Nice Above Fold - Page 867

  • Sweetened deals for PBS sponsors

    The Los Angeles Times asks: just how far will PBS go to please a corporate sponsor?
  • NPR : We've Run Our Course, But Stay Tuned...

    NPR is ending its “Mixed Signals” blog but expects to create some new ones. “The scattershot nature of Mixed Signals didn’t really work,” writes JJ Sutherland, who asks the blog’s readers to share their ideas for NPR’s future blogs and online interactions with listeners.
  • John Sutton: NPR may be overstating cume

    Consultant John Sutton looks at how different methods of calculating cume audience for public radio produce varying results. “There is strong evidence that the National Public Radio network Cume is overstated by as much as 15 percent,” he says.
  • Nielsen-funded study to examine new media use

    Ball State University’s Center for Media Design will conduct a pilot study “examining how individuals consume traditional and emerging video platforms inside and outside the home,” reports Adweek. The study, commissioned by the Nielsen-funded Council for Research Excellence, is part of the ratings giant’s efforts to get a better handle on measuring emerging platforms such as video-on-demand and broadband video.
  • UMass Lowell to pull support for Open Source

    The University of Massachusetts-Lowell will end support for public radio’s Open Source as of December, reports the Lowell Sun. “It’s basically an expensive program that, given our financial situation, doesn’t make sense for the university,” said David MacKenzie, the university’s interim chancellor. “I just felt we had other things that were higher on the priority list.” The show’s producers “haven’t the least hesitation” in promising to keep it going, writes host and co-creator Christopher Lydon on Open Source‘s blog. “We need your help and encouragement as we have from the start, or maybe just a little more so,” he tells listeners.
  • Disney gains audience, buzz factor

    In the kid’s media biz, “the buzz today is around Disney,” according to the New York Times.
  • Andy Carvin reviews Google for Educators

    PBS TeacherSource blogger Andy Carvin is underwhelmed by Google for Educators, a new website for K-12 teachers.
  • CPB hires ad exec to lead public awareness campaign

    CPB hired ad and PR veteran Del Galloway to lead its Public Awareness initiative.
  • Moyers: "Tomlinson had a chilling effect"

    Bill Moyers on PBS, from a Boston Globe Q-and-A: “It’s a place where if you fight you can survive, but it’s not easy. The fact of the matter is that Kenneth Tomlinson had a chilling effect down the line.”
  • WRFG's Ebon Dooley dies

    Ebon Dooley, co-founder and broadcast director of WRFG-FM in Atlanta, died Oct. 12, according to the station. Dooley also represented affiliate stations on the Board of Directors of the Pacifica Foundation. Greg Guma, Pacifica’s executive director, called Dooley “a warm and courageous man.” “He was truly committed to the idea that radio could bring about social change, that the things we do make an actual difference,” said a WRFG host in the Atlanta Progressive News.
  • Marimow steps down as head of news at NPR

    More on the resignation of NPR’s Bill Marimow in the Baltimore Sun. “He was committed to excellent journalism, but the job also requires attention to other things, to radio programming and the connection of that programming to member stations,” Jay Kernis, NPR’s v.p. of programming, tells the paper. “His attention was focused on part of the picture, and we needed focus on a bigger picture.” Also, the latest version of the New York Times‘ article.
  • NPR's Marimow steps down as news veep

    Bill Marimow resigned last night as NPR’s v.p. of news and will become its ombudsman, reports the Washington Post. NPR staffers told the Post that Marimow and Jay Kernis, v.p. of programming and his immediate boss, had clashed about “the scope and nature of his responsibilities.” UPDATE: The New York Times has posted an expanded version of its original article. “Colleagues said that Mr. Marimow, a long-time print journalist and investigative reporter, was perceived as having failed to adapt quickly enough to radio, particularly as radio converges with the Internet,” the Times reports. “They also said that he was on the wrong side of an internal power struggle.”