Nice Above Fold - Page 895

  • Some BBC coverage of Hurricane Katrina “sounds mean-spirited and not particularly helpful; it probably evokes knowing glances and smirks among editors and producers back in London,” says NPR ombud Jeffrey Dvorkin.
  • The Public Radio Program Directors conference has a blog this year.
  • WUOM in Ann Arbor is is the most popular station in its market, boasting an 11.1 share, according to the Ann Arbor News.
  • Observers in the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot yesterday criticize WHRO-TV/FM for ending local pubTV production, but with revenues down 27 percent in two years, station management cut staffing, which is down to 79 — a 23 percent drop in the past four years.
  • The FCC is letting noncommercial broadcasters in New Orleans rebroadcast commercial fare in the wake of Katrina, according to Radio World.
  • “Look, any time there’s a contentious exchange in the White House press room, it makes the press look bad,” said NPR’s Mara Liasson on Fox News Sept. 7.
  • Commercial TV veteran Paul La Camera was named g.m. of WBUR-FM in Boston. La Camera has served as president of a Boston ABC affiliate since 1994. He is WBUR’s first permanent g.m. since Jane Christo resigned last fall.
  • pbs.org launched NerdTV, a web-exclusive weekly TV series from technology columnist Robert X. Cringely.
  • Accuracy in Media calls for an investigation into pubcasting’s campaign this summer to restore $100 million in CPB funding.
  • The parent company of Minnesota Public Radio is backing a Friendster-like social networking website aimed at public radio listeners, reports the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.
  • The New York Times checks in with American Routes host Nick Spitzer as he prepares a post-Katrina episode of his show. “I wanted it to be music of reflection and solace and also hope, an attempt to put some balm on this,” he says.
  • David Freedman, g.m. of WWOZ-FM in New Orleans, considers the future of his devastated station in an e-mail posted on WFMU’s blog: “This is much bigger than WWOZ, although this station feels like it needs to be at the forefront of the bigger issue: the decimation of a culture.”
  • Now, the PBS news magazine hosted by David Brancaccio, will produce a one-hour town-hall meeting on the response to Hurricane Katrina on Friday, Sept. 16. During last week’s episode, Now revisited two special reports from 2002 that examined the implications of the disappearing Mississippi River Delta and the danger that hurricane flood waters could drown New Orleans.
  • Hurricane Katrina literally hit close to home for NPR and ABC news commentator Cokie Roberts. “All 11 houses in the Roberts family compound outside Gulfport, Miss., were destroyed,” the Philadephia Inquirer reported. “I spent a huge amount of my life on that piece of property,” Roberts told the paper. “It’s very much home.”
  • CPB Web resources: The corporation has posted information about the status of pubcasters affected by Hurricane Katrina; links to assistance resources for broadcasters; and Katrina-related news from NPR and PBS.