Nice Above Fold - Page 723
Sesame gets actual street
The street running through Kiwanis Park in Charleston, Ill., will be permanently renamed Sesame Street on Sunday, according to the Daily Eastern News of Eastern Illinois University in the central-Illinois city. Mayor John Inyart will read a proclamation to kick off a day of activities hosted by pubstation WEIU and a local commercial radio station. Participants are encouraged to dress as their favorite Sesame Street characters, and have a chance to record their favorite moments from the show.NPR and iBiquity agree to support lesser power boost for HD Radio
NPR joined with the proprietor of HD Radio technology, iBiquity Digital Corp., to propose that the FCC quadruple the permitted digital FM power level. In a statement released today they agreed the plan would protect analog FM broadcasts from interference while significantly improving reception of the digital HD Radio signal — especially by receivers indoors, where the digital signal sometimes can’t penetrate. Last fall, after other broadcasters suggested a ten-fold power boost for the digital signal, NPR field tests found the larger increase would interfere with regular FM broadcasts. If the FCC takes NPR’s and iBiquity’s advice, it would authorize a blanket 6 dB increase, from 20 dBc to -14 dBc.Mister Rogers gets a bronze tribute
A sculpture Fred Rogers was unveiled today in Pittsburgh as a tribute to the children’s television icon. He’s seated and tying his shoe, facing the city skyline, reports the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. It’s titled, “Tribute to Children.” The bronze piece created by sculptor Robert Berks is nearly 11 feet high and weighs more than 7,000 pounds. Berks may be best known for his bust of President Kennedy in Washington’s Kennedy Center. Also, don’t miss the nice audio tribute on WDUQ’s news blog, from Duquesne University in Pittsburgh. (Photo: Family Communications Inc.)
Blogger examines MPR/APM executive salaries; $600,000 for president
The member-supported local news site MinnPost is dissecting salary numbers of Minnesota Public Radio execs. Blogger David Brauer did “a little spreadsheet crunching” of MPR’s IRS 990 forms for the year ending June 2008. Bill Kling, president and CEO of Minnesota Public Radio/American Public Media, made $373,254 in compensation and benefits from MPR/APM, $180,000 from American Public Media Group (APMG) and $48,000 from Greenspring, MPR’s for-profit arm.Holiday furloughs hit WNET
Employees at WNET in New York will have three unpaid days off between Christmas and New Year’s Day, according to Crain’s New York Business. Senior managers at the pubTV station will have five days of unpaid leave. Production staffers involved in daily shows will be exempt.Kids' writing contest revived after Rainbow's end
PBS is picking up where Reading Rainbow left off, launching a new annual writing and drawing contest for children in cahoots with public TV stations around the country. More at current.org.
Viewers get grouchy over "Pox News"
Now here’s an unexpected question: Did Sesame Street take a poke at Fox News? That’s what PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler is looking at in this week’s Mailbag. In the Oct. 29 episode, Oscar the Grouch hosted the Grouch News Network, covering “all grouchy, all disgustin’, all yucky” news. But another character thinks it’s not grouchy enough and threatens to switch to “Pox News, now there’s a trashy news show.” Viewers wrote Getler to complain that the character actually said “Fox” News. “I can’t really blame them,” Getler writes. “When I went and watched the tape for the first time, I thought I heard ‘Fox’ as well, perhaps because of the association one assumes when you hear ‘news’ right after the word.”New York, New York, that Sesame town
New York magazine is celebrating 40 years of Sesame Street with a pageful of fascinating factoids in its current issue. A few: The show was almost called 123 Avenue B. Designer Charles Rosen based the set “on an amalgam of streets in Harlem, the Bronx, the Upper West Side,” according to the mag. The very first episode on Nov. 10, 1969, was sponsored by the letters W, S and E, and the numbers 2 and 3. And Big Bird is still played by Caroll Spinney, now 75 years old. In other Sesame news, don’t miss the new show opening.ITVS announces fictional exploration of a future America
Eleven fictional mini-features, each 15 minutes, created by indie filmmakers will ponder what America may look like in the future. The ITVS project, FutureStates, will run exclusively on its new website in March 2010. ITVS said in a statement that the industry will get a peek at the series at AFI’s Digifest on Thursday in Los Angeles.Columnist points out African-American absence on WTTW's "Chicago Tonight"
WTTW-Channel 11 in Chicago doesn’t have one African American reporter or anchor on staff, writes longtime Chicago media columnist Robert Feder on the WBEZ/Vocalo blog, noting the situation “seems like a throwback to some other era.” Chicago Tonight, the station’s public affairs program, has four white and two Hispanic staffers, he says. A WTTW spokesperson told Feder, “Because we reflect Chicago and we’re so Chicago focused, we know we’ve got to have African American talent. . . . It’s very front of our minds.” However, “given the station’s financial straits,” Feder notes, “it’s not likely to happen any time soon.”PBS marks four decades today
Happy birthday, Public Broadcasting Service! Yes, PBS turns 40 today. The U.S. Census Bureau took the opportunity to recognize the system and its “excellent programs and objectivity” in a short news release today. Let’s hope that your station is having birthday cake. Or at least donuts.Colorado pubTV joins with local journalists for state news project
Colorado Public Television on Monday announced a partnership with local journalists for a news website and an investigative news show covering the state. The project, Colorado Public News, “is responsive to the reduction of significant investigative journalism that has occurred nationally and locally with the shrinkage of news staffs in print and broadcast media, including the closure of the Rocky Mountain News,” Wick Rowland, president and CEO of Colorado Public Television, said in a statement. Former Rocky Mountain News investigative reporter Ann Imse will be editor-in-chief. “Since traditional advertising isn’t funding in-depth journalism, we are choosing the PBS model of producing great journalism and asking for tax-deductible donations to fund non-profit, public journalism,” Imse said in the statement.WXEL sale hits a paperwork snag
A local group interested in buying the license for WXEL FM and TV in Palm Beach, Fla., has not submitted required documentation, according to owner Barry University, reports The Sun Sentinel. But the Community Broadcast Foundation of Palm Beach and Treasure Coast disagrees. “Now they’ve come back and say they want documentation of your funding,” said Green, who told the paper that Barry officials have refused to meet with his group. “If you meet with us, you can ask us anything you want.” The FCC may have to intervene, according to one source. Station ownership has been in flux for years.Schiller responds to NABJ by "laying out the numbers"
NPR released its staff composition stats after the National Association of Black Journalists questioned the network’s commitment to diversity. “I couldn’t agree more that NPR must increase the diversity of its staff–particularly in management and editorial,” NPR President Vivian Schiller wrote in an Oct. 29 letter to NABJ leaders. “I believe our diversity efforts are best served through transparency, so we are going to lay out the numbers for you.” NPR’s management pool, which NABJ expressed concern about in an earlier letter to Schiller, includes 47 staff who describe themselves as people of color; that is nearly 24 percent of 199 managers at all levels of the network.Father of pubcasting to talk about "Saving the News"
Ward Chamberlin, one of the founders of American pubcasting, is one of four journalists who will discuss “Saving the News” Wednesday evening at Yale University, according to the New Haven Register. Chamberlin was COO of the Corporation for Public Broadcasting at its inception in 1967, and helped create PBS and NPR. Others in the panel are David Greenway, former editor of the editorial and op-ed pages of the Boston Globe; Robert Kaiser, associate editor and senior correspondent at the Washington Post; and John Yemma, editor of the Christian Science Monitor.
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