Nice Above Fold - Page 895

  • Getler to measure PBS journalism against its goals

    For the first time PBS has hired a journalist to critique the programs it distributes.
  • A coalition of media reform groups called on CPB to completely open its board meetings, the best parts of which are generally off-limits to the press and public, and otherwise encourage openness and transparency.
  • Blogger Rex Sorgatz has temporarily stopped selling T-shirts that say “A Prairie Ho Companion” after receiving a cease-and-desist letter from Garrison Keillor’s lawyers. “[I]t annoys the living hell out of me that Garrison Keillor thinks he can bully me,” says Sorgatz. (St. Paul Pioneer Press article.)
  • “Tune in for a crash course in the sounds your favorite record store clerk was grooving to, like, two years ago,” says Pitchfork of the NPR concert series.
  • Some BBC coverage of Hurricane Katrina “sounds mean-spirited and not particularly helpful; it probably evokes knowing glances and smirks among editors and producers back in London,” says NPR ombud Jeffrey Dvorkin.
  • The Public Radio Program Directors conference has a blog this year.
  • WUOM in Ann Arbor is is the most popular station in its market, boasting an 11.1 share, according to the Ann Arbor News.
  • Observers in the Norfolk Virginian-Pilot yesterday criticize WHRO-TV/FM for ending local pubTV production, but with revenues down 27 percent in two years, station management cut staffing, which is down to 79 — a 23 percent drop in the past four years.
  • The FCC is letting noncommercial broadcasters in New Orleans rebroadcast commercial fare in the wake of Katrina, according to Radio World.
  • “Look, any time there’s a contentious exchange in the White House press room, it makes the press look bad,” said NPR’s Mara Liasson on Fox News Sept. 7.
  • Commercial TV veteran Paul La Camera was named g.m. of WBUR-FM in Boston. La Camera has served as president of a Boston ABC affiliate since 1994. He is WBUR’s first permanent g.m. since Jane Christo resigned last fall.
  • pbs.org launched NerdTV, a web-exclusive weekly TV series from technology columnist Robert X. Cringely.
  • Accuracy in Media calls for an investigation into pubcasting’s campaign this summer to restore $100 million in CPB funding.
  • The parent company of Minnesota Public Radio is backing a Friendster-like social networking website aimed at public radio listeners, reports the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.
  • The New York Times checks in with American Routes host Nick Spitzer as he prepares a post-Katrina episode of his show. “I wanted it to be music of reflection and solace and also hope, an attempt to put some balm on this,” he says.