Nice Above Fold - Page 959

  • After steering KCTS through a major downsizing, interim chief Bill Mohler agreed to lead the station as its permanent president, reports the Seattle Times. “What happened is you get caught up in it with the people side,” Mohler told the Seattle Post-Intelligencer. “You have a collection of some of the most creative people that I’ve met in my entire life that are working here … and it was their jobs on the line.”
  • NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin defends his network’s coverage of the capture of Saddam Hussein, which angered some listeners by interrupting their Sunday morning routines.
  • Intel is developing technology that could improve the quality of large-screen digital televisions and substantially lower their price, reports the New York Times.
  • NPR newswoman Peggy Girshman writes about the net’s cookie mafia in the Washington Post.
  • Radio broadcasts of the Metropolitan Opera have introduced music lovers and opera stars alike to the genre, reports the New York Times (registration required). ChevronTexaco’s decision to stop backing the broadcasts has put their future in doubt.
  • It’s been nearly 10 years since the infamous O.J. Simpson low-speed car chase, and L.A. TV stations have made recording such pursuits a staple of their news coverage. TelevisionWeek borrows from This American Life to recall one of the stranger examples.
  • Religion & Ethics NewsWeekly features prominently in a TelevisionWeek story about how TV news covers religion in the post 9/11 era.
  • How about a glass of NPR wine? The New York Times reports that the net will partner with Signature Wines, a company that offers custom labeling for businesses and individuals, to promote its NPR wine club.
  • 'Piano Jazz’ host Marian McPartland, a dame at jazz crossroads

    Piano Jazz hits its silver anniversary in April, a landmark that surprises nobody more than venerated host and pianist Marian McPartland. “It’s kind of amazing that we’ve managed to be on the air for 25 years and no end in sight,” she says with a laugh. “I sort of envisioned doing it for a few months, or at the most a year. It never occurred to me that people would like it as much as they do.” Today it ranks among public radio’s most popular music programs, airing on 241 stations and reaching almost 400,000 listeners a week. McPartland, 85, who has hosted the show from its inception, started the gig at an age when most professionals are starting to daydream of sunny retirement homes.
  • Fellows seriously injured in rush-hour accident

    James A. Fellows, a longtime leader in public TV, remained in critical but stable condition last week after being hit by a car in Bethesda, Md., Dec. 2. Since the accident he has had five major operations at Bethesda’s Suburban Hospital to mend broken bones and other damage. Though he still faces many risks, doctors said last week he was trending for the better, according to Fellows’ friend Pete Willson. On Dec. 10, the attending physician smiled for the first time, Willson said. Fellows was struck in front of his house while walking across a busy commuter route during evening rush hour.
  • Monkey reminds you that Joan Kroc’s gift to NPR doesn’t excuse you from supporting your local station. “now, what i want to know is, what did mrs. kroc’s estate get as a member incentive? millions of npr coffee mugs? carl kassel recording me [a] message on their answering machine? a tub of mama stamberg’s cranberry relish?” Monkey’s site also features some pics of KERA p.d. Abby Goldstein.
  • NPR Ombudsman Jeffrey Dvorkin addresses NPR’s online underwriting and possible e-mail e-litism in his latest Media Matters column.
  • “It was clear to us then that PBS could not retreat from Death of a Princess without compromising the integrity and independence of the network,” recall Larry Grossman and Newton Minow in Columbia Journalism Review. The former PBS leaders compare their handling of the controversial PBS docudrama with CBS’s cancellation of The Reagans.
  • Classical Public Radio Network host Mark Sheldon died Monday of cancer. More from Colorado Public Radio.
  • Tavis Smiley says in the New York Daily News that listeners complained when he enlisted the conservative J.C. Watts to provide commentaries. “I had people demanding to know if I’d lost my mind,” he says. “But my belief is we need to hear and examine different perspectives, not just our own.”