Programs/Content
Kentucky Public Radio’s recipe for a statewide voter guide success
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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/aria-velasquez/page/480/)
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.
The Detroit Journalism Cooperative has “much more work to do,” says its convener.
The public broadcaster is “reimagining the very core” of its “educational value proposition.”
The lawsuit was filed in October as part of the investigative center’s research on a story about a spate of high-dollar embezzlements at the school.
We contemplate the challenges and the opportunities involved in expanding public television to new audiences.
With podcast revenues and downloads climbing, the NPR board discussed underwriting standards and the impact on broadcast underwriting.
A public radio producer lays out an argument for how unfettered advertising on podcasts compromises public media’s mission.
Writing for The Seattle Times, a communications professor and former reporter and producer for the city’s KCTS-TV argues that the station should sell its broadcast spectrum and cede local public TV service to Tacoma’s KBTC. “Our region deserves better,” writes Barry Mitzman, now a teacher of strategic communications at Seattle University. Stations duplicating PBS programming are “inefficient,” he argues. “Regional consolidation might save money that could be invested in programs,” Mitzman continues. “Many states, including Oregon and Idaho, have unified public-TV systems that produce more original content — often much more — than KCTS does.”
With KBTC airing much the same programming as KCTS, the Tacoma station could take over a KCTS transmitter.
VuHaus gathers in-studio music videos already being produced by Triple A–format stations onto a single platform.
In a commentary, the This American Life creator elaborates on his claim that “public radio is ready for capitalism.”
Execs from the networks told PBS Annual Meeting attendees Tuesday about their plans for collaboration.