Nice Above Fold - Page 799

  • Online flames over Feulner's legacy

    Blair Feulner’s exit from KPCW in Park City, Utah, is the “end of a sleazy era,” writes Salt Lake Tribune columnist Rebecca Walsh. Some online commenters point to “sleaze” elsewhere. The Tribune also reports that KPCW withdrew its late-filed FCC applications to build six new noncommercial stations. “Part of what you’re seeing is the effect that a stronger and more independent board of trustees is having on the direction of Community Wireless,” says Joe Wrona, spokesperson and executive committee member for KCPW’s licensee.
  • All FCC indecency policing is bogus, networks claim

    In a brief filed today with the Supreme Court, ABC, CBS and NBC claimed that the legal underpinnings of the landmark Pacifica decision and other content regulation precedents are no longer valid, Broadcasting & Cable reports. The filing is in support of Fox in an indecency case that the Court will hear later this year — the FCC asked the justices to reconsider a lower court’s finding that the commission was wrong to fine Fox for airing curse words uttered during a live awards show broadcast. The FCC wants the justices to consider only narrow legal questions specific to the case, but the networks in their filing urged the Court to broadly examine the legality of broadcast indecency enforcement as a whole.
  • Fan fights for weekly broadcasts of Rogers

    A devoted Mister Rogers fan has started a campaign to restore daily broadcasts of Mister Rogers’ Neighborhood to PBS stations. Brian Linder is protesting the network’s decision to feed episodes of the show on a weekly basis starting next month. “As long as children need to be nurtured, then there is a place for this program because there’s nothing else like it,” Linder tells the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette.
  • NPR acquires Public Interactive

    NPR and Public Radio International announced yesterday that NPR will acquire Public Interactive, PRI’s web services company. PRI will continue to manage sales and marketing for PI until the end of the year. A memo to NPR stations excerpted on PRPD’s blog said, “Public media’s web capabilities are dramatically under-resourced and clearly, we need to pool resources to develop our collective potential.”
  • How to liven up public radio without resorting to cannibalism

    Producer Doug Gordon offers his Modest Proposal for Making Public Radio More Entertaining and invites your comments and ideas on DirectCurrent.
  • Hutchison in for Stevens on Commerce Committee

    Sen. Kay Bailey Hutchison of Texas will replace Sen. Ted Stevens (Alaska) as the GOP’s ranking member on the Commerce Committee, which oversees broadcast legislation, while Stevens is under indictment, TV Week reports. Congress is about to recess for its August break and the party conventions and won’t be back in session until mid-September.
  • WMUB drops evening jazz, goes all-news

    WMUB in Oxford, Ohio, is adopting an all news/talk format next week. The format switch moves longtime evening host Mama Jazz to WMUB Jazz, a 24-hour HD-2 channel and online stream, and clears evening slots for repeats of the Diane Rehm Show and Talk of the Nation. The station invited listener feedback on its Directions blog, where a couple of commenters questioned why WMUB would drop the music programs that differentiated it from Cincinnati’s WVXU, a nearby NPR News station. “By focusing our format, we believe we will increase our ability to attract and retain new listeners as well as serve the great majority of current listeners,” said Cleve Callison, WMUB g.m.,
  • Food and beverage marketers seek kids online

    “The nation’s largest food and beverage companies spent about $1.6 billion in 2006 marketing their products to children [ages 2-17], according to a Federal Trade Commission report released Tuesday,” reports the Washington Post. About 200 million of that went to cross-promotional campaigns using films, TV shows, video games. “The Internet–though far less costly than television–has become a major marketing tool of food companies that target children and adolescents, with more than two-thirds of the 44 companies reporting online, youth-directed activities,” the report said. The FTC recommended that media companies license their characters to healthier food and drinks and that food and beverage marketers expand their efforts to educate kids about healthy choices.
  • Sen. Ted Stevens indicted

    Sen. Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), the longest serving GOP senator in U.S. history and a longtime pubcasting advocate, was indicted on federal corruption charges tied to his relationship with an Alaska oil exec. According to Senate Republican rules, Stevens will have to give up his position as vice chairman of the influential Commerce Committee, among other leadership positions, the New York Times reports.
  • Backlash against Garfield's take on online commenters

    Bob Garfield tells On the Media listeners what he really thinks about the “frustrating, maddening and extremely discouraging” online feedback he often receives from anonymous commenters and gets an earful from Ira Glass. Then, the social media consultant and blogger Derek Powazek weighs in: “Comments online are just like conversations in newsrooms – sloppy and stupid and often wrong. But they’re the raw stuff that great journalism starts from.”
  • Network builder Jack McBride dies

    One of public broadcasting’s master builders, Nebraska’s Jack McBride, died Monday from complications of lung surgery, the Lincoln Journal Star reported. He was 82. McBride was the first employee of the University of Nebraska’s TV department in 1953, put KUON on-air in 1954, won funding for a nine-station NET network in 1963, and added radio, a national school-video distributor, an intensive experiment with interactive videodiscs and many other ventures, serving until retirement until 1996. In 1990, NET was the first state net to lease a satellite channel to serve schools; today it has 303 downlinks across the state, according to the network.
  • No such thing as "race transcendence," says Smiley

    “There is no such thing in America as race transcendence, and Obama’s going to find that out real soon,” says Tavis Smiley in an AP story about how he and other journalists are addressing issues of race in the presidential campaign. Smiley started a blogosphere firestorm when he criticized Obama on The Tom Joyner Morning Show for not appearing on Smiley’s State of the Black Union cablecast on C-SPAN in February. “Just because Barack Obama is black, doesn’t mean he gets a pass on being held accountable on issues that matter to black people,” Smiley says in the article. “We have an awkward history about how to talk about race in the nation and in newsrooms,” says NewsHour and Washington Week’s Gwen Ifill, whose book The Breakthrough: Politics and Race in the Age of Obama will be published early next year.
  • Satradio merger okayed without pubradio provisions

    The compromise package of fines and consumer protections imposed by the FCC in exchange for approving the merger of the Sirius and XM satellite radio companies July 25 did not include key provisions sought by public radio advocates. Pubcasters lobbied members of Congress and commissioners to triple from 8 to 25 percent the spectrum capacity that the merged company would have to set aside for public interest and minority programming. They also asked the commission to require the inclusion of HD Radio receiving chips in satellite radio receivers, allowing subscribers to receive free digital signals from terrestrial stations. Neither provision was in the final agreement approved in a 3-2 party-line vote on Friday.
  • Next on eBay: Sting's bass, Andy's Fender Telecaster, Stewart's drums

    In the run-up to WNET/WLIW’s Madison Square Garden benefit concert Aug. 7 — the last performance of the reunion tour of The Police — four donors have bid a total of $39,700 on eBay for packages of front-row seats and other special goodies involving the band and their opening act, the B-52s. Stay tuned on eBay for Wave 2 of the auction, Aug. 4-14, which will dispose of autographed instruments from The Police. Meanwhile, tickets are selling for $125 and up, and seating is being expanded to include seats behind the stage. More on the stations’ Public Television Rocks campaign in Current, July 28.
  • Bryant Park fans keep up the fight

    Consultant Rob Paterson, a passionate fan of NPR’s soon-to-sign-off Bryant Park Project, has started The BPP Diner, a Ning site “where the show continues.” Another supporter gives instructions on how to turn a cereal box into an oversized postcard for registering unhappiness with NPR. And John Proffitt has compiled his favorite listener responses to news of the cancellation. “What I find remarkable is that so many in the audience ‘get it,'” he writes. “Making NPR’s decision here all the more puzzling / frustrating.”