Nice Above Fold - Page 811
What's the hold-up in creating a legal system for licensing music for podcasts?
It’s inertia that’s preventing the music labels and other rights holders from setting up a system to legally incorporate music into podcasts, according to David Oxenford of the Broadcast Law Blog. In a Q&A on Hear 2.0, Oxenford says it’s not a simple process to set up fee schedules and make songs easily available for podcasts and other on-demand uses. “There’s no question it should be done. Right now, you have to go through each and every record company and negotiate separately for every song, and for the small guy it makes it almost impossible.”Money, not continued pubradio service, talks in bids for Salt Lake's KCPW
There’s a bidding war going on for KCPW-FM/AM in Salt Lake City. Current licensee Community Wireless has told former g.m. Ed Sweeney that he needs to match a $3.7 million offer from religious broadcasters if the station is to remain a locally controlled NPR news outlet, according to the Salt Lake Tribune. The Community Wireless board had given Sweeney until March 15 to mount a viable bid for the station. Last week, Wastach Public Media, a newly formed Utah non-profit established by Sweeney, offered to pay $2.4 million for KCPW-FM. “I feel betrayed,” Sweeney tells Tribune blogger Glen Warchol.FCC sets settlement deadline for first batch of MXed noncom FM applicants
The FCC will process its backlog of mutually exclusive applications for noncommercial FM stations by identifying and working through groups of MXed applicants one at a time. First up are MX groups with four or fewer applicants, all 263 of whom are listed here. As of Friday, these applicants have 30 days to negotiate settlements. Afterwards, the commission will apply its point system before awarding licenses, according to this public notice. [Both links are PDF downloads.] The point system adopted by the FCC to evaluate MXed noncommercial applications is explained here and here.
Many different takes on Stern's exit from NPR
Gravity Medium has compiled a list of news reports and blog commentary on Ken Stern’s exit as NPR ceo. Here’s one that’s missing: Bob Garfield of On the Media interviews Current‘s Karen Everhart on Stern’s troubled relationship with pubradio station managers.Haarsager responds to tech bloggers angered by Stern's ouster
“This is not a coup by Luddite station CEOs who want to stop or slow down effective responses to [the] very types of disruptive change we’ve been trying to strategically accommodate,” writes NPR interim CEO Dennis Haarsager, in a blog post attempting to explain why Ken Stern is no longer at the helm of National Public Radio. Haarsager is responding in part to Jeff Jarvis of Buzzmachine, who characterized Stern’s ouster as a protectionist takeover by “local yokel” stations that feared his digital distribution strategies. [Be sure to read the comments to both blog entries.] Responding to a request for the NPR Board to explain in more detail why Stern was forced out, Haarsager writes: “I cannot comment in detail on this personnel matter except to say that Mr.Does Andrew W.K. now get an obscure nickname?
Rocker Andrew W.K. has written a song for public radio’s Fair Game with lyrics based on the words of John McLaughlin, host of The McLaughlin Group. Listen to “McLaughlin Groove” here.
CBS online exc moving to NPR
Dick Meyer, editorial director at CBSNews.com, announced yesterday in his online column that he is moving to NPR. Meyer didn’t specify which post he’ll assume, but PaidContent.org reports that Meyer will serve as editorial director for digital media.Nickelodeon vet takes over at Hit
Variety reports a change in the top job at Hit Entertainment. CEO Bruce Steinberg is stepping down, and Jeffrey Dunn, a former c.o.o. at Nickelodeon, is taking over. Dunn created Noggin with Sesame Workshop while at Nickelodeon, the mag reports. Hit, a partner with PBS in Sprout, owns Barney and Bob the Builder, among other shows.WYPR board chair cites disagreements in Steiner firing
The dismissal of talk show host Marc Steiner from WYPR-FM in Baltimore was related to internal disagreements, reports the Baltimore Business Journal. “It became obvious that attempts to resolve disagreements on a variety of matters had failed,” wrote board chair Barbara Bozzuto in an e-mail to WYPR members. “Declining ratings were emphasized as the reason for the show’s cancellation out of a desire to avoid any public discussion of complicated personnel issues.” Steiner tells the paper he was unaware of the issues cited. In the Baltimore Sun, a WYPR board member defends the decision. “Board members were aware that this decision would likely engender a vocal, negative reaction,” writes John Machen.Reasons for Stern's exit have more to do with dimensons of leadership than his stance on digital media
In a New York Times story on Ken Stern’s departure from NPR, board Chairman and interim CEO Dennis Haarsager downplays the notion that Stern’s undoing was his push to put NPR content on multiple digital media platforms. Haarsager agrees that Stern’s digital agenda didn’t have wide backing within pubradio, but says the digital issue was “not a source of tension” that led to his exit. “[T]here are about 20 different dimensions you evaluate leadership on,” Haarsager tells the Times. NPR has not conducted a national search for a top executive in 10 years and decided to do so “sooner rather than later.”Ken Stern resigns as NPR CEO
CEO Ken Stern is leaving NPR, the network’s board of directors announced today. The board did not explain why Stern was leaving, but several unnamed sources suggested reasons to NPR’s own Frank Langfitt. Dennis Haarsager, chair of NPR’s board, is taking over as interim CEO. Washington Post: “NPR Leader Out After Board Clash.” LA Observed has the memo from Haarsager.FCC will consider proposal to reallocate TV spectrum for FM
The FCC will seek comment on a recommendation to reallocate television channels 5 and 6 for FM broadcasting, according to a notice released yesterday [scroll to page 35]. The proposal, advanced via a petition filed by Maryland-based Mullaney Engineering, addresses the “gigantic pent-up demand for additional FM spectrum” and will help redress the inefficient allocation of spectrum on TV channels 2-6, according to the Mullaney petition. Rec Networks reports that the proposed reallocation could open up an additional 60 FM channels. The FCC will not accept comments until the notice of proposed rulemaking on broadcast diversity (MB Docket 07-294) appears in the Federal Register.NPR's new HQ to be property tax-free for two decades
NPR will not have to pay property taxes on its new home near Washington’s Union Station for 20 years, reports the Washington Post. The tax abatement offered by the District of Columbia, worth an estimated $40 million, was a major reason NPR opted to remain in Washington, D.C., rather than move to nearby Silver Spring, Md., home of Discovery Communications. Mediabistro posted internal memos and an FAQ about the move here.No guarantee for local bid to take over Salt Lake's KCPW
The station manager charged with creating an independent nonprofit and viable financial plan to purchase KCPW in Salt Lake City launched a website appealing for public support. Ed Sweeney, who gave up his job at KCPW last week, established the Utah nonprofit Wasatch Public Media and is working with Public Radio Capital on a bid for the station. Even though Community Wireless, KCPW’s current licensee, gave Sweeney first pass at creating a plan for KCPW to retain its staff and its current NPR news/information format, there’s no guarantee that Sweeney’s plan will be chosen over those of other potential buyers, he writes on the website.Ken Burns pens op-ed in support of PBS
In a piece for the Los Angeles Times, Ken Burns responds to “grandstanding politicians who believe that public television must be de-funded” and “misguided cultural critics who mistake our mission and demand of us something we are not.” PBS is “obligated to serve the public in a number of decidedly unsexy ways,” he writes, and while it isn’t as fast-paced as commercial TV, pubTV persists in “doing things well and doing things that last.” In response to suggestions that PBS should have to compete in the marketplace like other media outlets, Burns writes, “Many blessing have flowed to America from that marketplace, but I am certain that none of the films I have made in the last nearly 30 years could have been produced anywhere but at PBS.”
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