Nice Above Fold - Page 856
Ohio county to lose NPR
Adams County in Ohio stands to lose its sole NPR station with the sale of WVXW-FM to a Christian broadcaster, reports the (West Union) People’s Defender. Cincinnati Public Radio is selling the station after acquiring it from Xavier University last year. The county’s Chamber of Commerce is urging residents to ask the FCC to block the sale.KQED asks members to give up the vote
In a ballot mailing to 190,000 local supporters, KQED asks its members to waive their rights to vote on major corporate decisions and elections of the board of directors. “This is about money and this is about responsiveness,” Board Chair Nick Donatiello told the San Francisco Chronicle. “It’s up to the members if they want to spend this money on elections. It could buy a lot of programming.”This American Gripe
A devoted fan of This American Life takes issue with Chicago Public Radio’s approach to offering the show’s audio online: “They could save money by encouraging filesharing of their shows instead of wasting money fighting it.”
Online Q&A with Frontline's Martin Smith
Martin Smith answered online questions about “Return of the Taliban,” his Frontline documentary that debuted on PBS last night.Louisiana g.m. arrested for sex solicitation
The g.m. of a public radio station in Shreveport, La., was arrested Monday for soliciting sex from a minor over the Internet, reports the Shreveport Times. The minor was in fact an undercover officer.The Doc Searls Weblog : Monday, October 2, 2006
Doc Searls shares six pieces of advice for public radio as it adapts to changes in media. (Via Jake Shapiro.)
FAIR finds rightward bias on "NewsHour"
In a study released yesterday, Fairness and Accuracy in Reporting tracked the guests appearing on PBS’s NewsHour and found that Republican males were over-represented as news sources, according to this AP wire story.KOCE supporters react to veto
“We’ll do everything we have to do to try and retain the license,” KOCE President Mel Rogers tells the Los Angeles Times, reacting to Gov. Schwarzenegger’s veto of a bill designed to end the legal wrangling for control of the station.Study finds PBS Kids promotes fast food too
When her preschooler began humming the jingle from a McDonald’s commercial, Cleveland pediatrician Susan Connor decided to analyze the sponsorship spots that surround TV shows for tots. She found that fast-food companies are the predominant sponsors of preschool fare on PBS Kids and the Disney Channel, both of which “promote themselves as ad-free,” reports the Associated Press. The study, published this month in the medical journal Pediatrics, concluded that the ads targeting preschoolers on Nickelodeon and sponsorship messages on PBS and Disney “took similar approaches and used similar appeals, seeming to promote the equation that food equals fun and happiness.”Whiting's Writings - Diatribes - War in Heaven
John Whiting reviews Uneasy Listening, Matthew Lasar’s latest chronicle of the battles within Pacifica Radio. “As the backroom plots continually recycle, the story begins to read like an endless reality-TV pirate game in which the protagonists are made to walk the plank and then try to get voted back on board,” he writes.calendarlive.com: MEDIA - Is there anything he isn't doing?
The Los Angeles Times profiles Tavis Smiley: “In an era where Jay Leno and David Letterman use guests as comedy fodder and Charlie Rose has become a courtier to the barons of the Eastern media elite, Smiley is a reminder of the days when talk show hosts were conversationalists, not sycophants or joke meters.”Conservatives should stick up for Tomlinson, NRO says.
National Review Online blogger Stephen Spruiell comes to Kenneth Tomlinson’s defense, urging fellow conservatives not to “stay silent while Democrats tear down Tomlinson’s reputation just because he’s a conservative.”With 'Radio Lab,' Krulwich and Co. Will Stretch the Shape -- and Sound -- of Reporting - washingtonpost.com
The Washington Post‘s Marc Fisher profiles NPR’s Radio Lab, which enters its second season this fall. “. . . [T]here is a music to these nonfiction stories, a beat and a rhythm that feel fresh, and that’s something that good old public radio dearly needs,” he writes.reviewjournal.com -- News - Staying Smooth amid the Storm
The future of KCEP-FM in Las Vegas is in doubt as the station’s parent organization, the Economic Opportunity Board, struggles with a debt of $1.9 million, reports the city’s Review-Journal. “We’re being sued by a sausage company,” says the EOB’s executive director. “That was definitely a low point.”Oberlin's alumni mag on Radio Lab
In a profile in the alumni magazine of Oberlin College, Radio Lab hosts Jad Abumrad and Robert Krulwich discuss the show and its ties to their shared alma mater. “It feels like an extension of conversations I used to have at Oberlin,” Abumrad says. “There’s a playfulness that connects it to college. I hope that’s not just regression.” A coda to the article features other Oberlin grads in public radio contemplating the connection between their college and their jobs.
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