Nice Above Fold - Page 844
Report: FCC can legally regulate broadcast violence
A draft of a long-awaited FCC report suggests that the Congress could ask the commission to regulate broadcast violence without violating the Constitution, according to the Los Angeles Times. A bipartisan group of lawmakers asked the FCC in 2004 to look into whether it could constitutionally regulate such content; unlike with indecency, the Supreme Court has never ruled that the FCC could regulate on-screen violence.Scripting News: WNYC spam
Blogger Dave Winer complains about the spam he’s received since donating to New York’s WNYC. “Of course I have asked to be removed from the spam list, and how tacky is it to ask for a pledge less than a month after getting a gift of $100.”NPR's social media summit
NPR has convened a meeting of high-profile bloggers and Web 2.0 thinkers in Washington, D.C., this week to discuss the network’s future in social media. Not surprisingly, there’s plenty of online, on-the-scene coverage from this crowd. NPR’s Andy Carvin has notes and videos on his blog. Robert Paterson: “The theme is becoming the new reality of the shift from Consuming to Creating.” Doc Searls: “Seems to me that public broadcasting is way too long on policy and bureaucracy and way too short on engagement.” (Searls is taking pictures, too.) Jeff Jarvis: “NPR should be a network of networks.”
Poynter Online - A Conversation With Corey Flintoff
Poynter’s website presents MP3s of conversations with Corey Flintoff, an NPR newscaster and reporter who recently has been filing stories from Iraq. “Flintoff says journalists should be cautious of recent reports about Iran’s role in the war as well,” writes Leann Frola. “He says he’s skeptical of the ‘so called’ evidence that Iran is providing roadside bombs that are killing soldiers like the ones he interviewed. You just don’t know when you can’t see it for yourself, he says.”Journalists "have a long way to go to regain the public's trust "
Frontline producer Raney Aronson chatted with Washington Post readers about the public affairs show’s state-of-journalism doc, “News War: Secrets, Sources & Spin.” The program, the first segment in the four-part “News War” series, debuted Tuesday and is available online.CPB seeks stations for outreach grants
CPB released a request for proposals this week for stations interested in participating in its community engagement initiative, a two-year collaboration between the corporation and the Harwood Institute for Public Innovation, a community organization consulting group based in Bethesda, Md. The project will offer participating stations–which must already be pursuing community engagement efforts–coaching, ongoing support and access to the Harwood Institute’s resources in order to strengthen and expand those efforts. The stations will receive $20,000 to fund their projects and reimbursement for the cost of any travel to workshops. CPB will pick 12 stations of various market and budget sizes and licensee types to participate by March 9.
Discovery Education targeted for more cuts
The corporate restructuring announced this month by Discovery Communications President David Zaslav will likely bring more cuts to its education division, according to Broadcasting & Cable.Chester seeks recommitment to noncommercialism
While MoveOn.org urges its troops to back “permanent funding and independence from partisan meddling” for pubcasting, media reform activist Jeff Chester wants to see a trust fund only if it supports a “truly noncommercial” system. Such a system would reserve 30 percent of its funds for news and public affairs, air kidvid without commercial underwriting and bring in half of its programs from independent producers. He advises: “We shouldn’t help save ‘Big Bird,’ if all the public is going to get is more of the same of what we have today.” Chester discusses his recommendations in Digital Destiny: New Media and the Future of Democracy, just published by the New Press.Johanson gets her direction
Former PBS interactive chief Cindy Johanson will join the George Lucas Educational Foundation next week as chief operating officer. The new position reports to Milton Chen, executive director and former education topper at San Francisco’s KQED. Lucas, the director of Star Wars, said he wants Johanson’s help in making the foundation’s Edutopia.org website “the best archive of films, articles and tools for creating successful schools.”APTS seeks DTV channel carriage by satcasters
House Telecom Chairman Ed Markey (D-Mass.) told pubTV managers yesterday that he’ll support their call for satellite TV operators to carry the digital TV signals of local pubTV stations. APTS wants DirecTV and EchoStar to carry their local signals if it carries those of any stations. APTS achieved a digital carriage agreement with large cable operators in 2005 after seeking federal action. A deal with smaller operators is expected soon, APTS said.NAB urges satcasters to stop using FM modulators
National Association of Broadcasters has asked the XM and Sirius satellite radio companies to stop using tiny FM transmitters to connect their satellite receivers with the audio systems in subscribers’ cars. NPR also has objected to the gizmos.Eye to eye, wing to wing
In March many public TV stations will air Winged Migration, the hit 2003 theatrical release that put the viewer in the sky, flying alongside geese and other twice-yearly migrants. The distributor, American Public Television, is recommending (PDF, page 3) Jacques Perrin’s doc for broadcast on Earth Day, April 22.Shadows in the corridors
The scene: a small conference room of the Senate Committee on Commerce, late on a February afternoon. The players: a senior committee staffer and her longtime acquaintance, a public broadcasting general manager. The author is president of Colorado Public Television (KBDI) in Denver. Illustration: Elene Usdin. ‘Well, the bastards have you right where they want you!” growled the aide, barely looking up from her papers spread across the conference table. “Is that how you greet an old friend?” the station manager grinned, as he settled opposite her, the rays of the late-winter afternoon sun glancing across the table. “Right,” she smiled back at him, “I know I can be brusque, and it’s probably been a busy day for you, visiting all the members of your delegation.Giovannoni shares credit for Grammy-winning album
David Giovannoni, an influential audience researcher in the world of public radio, shares credit for an album that won a Grammy last night. Lost Sounds: Blacks and the Birth of the Recording Industry, 1891-1922 took the award in the Historical Album category. Giovannoni served as production consultant and contributed album notes, technical assistance and records from his collection. (Via RadioSutton.)Technology360: Trusted Space interviews
“We must as an industry stop thinking within radio and television silos,” writes Dennis Haarsager on his blog. “It’s a distinction that is important to us, but is totally unimportant to our listeners and viewers in an on-demand world. But NPR isn’t chartered to worry about television, PBS isn’t chartered to worry about radio, and decades of bad blood makes it difficult to build a unified future. We need to get over it and we may need a new institution to do it. Separate systems won’t work.”
Featured Jobs