Nice Above Fold - Page 400

  • Jones steps down from helm of National Black Programming Consortium

    Jacquie Jones, executive director of the National Black Programming Consortium (NBPC) since 2005, has resigned, effective immediately, but will continue to produce for public media. Stepping in as interim is Leslie Fields-Cruz, programming director, who has supervised distribution of programs to PBS since 2001. NBPC, a 35-year-old nonprofit that is affiliated with the CPB-backed National Minority Consortia, develops, produces and funds public media content focusing on the African American experience, such as the Peabody-winning documentary, 180 Days: A Year Inside An American High School. The 2013 film, which Jones directed and produced, portrayed day-to-day challenges of students and educators at an alternative high school in in Washington, D.C.
  • Friday roundup: Kansas spares pubcasting funding; letter sheds light on dismissal in Ga.

    Plus: Vermont Public Radio spies a threat to its Montreal listeners, and another film draws from This American Life.
  • Thursday roundup: Sweaters for public media, This American Life in the U.K.

    Plus: NPR explains its analytics dashboard, and the Knight Foundation's interest in digital storytelling.
  • Show producers at WNYC turn to digital platforms to add fresh voices, engage younger audiences

    New blogs and podcasts have boosted web traffic and social media buzz for Studio 360 and On the Media.
  • PBS, PRX pick up Webby awards

    Idea Channel, PRX Remix and Religion & Ethics Newsweekly are among the winners.
  • PBS proposes video-on-demand service in FY15 budget

    PBS’s fiscal year 2015 draft budget includes the launch of a Membership Video on Demand service that will generate revenue by drawing on the network’s expansive library of content. MVOD members will get exclusive access to on-demand PBS videos, according to a budget document acquired by Current. “This is a critical product to help stations drive membership of the growing digital audience,” it said. The service will be integrated with PBS’s COVE video platform, and the public broadcaster anticipates hiring additional staff for the project. The budget proposal, now awaiting comment from stations, also requests a 2.5 percent increase in assessments from stations.
  • Tuesday roundup: Nycklemoe out at KPLU; Cohen retiring from PRPD presidency

    Plus: A columnist sounds off on Slate's pubmedia-esque membership program, and NPR unearths its Internet beginnings.
  • 'To the Best of Our Knowledge', a weekend staple from Wisconsin, gets makeover

    A host's departure led to an overhaul of the long-running show and competition among producers for the vacant seat.
  • CPB ombud criticizes KUNM’s handling of plagiarism charges

    The handling of plagiarism charges at New Mexico’s KUNM-FM drew criticism from CPB Ombudsman Joel Kaplan, who weighed in on the issue in an April 24 report. The charges were first made public by former KUNM reporter Tristan Ahtone, who left the Albuquerque station in March over what he cited as the station’s failure to respond to a fellow reporter’s plagiarism, as recounted in an April 15 story in the Santa Fe Reporter. In an email to his superiors at KUNM that a Santa Fe journalist later forwarded to Kaplan, Ahtone accused KUNM leadership of hiding three instances of suspected plagiarism from listeners.
  • Public Radio Capital rebrands, launches new projects 

    Pubmedia consulting company Public Radio Capital has rebranded as Public Media Company and announced a pair of upcoming projects that reflect its desire to expand its client base. The 12-year-old Denver-based operation announced the name change April 22, along with a website redesign. Public Media Company will also grow its operations with Channel X, an online marketplace for public media video content, and the Public Media Database, a performance-metric platform for stations. “The scope of our work has broadened pretty dramatically,” said CEO Marc Hand. Public Media Company had been working with joint licensees and pubTV stations for years before its name change.
  • CPB urges FCC to preserve public TV coverage in spectrum auction

    WASHINGTON, D.C. — CPB’s Board of Directors unanimously approved a resolution Thursday urging the FCC to avoid allowing “white areas” that would lack public television coverage after the upcoming spectrum auction and channel repacking. The resolution followed a meeting Tuesday in which network broadcasters and CPB management met with FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler to discuss the auction, set for mid-2015. It will clear bandwidth to be used by the burgeoning number of wireless devices. Television broadcasters face three choices: sell spectrum and get out of broadcasting, sell a portion of spectrum and share a channel with another broadcaster, or opt out of the auction.