Nice Above Fold - Page 380

  • Former HiT president to take over leadership of Sesame Workshop

    Sesame Workshop has hired Jeffrey D. Dunn, former CEO of the HiT Entertainment Network, as its new CEO.
  • Plane crash claims lives of two WXXI board members, major donors

    Two major donors and board members of Rochester, N.Y., dual licensee WXXI died Sept. 5 after their plane crashed in the ocean off the coast of Jamaica. Both were 68. Larry and Jane Glazer, major figures in Rochester’s business community who both served on WXXI’s board and co-chaired the station’s $17 million Go Public capital campaign, were flying their single-engine plane from Rochester to Naples, Fla., when their aircraft became unresponsive. Larry, a registered pilot, was at the controls. The North American Aerospace Defense Command, which shadowed the plane after the pilot became unresponsive, reported seeing the pilot slumped over and the windows frosted, usually a sign of decompression.
  • Monday roundup: Iowa loves Doctor Who most of all; Sesame Street disappears from Netflix

    Plus: A former Shark Week host seeks redress from NPR, and NPR's ombud considers an accusation of plagiarism.
  • NPR adds social components, stand-alone site to Local Stories Project

    After launching with one station in 2011, the social media–driven project now has 36 participating stations.
  • The time Joan Rivers didn't become an NPR host

    With the death of Joan Rivers, Jay Kernis, former senior v.p. for programming at NPR, shared this remembrance of Rivers on his Facebook page yesterday. It’s reproduced here with his permission. Between 2001-08, I was SVP for Programming at NPR and someone told Joan that she would be perfect to host a public radio show. I had interviewed her many years ago for NPR and I knew from producers like Amy Rosenblum just how smart Joan was. I was thrilled to be invited for lunch at her remarkable home on the East Side of NYC. Wore a suit, arrived ten minutes early with a notebook filled with Rivers research.
  • Times Square's unlicensed Elmos spell headaches for Sesame Workshop

    Unruly street performers have prompted the children's TV producer to consider legal action and a city councilman to propose a new law.
  • Two public TV networks decline to air POV documentary After Tiller

    At least two public television networks opted not to air this week the POV documentary After Tiller, which profiles four late-term abortion providers and prompted a campaign among anti-abortion organizations. POV’s plans to air the film’s national broadcast premiere at 10 p.m. Sept. 1 spurred an Aug. 27 online statement from Judie Brown, president of the American Life League, who called the documentary “nothing short of pure propaganda intended to demonize the entire pro-life movement and drum up support for late-term abortion.” Several other anti-abortion websites urged visitors to contact PBS headquarters or PBS Ombudsman Michael Getler to protest stations airing the film.
  • Thursday roundup: Charlie Rose makes for healthier viewing; Sagal opens up on The Moth

    Plus: Jesse Thorn discusses the businesses of podcasting and radio, and a blogger argues for the greatness of Ken Burns.
  • NPR's Ellen McDonnell, executive editor for news programming, will retire after almost 35 years

    NPR’s news division is seeing the exit of another longtime executive with today’s announcement that Executive Editor for News Programming Ellen McDonnell will retire. McDonnell oversees NPR news programs including Morning Edition and All Things Considered. She started at NPR in 1979 and worked for nine years as executive producer of Morning Edition. “Ellen is as much a part of NPR’s DNA as she is a presence in our daily lives,” NPR’s Chief Content Officer Kinsey Wilson wrote in a memo quoted on the network’s breaking news blog. “She has touched and transformed nearly every aspect of NPR News, her creativity and zeal surpassed only by her generosity of spirit.