Nice Above Fold - Page 993

  • Activists have been picketing Minnesota Public Radio to protest what they believe is biased, pro-war reporting on the network and on NPR. [Via randomWalks.]
  • Four New York radio stations jockeying for Manhattan listeners are stepping on each other’s toes in the process, raising worries about interference, reports the New York Times.
  • Pacifica is trying to save its deteriorating archives, which include recordings of many famous artists, authors, politicians and activists. [More coverage in the New York Daily News and the San Francisco Chronicle.]
  • Milwaukee Public Schools issued a Request for Proposals Oct. 15 to find an operator for its radio station, WYMS. (Microsoft Word file.)
  • Radio reading services worry that digital radio could interfere with their signals, reports Radio World. And in an RW editorial, an advocate for reading services urges the radio industry to support secondary audio services.
  • The FCC has struck a confusing section from a December 2001 decision that admonished WNCW in Spindale, N.C., for breaking underwriting rules. Several public radio organizations, worried that the decision threatened their business practices, asked the Commission to retract the vague language. It did–but not necessarily because it agreed with the pubcasters. Read the Commission’s decision (.doc, .pdf, .txt).
  • Congress and the recording industry must find a way to let college radio flourish, writes Michael Papish in The Washington Post.
  • The New York Times tells the story behind “The Vietnam Tapes of Lance Cpl. Michael A. Baronowski,” an NPR documentary that some stations are rebroadcasting for Veterans’ Day. You can hear the documentary online.
  • The New York Times reviews an American Experience bio of former President Jimmy Carter, winner of this year’s Nobel Peace Prize: “This program is a vivid reminder that a good president and a good man are not necessarily the same thing.” The two-part profile debuts Nov. 11 and 12 on PBS.
  • Sound Portraits Productions, led by independent radio producer David Isay, has just posted a study guide to be used in classrooms, along with its “Youth Portraits” series of stories.
  • Dottie Talmage, who managed KVNF-FM in Paonia, Colo., for seven years, died Oct. 28 at the age of 51.
  • Columnist Mona Charen accuses NPR of being liberal and anti-Israel.
  • Christopher O’Riley, host of public radio’s From the Top, confesses his admiration of Howard Stern in a Minneapolis Star-Tribune profile.
  • Independent radio producer Robin White has a website for his documentary Giving Back the Owens.
  • WAMU-FM in Washington, D.C., upset listeners yesterday when it accidentally rebroadcast a taped show that included “breaking news” about the start of the area’s sniper shootings.