imported drama series, PBS announced today. (In January, Gillian Anderson started hosting the winter season, Masterpiece Classic.) Cumming has played roles from Chekhov and Euripides, as well as in X-Men and a James Bond flick, and won a Tony as the emcee in Cabaret. Cumming’s website. He’ll introduce a season that includes the conclusions of Foyle’s War and the Inspector Lynley series and a spinoff of Inspector Morse.Google announces copy/paste social networking app
Not specifically pubcasting-related but perhaps of interest to station webmasters: Google’s new Friend Connect aims to enable even small websites to incorporate social networking aspects by pasting some code into their pages. The tool offers free access to social apps. It also makes it possible for site users to import profile and friend information from established social networks such as Facebook.NPR advance team in China reports on earthquake's aftermath
NPR’s Melissa Block recorded a live account of yesterday’s earthquake in central China and later reported from the scene of a collapsed middle school where parents grieved over the bodies of their dead children. Raw audio of both scenes, as well as coverage from yesterday’s edition of All Things Considered in which Block describes being surrounded by an angry mob and forced to leave the middle school, are posted here. The ATC reporting team, including co-host Robert Siegel, were on assignment in a city near the quake’s epicenter, gathering material for a series of special broadcasts planned for next week.KCET to rep BBC newscast, WLIW creating competitor
The BBC has signed a new distributor for the nightly half-hour BBC World News newscast for public TV stations — KCET in Los Angeles. New York’s WLIW, which has syndicated the show for nearly 10 years, will produce a new evening newscast for pubTV. Your World Tonight (working title) will debut in October when the BBC contract ends. Marc Rosenwasser, a former CBS Evening News senior producer, will produce the new show. The British pubcaster — which increasingly uses its own platforms, notably its BBC America cable channel, to distribute its productions beyond the sceptered isle — acknowledges it doesn’t want the pubTV newscast knocking heads with its new 60-minute cable newscast.Slate questions drug companies' influence on pubradio's Infinite Mind
Slate has stirred up a new controversy over improper editorial influence in pubradio programming: a recent edition of The Infinite Mind is under fire for failing to reveal that four mental health experts contributing to “Prozac Nation: Revisited” have financial ties to drug companies that manufacture anti-depressants. The recent episode, in which host Fred Goodwin and all three interviewed guests agreed that the media overplays the link between violent behavior and antidepressants, is portrayed as an example of medical reporting that is “in a class by itself for concealing bias,” according to Slate. Producer Bill Lichtenstein responds here and additional commentary, including a response from Slate’s writers, is here.James Day, 89
He put San Francisco’s KQED on the air in 1954 — with Jon Rice, the station’s legendary first program director — and in 16 years demonstrated much of what “public television” could become, years before the Carnegie Commission put forth the new name for educational TV.Jay Iselin, former WNET president, dies at 74
John Jay Iselin, ebullient president of New York’s WNET from 1973 to 1987, died of pneumonia May 6, the New York Times reported today. He presided as the station matured and developed such major PBS series as Nature, Live from Lincoln Center and the NewsHour. The former Newsweek reporter went on to head Cooper Union, the free-tuition arts-architecture-engineering college in Manhattan. Iselin’s predecessor, James Day, died less than two weeks earlier at age 89.
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