Nice Above Fold - Page 937

  • Blogger and public radio programmer Eric Nuzum is joining NPR in August as program and acquisitions manager, a new position.
  • NPR ombudsman Jeffrey A. Dvorkin addresses listener queries about the influence of fundraising concerns on the network’s editorial decisions in this column on NPR.org. Though he writes that there is a growing concern about the issue “both outside and inside NPR,” Dvorkin concludes that “it would take more than a few Wal-Mart underwriting messages” to corrupt the network’s journalistic integrity. (via Romenesko)
  • Big PDF of a conversation between Ira Glass, host of This American Life, and graphic novelist Chris Ware.
  • In a financial report (PDF), the c.f.o. of Pacifica warns that the network “cannot survive” its current level of spending on governance, which includes the cost of its elaborate board elections.
  • You won’t see Bob Edwards on TV anytime soon. “It’s so bogus,” he tells the Minneapolis Star-Tribune. “They put makeup on you. There are cardboard bookcases behind you. I can’t feel normal.”
  • “If you can make it through this show without crying, consider yourself a stoic.” The Boston Globe reviews Hank Williams: Honky Tonk Blues, an American Masters documentary debuting tonight on PBS.
  • Around Town, WETA-TV’s last regularly scheduled local series, is being reformatted into interstitial spots, reports the Washington Post. Television V.P. Kevin Harris, who decided to end the show’s 18-year run as a weekly, aims to reach more viewers by sprinkling segments on local arts and culture into primetime program breaks. “We think it’s changing into a really dynamic format,” Harris told the Post.
  • The St. Paul Pioneer Press covers Minnesota Public Radio’s groundbreaking on its big new headquarters in downtown St. Paul. (Reg. req.)
  • In a June 16 New York Times op-ed, NPR’s Juan Williams praised George W. Bush and advised him on how to attract more black votes. On Morning Edition, Williams regularly interviews members of Bush’s administration.
  • Nap Turner, a fixture on the Washington, D.C., jazz and blues scene and a deejay on Pacifica’s WPFW-FM, died yesterday. The Washington Post‘s Marc Fisher remembers him.
  • St. Louis Post-Dispatch media writer Eric Mink lauds Frontline’s Ofra Bikel in this column. (via mediabistro.com)
  • The Chicago Tribune profiles Chicago Public Radio host Gretchen Helfrich and her nationally distributed talk show, Odyssey.
  • NPR will invest $15 million over the next three years in news programming, the network announced today. The money comes from the payout of the invested Joan Kroc gift.
  • KVCR-FM in San Bernardino, Calif., may drop A Prairie Home Companion, reports the San Bernardino County Sun. Larry Ciecalone, g.m. of KVCR, tells Current that a new affiliation fee from Minnesota Public Radio has prompted the decision. The crunch also led to program cuts at WRVO-FM in Oswego, N.Y.
  • The Christian Science Monitor writes up low-power FM and, in an editorial, backs the Senate bill that would expand LPFM.