Nice Above Fold - Page 949

  • Chuck Niles, a renowned Los Angeles jazz deejay who called KKJZ-FM home since 1990, died yesterday at the age of 76, reports the Long Beach Press Telegram.
  • Ruth Seymour, KCRW g.m., admitted fault today and invited Sandra Tsing Loh to return to the air, but Loh declined.
  • New laws raising indecency fines are worrying some smaller broadcasters, including noncoms, reports The Oregonian.
  • The Washington Post profiles Joan Kroc, the unorthodox philanthropist who left NPR $200 million in her estate last year.
  • A Reuters article on Internet radio mentions KEXP and WAMU’s BluegrassCountry.org.
  • Also coinciding with the recent ruckus over broadcast indecency, KPCC-FM in Los Angeles cancelled The Play’s the Thing, a radio theater series, last month after naughty words were said on the show, reports the LA Weekly.
  • The Los Angeles Times reports that religious broadcaster Daystar submitted a new bid to purchase Orange County public TV station KOCE. Meanwhile, a pending deal to sell the station to the KOCE Foundation may be unravelling.
  • Don Lockett, formerly NPR’s chief technology officer, has written The Road to Digital Radio, a “management level overview” of the technology.
  • Public Radio Program Directors rescheduled its conference this fall to avoid a conflict between its old dates and the observance of Yom Kippur. PRPD is now set for Sept. 29 through Oct. 2 in San Antonio. See Current‘s Calendar for more events.
  • Sandra Tsing Loh briefly discussed her recent firing from KCRW on last night’s On Point, a show produced at Boston’s WBUR-FM. (RealAudio; Loh starts at 35:13.)
  • Anxieties over anti-breast fever in Washington prompted American Experience to re-edit a love scene in its upcoming documentary about Emma Goldman, according to the Washington Post.
  • The American Prospect previews the forthcoming Air America Radio, the talk radio network aimed at liberals that has so far hired away four denizens of public radio, including Katherine Lanpher.
  • Minnesota Public Radio is seeking applications for its Classical Music Initiative, an NEA-backed project to incubate new ways of presenting classical music.
  • The New York Observer discusses the return of Kurt Andersen–host of public radio’s Studio 360–to the pages of New York magazine, which he formerly edited.
  • PBS’s American Experience plans a three-hour film on the history of Las Vegas, according to the Miami Herald.