Nice Above Fold - Page 934

  • Martha Stewart Living will offer public TV stations a new half-hour program sharing the name of its Everyday Food magazine, WETA announced this week. Stewart’s company, struggling to reestablish itself with its founder going to jail, lost $19 million in the second quarter, according to TheStreet.com.
  • In Bethlehem, Pa., the Lehigh Valley’s public TV and radio stations, WLVT and WDIY, are talking merger, the Morning Call reports.
  • Bob Wright, NBC Universal c.e.o. and now talent spotter, answered an indie dream by picking a documentary on capital punishment out of the Sundance Festival lineup and buying it for network broadcast, the New York Times reported. “Deadline” aired July 30 on NBC’s Dateline. Kirsten Johnson, co-director and cinematographer for the doc, has run camera for several PBS programs.
  • The NewsHour‘s coverage of the Democratic National Convention is posting big audience gains for PBS, reports the New York Times.
  • The Washington Post has the details about Bob Edwards’ new XM Radio gig.
  • Bob Edwards is leaving NPR to host a morning show on XM Radio, reports NPR. The network’s initial reports that the show would involve Public Radio International were erroneous.
  • “Trying to track the unproven innuendoes and conspiracies in a Michael Moore film or book is as futile as trying to count the flatulence jokes in one by Adam Sandler,” says NPR’s Scott Simon in The Wall Street Journal.
  • PBS again taps viewer curiosity about old things

    A spin-off of Antiques Roadshow, PBS’s most popular series, will visit memorable guests from past installments and guide viewers through the ins and outs of the antiques market. Antiques Roadshow FYI debuts early in 2005 as a half-hour weekly magazine program. PBS will pair it with another new half-hour series to be announced next month. PBS announced the new Roadshow series July 8 [2004] during the Television Critics Association summer press tour. The network also announced a three-part history series, Guns, Germs and Steel, to be made with Lion Television and National Geographic Television. Antiques Roadshow FYI will answer “whatever happened to” questions about former Roadshow guests, provide expert advice to collectors and tell inside stories of the antiques world — mysteries of valuable antiques that have disappeared or tales of their discovery.
  • National Educational Telecommunications Association Bylaws

    NETA, a successor of Southern Educational Communications Association, provides a range of services to public TV professionals and stations, including program distribution, specialized councils for the various disciplines in stations, and an annual conference. It is based in Columbia, S.C. ARTICLE I: PURPOSE The purpose of the Corporation is exclusively educational: to develop, exchange, and share on a nonprofit basis the educational, instructional, and cultural resources of and with participating members of the Corporation so as to assist the development of instructional, educational, and cultural activities of educational television and radio stations: to produce, distribute, or otherwise exploit, or any combination thereof, for broadcast by radio, television, or otherwise, or any combination thereof, material which is instructional to the public on subjects useful to the individual and beneficial to the community; to further the utilization of other forms of electronic communications of educational material; to aid in developing and implementing interstate exchange of instructional, educational, or cultural material designed or intended for broadcast by radio, television, or otherwise, or any combination thereof; and to aid in developing and implementing interstate exchange of materials and information relating to the educational use of electronic communications.
  • WHUT in Washington, D.C., just launched its first pledge drive in eight years. “Our attitude is that every dollar we raise through this drive is a dollar more than we had last year,” says Jennifer Lawson, general manager.
  • “By default, documentary filmmakers are put in a dissident position because we are being critical of what’s happening in the world,” says film director Mark Achbar in the Washington Post.
  • Lehrer tells Brokaw, Jennings and Rather: “You guys are a hell of a lot more important than your bosses are willing to admit.” During a seminar yesterday on political reporting, Lehrer scolded the big networks for sparse primetime coverage of the party conventions. PBS’s senior newsman elaborates on Poynter Online: “Journalism organizations that say the conventions are not important are essentially saying the election of a president is not important.”
  • Cost of democratic safeguards is steep, Pacifica discovers

    Pacifica’s transition to a listener-elected board of directors carried an unexpectedly high price tag, and network executives are exploring cheaper alternatives. Last year the radio network enshrined its democratic principles in bylaws that empowered its staff and members of stations to elect Local Station Boards. Those boards in turn vote for the network’s national board. The bylaws were a crowning achievement to activists who spent years wresting Pacifica from an unpopular board, which had begun appointing its own members and installed a top-down governance style. But the additional governance costs have shocked some Pacifica leaders, who ask whether the cash-strapped network can sustain them.
  • Microsoft is considering selling Slate, its online magazine, according to the Washington Post and New York Times. NPR partners with Slate to produce Day to Day, its midday newsmag.
  • The Senate Commerce, Science and Transportation Committee approved today a bill that would allow for more low-power FM stations.