Nice Above Fold - Page 715

  • Salary and funding woes hit WLIU's new owner

    Peconic Public Broadcasting, the new owner of WLIU 88.3 in Southampton, N.Y., could not pay most employees this month. And despite an impressive list of supporters for the station, large donations previously promised have not yet materialized, reports the Southampton Press. Station manager Wally Smith said Peconic didn’t expect to have to cover payroll this month as per its transfer agreement with former owner Long Island University. Smith expects the station will meet full payroll for its 13-person staff after the new year. “There’s nothing unusual about the fact that there are rough patches,” Smith told the paper, which referred to the “complicated transfer of the station” that is expected to be completed in early January.
  • Might AARP's first Spanish-language show come to PBS?

    AARP Broadcast, a media arm of the nation’s largest membership organization for adults 50 and older, just shot a pilot of Viva su Segunda Juventud, its first Spanish-language show, reports Multichannel News. There’s no distributor yet and an AARP spokesperson declined further comment to that reporter. Is the new program perhaps PBS-bound? AARP Broadcast currently produces two half-hour titles that aired on Retirement Living TV in 2009 but will be distributed to pubTV stations by Maryland Public Television starting in 2010. The partnership is a good fit, considering the pedigrees of both the shows’ hosts: On Inside E Street it’s Sheilah Kast of WYPR in Baltimore, and on My Generation it’s Cynthia Steele Vance, a WETA trustee and former pubcasting reporter.
  • Watchdog group urges public to petition PBS on Moyers and Now replacements

    Fairness & Accuracy in Media, a national news watchdog organization tracking bias and censorship, is encouraging the public to sign a petition urging PBS to replace the departing public affairs programs Bill Moyers Journal and PBS Now with “similarly thoughtful shows” that continue the tradition of “hard-hitting, independent programming that should thrive on public television.” It adds: “What replaces those programs will be a test of its commitment to the very foundations of public broadcasting itself.” Here’s a link to the petition.
  • PBS Teachers offers new classroom resources on economic, financial issues

    PBS Teachers is giving instructors a way to help students become more economically and financially literate through its new Access, Analyze and Act project. It’s a unique collection of educational digital media resources focused on the economy. According to a statement today from PBS, Eight lessons plans offer real-world case studies on four economic topics that explore economic and financial issues from a young person’s point of view. There’s an introduction on the site by PBS Now host and senior editor David Brancaccio encouraging teachers to make the study of economics a personal story, and a video appearance by Michael Mandel, chief economist for BusinessWeek.
  • Dino Train chugs onto People mag's "Best Kids Shows" list

    People magazine puts Dinosaur Train, the new PBS show from the Jim Henson Co., on its “Year’s Best Kids Shows” list, according to the Muncie, Ind., Star Press. Also included: Jungle Junction from Disney, The Superhero Squad Show on Cartoon Network, Nickelodeon’s The Fresh Beat Band and Cartoon Network’s The Garfield Show. (Garfield creator Jim Davis’s company, Paws Inc., is based in rural Albany, Ind., hence the announcement via the Star Press.)
  • NPR diversity consultant to sign on as v.p.

    Keith Woods, a Poynter Institute dean who was consulting with NPR on newsroom diversity, will join the network as vice president, diversity in news and operations, in February. The position, a newly created senior management role, will lead development and implementation of strategies for diversity within NPR and public radio as a whole. Newsroom diversity–as well as NPR’s commitment to training, hiring and retaining journalists of color–have come under criticism this year as NPR laid off staff, canceled its African-American oriented show News and Notes, and fired one of its few black newsroom managers. “We are extremely fortunate to have found a leader who offers a combination of strong journalistic credentials, diversity expertise and a passion for teaching,” said NPR President Vivian Schiller, in a news release.
  • PBSKids.org mention in junk-food survey "misleading," PBS exec says

    Many of the most popular websites for kids contain advertisements for junk food, reports Reuters on a study in the latest American Journal of Public Health. One of the websites examined was PBSKids.org, which averages 9 million unique visitors per month. Lesli Rotenberg, s.v.p. of children’s media at PBS, noted that the site’s appearance in the study is “misleading,” as it does not accept advertising nor market food products to children. The site carries logos of PBS sponsors at the bottom of some pages, including McDonald’s and Chick-fil-A. Children never see images of food products, she said, adding that the Fizzy’s Lunch Lab and Don’t Buy It pages actually teach kids about healthy eating — and how to avoid media influences in their purchase decisions.
  • N.C. pubcasters in "hissing contest" over doc filmed in state?

    A documentary on North Carolina is “caught in a hissing contest” between pubTV stations UNC-TV and WTVI, reports the News & Observer in Raleigh. Mike Lassiter, an attorney in Statesville, and videographer Scott Galloway captured businesses throughout the state and the people behind them in their film, Vanishing Americana. But it probably will only be seen in 13 of the state’s 100 counties, on WTVI alone. Statewide pubcaster UNC-TV refuses to show the film. “It’s a bit of an overstatement to call it a policy, but it’s a general rule that we don’t broadcast things originating from WTVI,” said UNC-TV spokesperson Steve Volstad.
  • PBS snags three Golden Globe nods

    PBS’s Masterpiece received three Golden Globe nominations. Nominees for the prestigious Hollywood Foreign Press Association’s honors were announced this morning. Nods went to Little Dorrit for best miniseries or motion picture made for television, and Kenneth Branaugh in Wallander (above) and Chiwetel Ejiofor for Endgame both in the category of best performance by an actor in a miniseries or motion picture made for television. The awards will be presented Jan. 17. Entire list of nominees here.
  • KCET-TV fave appears on The Simpsons

    Did you catch much-loved, uber-enthusiastic California pubcaster Huell Howser on The Simpsons Sunday? Who’s he? As the LAist blog says, “While we can’t say that no one outside of California knows who Howser is, it’s likely the cameo will only tickle locals who have seen Howser marvel over all manner of landmark, machine, or quirky Californian on his various PBS shows,” seen six nights a week on KCET as well as various other broadcasts on pubTV stations in Oregon, Nevada and Tennessee (he’s a Tennessee native). Also included in the blog item is a link to another, ahem, very quirky Howser tribute video, “Trippin’ with Huell Howser.”
  • From the latest edition of Current

    Delaware city officials threaten to oppose WHYY license renewalWork cut out for a Public Media CorpsBack to the Future: Ramp up public TV local news, PM Magazine-styleBig regional Emmy wins for pubcasters in Salt Lake and Dallas
  • Go along with Nova onto a Navy aircraft

    David Pogue, who’s hosting a four-part Nova for fall 2010 on materials science (working title: Stuff), has a cool Flickr set of his weekend adventures on a Navy aircraft carrier. (Don’t miss shots of the production team.) This segment will be on steel. The production team is also blogging its behind-the-scenes work at Inside Nova. That blog has been a “big hit,” says Nova spokeswoman Carole McFall. “I think people really enjoy hearing about what’s in the pipeline directly from our researchers and production teams.”
  • Sorry, no s'mores at PubCamp Webinar

    Wondering what the heck a PublicMediaCamp is? The next National Center for Media Engagement can help out with that. Its next Peer Webinar, at 2 p.m. Eastern this Wednesday, is “PubCamp 101.” Presenting will be Jonathan Coffman, PBS’s product manager, social media; and Peter Corbett, an event expert and CEO of iStrategyLabs. They’ll cover the history of PubCamps, why PBS and NPR are involved, and how to create a local PubCamp. Sign up here.
  • Most Writers Guild nods go to PBS; Frontline sweeps entire category

    PBS has 15 Writers Guild of America nods — more than any other broadcast or cable TV channel — for outstanding achievement during the 2009 season. Frontline took all six nominations in the documentary and current events category. In the documentary other than current events category, all six slots also went to pubcasting, five for American Experience and one for National Parks: America’s Best Idea. Bill Moyers Journal scored two nominations in news analysis feature or commentary, and Sesame Street also took two spots in children’s episodic and specials. The nominations are from both the Writers Guild of America, West, and Writers Guild of America, East.
  • Going to news has been done, but going up against WBUR ...

    Boston’s public radio landscape shifted Dec. 1 when WGBH moved all of its classical music programming to WCRB 99.5 FM and adopted a news/talk-dominated format for WGBH 89.7. The change, made possible by WGBH’s $14 million purchase of the commercial classical station from Nassau Broadcasting Partners, marks a strategic redirection for the Boston pubcaster that’s known throughout the world as the top producer of television programming for PBS. Its radio service, with a 100,000-watt signal extending far beyond Boston, had tried for decades to satisfy both music lovers and NPR news audiences. Like pubradio licensees in other major cities, WGBH now looks to super-serve both sets of listeners and attract new ones with two distinct formats.