Nice Above Fold - Page 897

  • Penn State’s pubTV and radio stations in Happy Valley dedicate their new building Sept. 8 and the TV station adopts the radio station’s call letters in October, moving from WPSX to WPSU. The combo shares a 96,000-square-foot building at the Innovation campus with the university’s continuing education, online World Campus and other outreach activities.
  • Public radio “just isn’t set up for innovation and it isn’t set up to cultivate new ideas and it isn’t set up to cultivate the next generation of things. And it seems like a waste to me,” says Ira Glass to the CJR Daily.
  • WUKY-FM in Lexington, Ky., restored Garrison Keillor’s Writer’s Almanac to the air Friday, shortly after canceling the segment because of concerns about “decency.” The station’s manager “may now have discovered that playing it safe is the most unsafe thing an educational station manager can do,” say two commentators with ties to Kentucky ETV.
  • Public Radio International will furnish Duke University with digital versions of some of its shows for use in classes, according to the Chronicle of Higher Education.
  • Democracy Now host Amy Goodman and her brother, David, have asked that the New York Times and a late reporter, William L. Laurence, be stripped of a Pulitzer Prize. They charge that Laurence delivered biased reporting on the bombing of Hiroshima and Nagasaki while on the U.S. military’s payroll.
  • Radio researcher Mark Ramsey warns against overusing digital radio for the creation of new formats: “Just because we can thin-slice a format into skinnier niches doesn’t mean we should.”
  • Marketplace will increase reporting on global sustainability and the economy with a $2.1 million grant from the Tides Foundation. The money will also support coverage on other American Public Media programs.
  • A Los Angeles Times story lays bare Ira Glass’s struggle to bring his radio show to television: “Time and again, Glass seemed unable to reconcile himself with the pace of a TV story — in which the mind reads images faster than the speed of a narrator, leaving him no room to do what he knows best.”
  • Dick Gordon, former host of public radio’s The Connection, writes in the Boston Globe on the show’s last day: “I’m still bewildered as to why the program was canceled.” “We have lost an important set of voices — actual conversations about important topics,” writes a fan in a letter to the Globe.
  • Public TV’s Now hired Maria Hinojosa as senior correspondent. Hinojosa will continue hosting public radio’s Latino USA.
  • Chicago’s WBEZ declined to sell underwriting to a local Air America affiliate, reports the Chicago Sun-Times.
  • Ken Tomlinson’s chairmanship of the U.S. Broadcasting Board of Governors, overseer of VOA and other overseas broadcast units, compares with his guidance of CPB, writes Franklin Foer in The New Republic Aug. 15 issue — asserting that both are marked by partisan purges, ideological hirings and closed meetings. NPR’s David Folkenflik filed a similar report for NPR in June. Both Foer and Folkenflik refer to the Foreign Affairs magazine article by Sanford Ungar [partial article online], a former VOA director and ATC co-host who is now president of Goucher College in Baltimore. Tomlinson and criticized VOA Director David S. Jackson respond to Ungar’s article here.
  • Three journalists quit a health program project at Connecticut PTV after top managers pressed them to interview execs of a hospital that partially funded the project, the Hartford Courant reported today [image of front page]. The Courant launched its critique of CPT yesterday with a piece criticizing its reduced local programming and the management of President Jerry Franklin. The newspaper points to Pittsburgh’s WQED as a station of similar size with more local production. No gloves are laid upon the Connecticut network’s radio wing.
  • Iowa’s Board of Regents hired Cindy Browne as the first executive director of Iowa Public Radio today. Browne, a Minneapolis consultant, longtime exec of Twin Cities PTV and later executive v.p. of CPB, competed for the job against John Stark, g.m. of KNAU-FM, Flagstaff, Ariz. The candidates visited Iowa campuses during the unusually public hiring process. Stations at three universities are combining to create the new network.
  • Fundraiser’s past a red flag no one saw

    Before Nancy Kruse’s fundraising company closed, leaving more than $400,000 in expected public radio proceeds unaccounted for, Kruse’s company bio described her as, among other things, “director of The Writing Center in San Diego” who “has a master’s degree in public policy from Georgetown University and, in 1997, was awarded a Eureka Fellowship for her leadership in nonprofit management.” However, Georgetown University has no record of her graduation and Eureka Communities does not list her as a past fellow. She did indeed run the Writing Center, once a nonprofit fixture of San Diego’s literary scene, but Kruse’s former co-workers, who knew her under the name Delaney Anderson, say she presided over the center’s collapse.