Programs/Content
Kentucky Public Radio’s recipe for a statewide voter guide success
|
It takes some planning to create a voter guide that geolocates users, but the payoff is entirely worth it.
Current (https://current.org/current-mentioned-sources/amy-salit/page/272/)
It takes some planning to create a voter guide that geolocates users, but the payoff is entirely worth it.
We in public media often refer to our little world as “the system.” If we are, in fact, an interdependent system, fundraising to support fellow stations and staffers in distress is the kind of thing we can do to prove it.
“This is incredibly painful, despite all their efforts to make the decision easier,” said host Jay Smooth.
The bureau’s reporting aims to help listeners “better understand economic globalization and its impact on the Southwest.”
Thirty-seven percent of respondents who had listened to news in the week before taking the survey said they had listened to at least two hours of news.
Gov. Phil Murphy is poised to sign legislation to create a Civic Information Consortium by mid-August.
Henry Morgenthau III joined WGBH in 1957, just two years after it went on the air.
Capital Public Radio’s “Story Circles” brought wildly diverse residents face to face to envision a way forward.
We data-dive into the iTunes Top Podcasts, pitting podcasters vs. broadcasters and pubcasters vs. their commercial colleagues.
Citing a need to “adapt to the changing media landscape,” the public radio show focused on young classical performers will feature a series of guest hosts in place of Christopher O’Riley.
“The broad bipartisan support on the committee for these funds constitutes an encouraging vote of confidence,” said APTS President Pat Butler.
The $1.7 million backs efforts to help under-represented producers of podcasts network and incubate ideas.