Nice Above Fold - Page 664
Former WBEZ program director kicks off Chicago Newsroom on pubaccess channel
Chicago Newsroom, a new weekly roundtable featuring a panel of local journalists and newsmakers, premieres Thursday (Sept. 9) on Chicago Access Network Television — in the wake of longtime Chicago Mayor Richard Daley’s Tuesday (Sept. 7) announcement that he will not seek reelection. Heading up the new show is Ken Davis, former talk show host and program director of Chicago Public Media WBEZ-FM (91.5), who also spent seven years as director of the city’s Municipal Television system. Chicago Newsroom will also stream live here.Instructional TV sales exec moves to NBR’s bigger league
In his career in the media niche of instructional television, Mykalai Kontilai worked with several respected names in public broadcasting as well as parts of Scholastic Inc., one of the world’s largest producers of educational materials for children and classrooms. Two of these key relationships for Kontilai or Teacher’s Choice, the ITV sales company where he was a major marketing presence, fell apart abruptly and after a matter of months — those with a past education chief of NETA and a former CPB finance exec. Kontilai finally left the ITV field after Scholastic ended its business relationship in 2006 because, a spokesperson told Current, the company was “dissatisfied with Mr.Instructional TV sales exec moves to NBR’s bigger league
In his career in the media niche of instructional television, Mykalai Kontilai worked with several respected names in public broadcasting as well as parts of Scholastic Inc., one of the world’s largest producers of educational materials for children and classrooms. Two of these key relationships for Kontilai or Teacher’s Choice, the ITV sales company where he was a major marketing presence, fell apart abruptly and after a matter of months — those with a past education chief of NETA and a former CPB finance exec. Kontilai finally left the ITV field after Scholastic ended its business relationship in 2006 because, a spokesperson told Current, the company was “dissatisfied with Mr.
Misspending seen, but IG doesn’t hit board diversity
KABF, the Arkansas community radio station audited by CPB’s Office of the Inspector General last year after a whistleblower complaint, may be subject to financial penalties of nearly $53,000 for mishandling CPB grant monies and over-reporting underwriting income in fiscal 2007. KABF didn’t comply with requirements for open meetings and open financial records, for example, nor did it maintain an active community advisory board, according to the IG. It also failed to provide public information required by the Communications Act, such as Equal Employment Opportunity disclosures and donor lists. The Little Rock station, long controlled by the left-leaning, grassroots organizing group Association of Community Organizations for Reform Now (ACORN), lacked internal controls to verify the accuracy of its financial records and track how CPB aid was spent during the fiscal year examined by auditors, according to an IG report that described KABF as “materially noncompliant” with CPB requirements.Journalists counted: 3,200 pros; 6,000 total
Public broadcasting has 3,224 professional journalists plus 2,770 nonprofessionals contributing to its reporting, making a total of nearly 6,000, according to a census by a team from Public Radio News Directors Inc. that was commissioned by CPB. Three-quarters appear to work in radio. Almost 80 percent of the professionals are full-timers, according to preliminary figures. The pros would amount to about one in six of total public broadcasting employees, based on the 20,000 total estimated for January in a CPB report. The nonprofessionals are roughly equally split between students and volunteers, according to early figures. PRNDI’s team, led by Michael Marcotte and including Ken Mills and Steve Martin, has submitted more detailed survey results to CPB.Cest la vie in French public TV
“In the usual custom,” writes the international Follow the Media blog, “the autumn schedule for French public television is announced in a gala Paris press conference hosted by the president of France Télévisions.” This is the season everything changes there. French President Nicolas Sarkozy had made reorganization of pubTV there a priority after his 2007 election. At that time Sarkozy described his vision for French public broadcasting as creating a “national champion” in the model of the UK’s BBC, the blog says. Critics, including former French pubTV President de Carlois, railed against what they saw as government interference with the public airwaves.
America Ferrera to host Independent Lens
Independent Lens has announced that actress America Ferrera — aka “Ugly Betty” — is this season’s host for the popular documentary series. Her portrayal of Betty Suarez on the ABC comedy has earned her an Emmy, a Golden Globe, and a Screen Actors Guild Award, as well as ALMA and Imagen Awards. The new season begins Oct. 19.A very merry Moyers
Columnist Bob Davis of the Anniston (Ala.) Star misses Bill Moyers on PBS. In his Sunday (Sept. 5) column, Davis recalls a long-ago trip to Marshall, Texas, to see the city’s holiday decorations. Lights, lights everywhere. “Then came the capper, the ultimate, at least for a news junkie like me,” Davis writes. “It was a string of lights in the shape of one of Marshall’s most famous sons, Bill Moyers, the journalist and former Johnson administration spokesman. The figure even had small circles of Christmas lights in the shape of Moyer’s eyeglasses.” No photo, so you’ll just have to enjoy that mental image of yours.Exploring "murky moral landscapes"
A new 13-week series of forums on ethics on an international scale begins this month on MHz Worldview, the channel announced Friday (Sept. 3). Global Ethics Forum is a weekly show produced by the Carnegie Ethics Studio, a division of the Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs. Experts will “navigate the murky moral landscapes presented by global politics, development, and international business,” the announcement said.Sesame Street characters help kids in Abu Dhabi "Reach for the Sky"
More than 6,000 children so far have turned out for the “Reach for the Sky” project during the month of Ramadan in Abu Dhabi, co-sponsored by Sesame Street, the Emirates News Agency said this week (Sept. 2). The public TV characters interacted with the kids for the science-based outreach. “We noticed the children’s enthusiasm to learn more about outer space while watching them working hard on making their own rockets and assembling and operating robots,” said Dr. Abdullah Ismail Abdullah, Senior Advisor to the Emirates Foundation for Philanthropy science, technology and environment program, which runs nightly at the Marina Mall Abu Dhabi throughout the Islamic holy month.News center with pubcasting partners surprises director with its success
The Wisconsin Center for Investigative Journalism, with its partners Wisconsin Public Radio, Wisconsin Public Television and the University of Wisconsin-Madison journalism school, has distributed more than 20 major reports to news outlets serving more than 2 million residents in the state and surrounding areas in just over one year, reports American Journalism Review. One big collaborative project in February examined the underreporting of sexual assaults on college campuses. That was a joint project among the Investigative News Network, the Center for Public Integrity, National Public Radio and five nonprofit investigative centers around the country. “It’s been an amazing first year full of more challenges and more successes than I could have imagined,” said Andy Hall, center director.Governor formally proposes severing NJN from state control
New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie put forth legislation today (Sept. 3) to end the state’s 40 years of financial support for the New Jersey Network by year’s end, reports the Star-Ledger newspaper in Newark. Under the plan, the state treasurer would take inventory of the network’s assets and determine how to sell or transfer them. This would be done by Nov. 1. It would also allow the treasurer to negotiate directly with an existing public broadcasting outlet and to accept proposals for the sale or transfer. Dudley Burdge, spokesman for the Communications Workers of America, the union representing most of NJN’s staff, told the paper that the plan “will be extremely destructive to the network and especially to its news and public affairs programs.”Habla Espanol? Check out new Vme Kids
Spanish network Vme, carried by many public TV stations, on Wednesday (Sept. 1) launched Vme Kids, the only around-the-clock channel for preschoolers who speak Spanish as the main language at home, according to a press release. It’ll run on AT&T’s U-verse channel 3058, with additional distributors to be announced.If it's Thursday, it's Mailbag time
PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler is digging out from three weeks’ worth of letters and emails, and has come up for air to ask the eternal question, what does an article on the New Yorker on the billionaire Koch brothers have to do with Nova?Tucson government channel and Arizona Public Media may merge
The City of Tucson is considering merging its government television station with Arizona Public Media, according to the Arizona Daily Star. The paper says that Arizona Public Media initiated the merger talks. The arrangement would call for the city to pay Arizona Public Media $600,000 yearly to produce content similar to what the city-owned Channel 12 produces now. The content could run both on Channel 12 and on any Arizona Public Media channel. Most equipment and all employees of Channel 12 would be transferred to Arizona Public Media, and the city would pay it for services. That would create a savings of $300,000 from Channel 12’s $900,000 annual budget.
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