Nice Above Fold - Page 374

  • Thursday roundup: USDA backs digital projects; PBS hires Fox exec for digital

    • Public TV stations in four states, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands will receive a total of $2.5 million in federal grants for upgrading transmitters, translators and production equipment. The grants from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, announced Wednesday, are part of the 2014 Farm Bill reauthorized by Congress. We’ll have to expense a trip to the islands to report back on their new equipment. • PBS has hired Don Wilcox, a former executive with Fox Broadcasting Corp., as v.p. of digital marketing and services. At Fox, Wilcox was v.p. and g.m. of branded entertainment, overseeing websites including Fox.com, 
  • Susan Sollins, e.p. of arts documentary series, dies

    Susan Sollins, executive producer of the biennial public TV series Art in the Twenty-First Century, died Oct. 13. Her age and the cause of death were not disclosed. In 1997, Sollins founded ART21, a nonprofit organization devoted to chronicling contemporary art and artists. In 2001, it launched Art in the Twenty-First Century, a series of short films focusing on contemporary artists both established and lesser-known. The seventh season debuts Friday. Sollins also directed William Kentridge: Anything is Possible, a feature-length film that debuted on PBS in 2010. Both that film and the series won Peabody Awards. “Susan was a visionary creative force and tireless advocate for contemporary art and artists,” ART21 said in a statement on its website.
  • Appeal to protect public TV's translators gets little traction with FCC

    Pubcasters fear that hundreds of translators could be threatened by the spectrum auction planned for next year.
  • Tuesday roundup: Pew finds NPR listeners lean left; NETA honors members

    Plus: Clocks for a few NPR shows are delayed, and comedians honor Jay Leno for a PBS broadcast.
  • Pubcasters can follow example of Texas Tribune, says editor-in-chief

    ADDISON, Texas — More than one-third of the roughly 300 attendees at the annual National Educational Telecommunications Association’s professional development conference this week are first-timers, making for one of the most crowded Newcomers Welcome sessions in years. And those newbies have plenty of sessions to choose from at the conference, which runs through Wednesday at the Hotel InterContinental in this Dallas suburb. Topics include development, collaborations, marketing, community engagement, FCC regulations, education, promotion — one session even analyzes the “complex, arcane” structure of the public broadcasting system. The conference opened Monday with keynote speaker Evan Smith, editor-in-chief of the Texas Tribune, addressing the power of public conversation.
  • Monday roundup: The need for Ferguson coverage; WFMU's story, in film

    Plus: WNET goes deep on poverty, and a jazz radio legend has died.
  • Success in sharing arts content inspires new programming co-ops for public TV

    Public TV stations are starting two new programming co-ops modeled after the Arts and Culture Major Market Group project, which gathers and repackages local content for more than 30 stations nationwide. WNET, which handles the arts project, now has producers compiling station contributions for a new technology initiative as well. The local segments feed into SciTech Now, a half-hour newsmagazine hosted by PBS NewsHour’s Hari Sreenivasan that premiered Oct. 1 in New York, Houston and Seattle. Another program-sharing pilot aiming for small and midsize stations, based at Maryland Public Television, draws from the popular genre of outdoors shows.
  • Friday roundup: PBS's Graham goes to Acorn; programmers offer NPR clock tips

    Plus: Grants to digital projects at PRI and WKAR.
  • This American Life story prompts $5M lawsuit over 1994 false confession

    A This American Life story may help a woman prove that Washington, D.C., police violated her civil rights when a detective obtained a false confession from her 18 years ago. Kim Crafton filed a lawsuit Sept. 3 against the Washington Metropolitan Police over the 1994 incident, which became the subject of an October 2013 TAL story. The report featured D.C. Officer James Trainum, who had interrogated Crafton, discussing what led to the false confession in her case. In February 1994, Crafton, who was 19 at the time, confessed to killing D.C. resident Lawrence O’Connell. Police had interrogated her for 17 hours.
  • Eight, Arizona PBS Nerd Walk inspires other community engagement events

    For participants in these stations' events, being a nerd is a source of pride.
  • NPR, WAMU limit use of Washington football team's name

    An NPR editor has recommended that network journalists avoid referring to the Washington Redskins by their name and should instead use “Washington” or “the team” as much as possible. Standards & Practices Editor Mark Memmott provided the guidance Oct. 10 amid a growing backlash against a name that is a racial slur. Memmott said he is not calling for an outright ban, but that use of the name should be curtailed under the organization’s policy regarding potentially offensive language. “The team’s name is the name and our job is to report on the world as it is, not to take a position or become part of the story,” Memmott wrote.
  • NPR podcast on Latino culture crosses over to radio

    An NPR podcast hatched from a friendship four years ago took a step in its evolution earlier this month, becoming a weekly radio show focused on Latino music and culture. Edited down from the weekly podcast’s 40 minutes, the half-hour Alt.Latino debuted Oct. 2 and is airing on stations in four markets, including Denver and San Francisco. The “alt” in the title refers to the show’s exploration of subjects that co-host and co-creator Jasmine Garsd sees as underreported by other media outlets. “We started off with a lot of indie music, but as the show grew we saw it more as delving deeper into Latin culture,” Garsd said.
  • Pubcasters take home regional Emmys, and more awards in public media

    Three programs that will run on PBS in the next year were recognized at the Jackson Hole Wildlife Film Festival.
  • Kantor brings wide-angle lens to PBS's American Masters

    The new e.p. wants to break old rules about who could or should be subjects of profiles.
  • Public TV freelancers in Writers Guild approve contract extension

    More than 200 members of the Writers Guild of America who work as freelancers in public TV have ratified a two-year extension of their current contract, which includes raises in salary minimums and additional pension contributions from WGBH in Boston and WNET in New York. The guild represents members working on national programs including Frontline, American Experience, Nova, American Masters, Nature and Great Performances. After four months of negotiations, members unanimously approved the extension Tuesday. It provides a 2 percent raise in minimum salaries retroactive to July 1, which increases to 2.5 percent July 1, 2015. Employers also will contribute an additional .5 percent to the Producer-Writers Guild of America pension plan.